NEWS & COMMENTARY November 18, 2022
By Tascha Shahriari-Parsa
Tascha Shahriari-Parsa is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays news and commentary: a nationwide Starbucks strike of 112 stores; Iran metal workers join the resistance; Sanders vies to take Murrays seat as HELP committee chair; and the NLRB Union challenged the General Counsels plan to change their telework policy.
Starbucks workers at 112 stores all across the country went on strike yesterdaycomprising more than 2,000 workers in total. The occasion of the strike was Starbucks Red Cup Day, a special day when Starbucks gives out a free, red reusable holiday starbucks cup to customers ordering a holiday seasonal beveragea day that is notoriously difficult on baristas and notoriously profitable for Starbucks, according to Massachusetts Starbucks barista Emily Schule. More than 260 Starbucks stores have now unionized, while they continue to press Starbucks to quit dawdling and get to bargaining with them. Starbucks has also been the subject of 39 complaints by the NLRB, and a total of over 900 unfair labor practice charges. Starbucks has fired over 150 union leaders for their union activities, Starbucks Workers United has claimed. This is to show them were not playing around, said California Starbucks worker Tyler Keeling. Were done with [Starbucks] anti-union retaliation and them walking away from bargaining.
Isfahan metal workers have been on strike this week since Tuesday, accompanying three days of countrywide protests continuing the revolt against the Iranian regime. At the center of the struggle are women engaging in civil disobedience in the streets by violating the mandatory hijab laws, a continuing echo of the 1979 International Womens Day Protests in Tehran. Also paralleling 1979, oil workers and other big industries have engaged in mass political strikes through the country. Over 1,000 people have been indicted by the Iranian government for their role in the recent demonstrations, with three more death sentences being issued yesterday.
FULL story here:
https://onlabor.org/november-18/