NEWS & COMMENTARY December 12, 2022
https://onlabor.org/december-12-2022/
Fred Wang
Fred Wang is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays News & Commentary, a lookback at a historic year of unionizing at Starbucks and across the tech industry.
Its been a little over a year since the first Starbucks store in the U.S. organized, as Kevin summarized this weekend. A lot has changed in that time, to put it mildly.
As the Seattle Times recounts, while over 260 of its U.S. stores have unionized, Starbucks seen historically as employee-friendly has clashed with union workers the entire way. Claims of Starbucks retaliating against unionizing efforts are surely familiar at this point. Since January, the Starbucks Union has filed 548 unfair labor charges against Starbucks, per data collected by Matt Bruenig. Perhaps not coincidentally, election filings have started to level off in recent months. And as many stores shift from the union-organizing phase to the slow contract negotiation process, Starbuckss efforts to obstruct to impede the labor movement are sure to continue. In short, Starbucks has changed, and so has its relationship with workers.
Still, many workers are committed to seeing this entire fight through. As one Seattle barista, Rachel Ybarra, put it: Starbucks cant get rid of me. Im going to stay with this company until I can make it the company that it should be.
2022 saw an unprecedented rise in labor organizing in U.S. tech firms, Axios notes, in a piece briefly summarizing the years major news in tech workers labor activism such as organizing efforts at Amazon, Apple, and across the video game industry. Although labor organizing in the tech space is still in its infancy, Axios notes, the momentum thats been built in the past year may well carry over into the next, especially as national approval of labor unions continues to rise.