More than 1,000 Starbucks baristas at 75 US stores have gone on strike since Sunday to protest a new company dress code, a union representing the coffee giant's workers said Wednesday. Starbucks put new limits starting Monday on what its baristas can wear under their green aprons. The dress code requires employees at company-operated and licensed stores in the US and Canada to wear a solid black shirt and khaki, black, or blue denim bottoms. Under the previous dress code, baristas could wear a broader range of dark colors and patterned shirts. Starbucks said the new rules would make its green aprons stand out and create a sense of familiarity for customers as it tries to establish a warmer, more welcoming feeling in its stores.
But Starbucks Workers United, the union that represents workers at 570 of Starbucks' 10,000 company-owned US stores, said the dress code should be subject to collective bargaining, the AP reports. "Starbucks has lost its way. Instead of listening to baristas who make the Starbucks experience what it is, they are focused on all the wrong things, like implementing a restrictive new dress code," said Paige Summers, a Starbucks shift supervisor from Hanover, Maryland. "Customers don't care what color our clothes are when they're waiting 30 minutes for a latte."
Starbucks said Wednesday that the strike was having a limited impact on its 10,000 company-operated US stores. By the union's own count, fewer than 1% of Starbucks workers are participating in the strikes, and in some cases the strikes closed stores for less than an hour, the company said. "It would be more productive if the union would put the same effort into coming back to the table that they're putting into protesting wearing black shirts to work," Starbucks said in a statement. Starbucks Workers United has been unionizing US stores since 2021. Starbucks and the union have yet to reach a deal on a contract, despite agreeing to return to the bargaining table in February 2024. (Starbucks is planning to reduce automation and hire thousands more baristas.)