Slow Roasted - Seven Years of
Anti-Labor Practices Backfire on Coffee Giant
3/25 |
Starbucks settled 15 charges
of unfair labor practices in
New York in early March — a
move the Industrial Workers
of the World are hailing as
a victory.
By Worker
Freedom
 |
Starbucks
settled
15
charges
of
unfair
labor
practices
in New
York
Tuesday
— a move
the
Industrial
Workers
of the
World
are
hailing
as a
victory
in their
drive to
unionize
the
coffee’s
giants
baristas.
The
Wobblies
say
Starbucks
agreed
to
reinstate
two
union
members
who had
lost
their
jobs —
Sarah
Bender
and
Anthony
Polanco
— and
stop
interfering
with
union
organizing
activities.
The
settlement
is so
complete,
says one
IWW
member,
it’s a
virtual
“neutrality
agreement”
that
sets the
stage
for the
union to
expand
its
efforts.
For Mark
Tutalo,
a former
Starbucks
employee
who sued
the
company
last
month,
the
settlement
comes
about
seven
years
too
late.
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In his
lawsuit,
filed
Feb. 6
in King
County
Superior
Court,
Tutalo
claims
the
company
made him
pay for
his
union
affiliation
by
repeatedly
refusing
to
change
his
shift
from
nights
to days
— a
request
Tutalo
says he
made
under
the
Americans
with
Disabilities
Act.
Tutalo,
of
Covington,
is a
Gulf War
veteran
with a
documented
case of
post-traumatic
stress
disorder
that he
says
makes it
difficult
for him
to sleep
during
the day.
In 1999,
years
before
the
renegade
Wobblies
started
their
union
drive in
New
York, 19
of the
21
people
who once
worked
at
Starbucks’
roasting
plant in
Kent
voted to
join the
International
Union of
Operating
Engineers
and,
after
two
years of
struggle
with the
company,
finally
got a
contract.
IUOE’s
business
manager,
Dave
Maxwell,
says he
believes
it was
Starbucks’
first
U.S.
union —
and
Tutalo
and
former
c-worker,
Jeff
Alexander,
were
supporters.
They say
Starbucks
pulled
out all
the
stops to
kill the
union.
Starbucks
Chairman
Howard
Schultz
came
down in
person
to talk
workers
out of
unionizing.
After
the
vote,
they say
Starbucks
brought
in an
union-busting
law firm
and
managers
intimidated
union
members,
writing
them up
for
minor
safety
infractions
until,
one by
one,
union
members
left the
plant.
“ Over
time, it
was a
grind
working
there,”
says
Alexander,
who now
works
directly
for
Local
286 of
the
Operating
Engineers.
“People
were
watching
you,
following
you and
trying
to write
you up
on
everything.”
A
settlement
that
Starbucks
signed
one year
ago with
the
National
Labor
Relations
Board
also
indicates
that the
company
engaged
in
unfair
hiring
practices.
In an
apparent
effort
to get
rid of
the
union
—which
succeeded
when
employees
later
voted
for
decertification
— hiring
managers
began
asking
applicants
in
interviews
about
previous
union
membership
or
sympathy.
The
settlement
provided
$125,000
to a
human
resources
staff
member
who
union
members
say was
fired
after
she
questioned
the
legality
of union
screening
questions.
Another
eight
people
who had
been
interviewed
but not
hired
received
$5,000
each and
the
option
to work
at the
plant
when an
opening
became
available.
But, for
Mark
Tutalo,
who left
the
plant in
November,
an
opening
on the
day
shift
never
came. In
his
lawsuit,
and an
NLRB
charge
he also
filed in
February,
Tutalo
claims
he was
discriminated
against
for
giving
the NLRB
a
statement
during
its 2004
investigation
of
unfair
hiring
practices
at the
plant.
Since
2002,
the
lawsuit
states,
Tutalo
made
three
requests
for a
shift
change
from
nights
to days,
two
times
when day
positions
were
coming
open.
The
requests
were
turned
down all
three
times.
On Nov.
8, five
hours
after
Tutalo
submitted
his two
weeks’
notice,
the
lawsuit
states
Starbucks
posted
two
vacant
positions
for
Tutalo’s
job on
the day
shift.
A
Starbucks
spokesperson
did not
return
calls
seeking
comment
on
Tutalo’s
claims
or its
current
policies.
The
company
has said
in the
past
that
“Starbucks
does not
take
action
or
retaliate
against
partners
who
might be
interested
or take
part in
union
activity.”
In spite
of the
IWW
settlement
in New
York,
members
of the
Operating
Engineers
say they
don’t
believe
that’s
true of
what
they
call the
Wal-Mart
of
coffee
shops.
Despite
the
company’s
progressive
image,
Tutalo
says,
“Howard
Schultz
would do
anything
to get
rid of
the
union.”
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