Last year, Ithaca, New York, became the first town in the country where every Starbucks worker was unionized. Now, by the end of the month, Starbucks will have forcibly shut down all three of its unionized Ithaca locations.
The company announced its intention to close Ithaca’s two remaining stores (in a town in which a large chunk of the population is caffeinated college students) on Friday. In a recent press release, the company said they “continue to open, close and evolve our stores as we assess, reposition and strengthen our store portfolio.” But given that all of Ithaca’s stores, all unionized, have been shut down within a year, the actions seem more than simply earnestly strategic.
Last June, Starbucks shut down a location near Cornell University, a handful of weeks after the location voted 19–1 to unionize. “The College Ave location may be the single most prime property in all of Upstate NY,” former Ithaca Mayor Svante Myrick wrote on Twitter. “Over 15,000 pedestrians cross it every day. There’s no way it isn’t profitable. This looks like union busting.”
Last week, emails were revealed to show that Starbucks higher-ups were actively concerned with bad press and the workers’ striking in the lead-up to their decision to shut down the campus location. Workers had complained of their hours being cut and stores being understaffed, seemingly in efforts to wear down the workers and consequently the stores themselves.
“The under-scheduling is genius on their part,” Stephanie Heslop, who worked at one of the two soon-to-be-closed locations, told Jacobin. “Customers and our pitiful paychecks punish us and Starbucks can claim that it’s about ‘business needs.’”
Such efforts to push out employees holds potential resonance, with another Starbucks store in Buffalo, New York—among the first locations to unionize—now filing to decertify from the union. Last April (the same month Ithaca’s campus location unionized), the Buffalo store voted 18–1 to unionize. Since then, it seems management has done whatever it could to turn back the clock.
“Almost every union leader at the store was fired or forced out because of the environment of intimidation and fear that Starbucks management created,” a spokesperson for Workers United told local TV outlet WGRZ. “In fact, the company is currently being prosecuted for the discriminatory treatment of workers at the Del-Chip store.”
It appears that if Starbucks can’t outright close locations down, it’s looking to simply wear out and replace the workers who unionized them. Such a notion is affirmed by the aforementioned emails, which reveal efforts from management to refuse time-off requests for student workers to go home for spring break and even double-schedule them, all in self-fulfilling anticipation of “expected turnover” for “10-14 partners in the next four weeks” (emphasis in the original email). That specific email was sent on March 4: four weeks before the store would hold its unionization vote.
With the closure of the college campus location, the two remaining locations in Ithaca logically would have only increased in foot traffic. Yet somehow, Starbucks purports that the closure of those two final locations—again, in a town whose population is significantly made up of students and faculty—is part of some ongoing detached-from-union-efforts business optimization scheme.
To be fair, Starbucks is not wholly dishonest in its logic of why it is forcibly closing stores. The closures are optimizing—just not for customer satisfaction, nor for basic worker protection and dignity, but simply for executive profits.
The revelations are not surprising. Just over a month ago, former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz accidentally admitted that nonunion stores received better benefits than unionized stores, and he couldn’t even say “no” to the question of whether he has threatened workers for unionizing.
This stuff really makes me wonder what kind of tactics have to be adopted by the western left.
I mean yeah unconditional solidarity with the struggle of these workers and I fully believe it’s a necessary and important one. But the sacrifices these workers are making are absolutely brutal. Being fired is absolutely awful and the mind games they play under these kinda of circumstances are incredibly traumatizing.
I don’t know how far this struggle can really be taken with how much power capital has in the U.S. and how fickle a friend the NLRB is, not to mention the arch right wing judiciary in this country.
Not to say this struggle is futile, but stuff like this really makes me wonder. If nothing else this has to be a major blow to moral to any other ongoing organizing effort in other retail settings.
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Most people are familiar with why economism is flawed with respect to what workers should do, but this here is why economism is flawed from the perspective of trying to analyze the actions of the bourgeoisie as well. Just like how having a higher wage in and of itself doesn't lead to the emancipation of workers, capitalists don't make decisions purely on an economic basis either. They are more than willing to lose hundreds of millions of dollars if they can break the backs of the current generation of workers and lose hundreds of millions of dollars more to break the next generation's backs.
I'm genuinely not kidding when I say the only thing to do is attempt to strap up and ride out the crash of empire. It might take a long time, or it might be a decade, but unless you can figure out a way to organize a 30-40% general strike that literally siezes and operates the means of production, you cannot win against corporations that are worth billions of dollars.
It won't happen and I don't want to sound too :fedposting: but making the cost vastly, vastly higher than closing stores to punish labor.
Historically in the States that meant burning train cars, shutting down mines, sabotage etc until you had to face off with militias or the army. It only had mixed success then and certainly wouldn't like that now, not head on.
But a comparatively smaller set of dispersed and disconnected people could probably do a lot of damage to businesses that are the worst offenders. Luddites smashed looms and burnt properties. Renault workers under Nazi occupation rigged truck engines to blow after very few miles. Eco groups destroyed forestry vehicles and equipment. How to blow up a pipeline etc.
The issue would be how many people are actually both willing and able. And how do you cultivate or support a compartmentalised movement like that without infiltration.
I think I recall reading once that Lenin thought that communist revolution was only possible in "weak" capitalist countries. Not sure if that is true though.
It is also why leftists flat out want to see America crash and burn. Not saying its impossible to have systemic change, but too much of the country is well off currently to smell the smoke.
China is going to smash the US. We've nothing to worry about.
Anyone else notice that Starbucks and Amazon escalated from tactics that left them with plausible deniability to blatantly illegal tactics right around the time that the Supreme Court went hard right? Probably more of a general fascist collapse thing, but I’d imagine some deep pocketed lawyers would love a chance to challenge some of these labor laws before the Supreme Court.