Starbucks executives know that our stores are facing a variety of challenges, and last year announced a “bold reinvention plan” aimed at making a better experience for store partners. Meanwhile, Starbucks is making headlines and attracting Senate attention for tampering with the federal right of store partners to have fair elections, free from fear, coercion, and intimidation.
This behavior of not listening to partners has also impacted us, the support partners. An unforeseen and poorly planned “return to office” mandate is making our lives more difficult, prioritizing corporate control over productivity, diversity & inclusion, and individual job satisfaction, effectively reducing our ability to positively impact store partner experience.
We love Starbucks, but these actions are fracturing trust in Starbucks leadership. Our mission of serving “one cup, one person, and one neighborhood at a time” is explicitly ignored when corporate policies attempt to eliminate the individuality of our partners and stores. Morale is at an all-time low, and the brand reputation and financial value of this publicly traded company are at risk.
As Starbucks Support Partners:
- We call on Starbucks to reverse the Return to Office mandate and allow support teams and individuals to have a voice in setting the working conditions that make them happiest and most effective.
- We call on Starbucks to commit to a policy of neutrality and respect federal labor laws by agreeing to follow Fair Election Principles, and allow store partners, whether pro- or anti-union, to decide for themselves, free from fear, coercion, and intimidation.
We are all one Starbucks, we are all partners. We believe in Starbucks, we believe in its core values, and we call for a return to those values. When all partners are included, as trusted partners with a voice, we know that Starbucks can truly be a different kind of company.
We, the 121 undersigned. As of 4/26/23 at 5:30 pm PT. Updated regularly.
Adam Baumeister | John Bergeron |
Alex Katz | Jon Rodriguez |
Alexis Morales | Jonathan Wenger |
Alun Jones | Joshua Brainard |
Amanda Stockbridge | Josslyn Gosch |
Andrew Edahl | Julie Pember |
Andrew Lloyd | Justin Lentz |
Archana Raju | Justin Shorney |
Ashlie Bergeron | Kai Schaller |
Bartley Kleypas | Karen Brown |
Brandon Abbott | Karmin Mauritz |
Brian Wirt | Kat Reinhart |
Callie Smith | Kellie Davenport |
Chad Bell | Kelly Drake |
Christopher Cox | Kyle Stadler |
Courtney Sutter | Laura Burbank |
Cyril Bouanna | Lauren Watanabe |
Dan Pierce | Matt Cles |
Dana Gould | Michelle Kozlowski |
David Hull | Monique Chase |
David Lewis | Mora Labisi |
Daniel Fuentes | Natalie Griffin |
Elliot Robinson | Nathan Glucksman |
Eric Engquist | Nichole Ikeda |
Erin Garlow | Peter de Jesus |
Erin O’Connell | Rebecca Gose |
Gabriela Villate | Ross Abbott |
Genie Leslie | Ruth Menger |
Hillary Rudolph | Sean Meenaghan |
Ian Bowers | Stephanie Kolokotroni Jones |
Jacque Kimzey | Stephen Somers |
Jake Sklarew | Stephen Steward |
Jason Stoff | Taylor Rowe |
Jeff Yaskus | Timothy Walker |
Jennifer Revenig | Trisha Johnston |
Jenny Starks-Dean | Will Asrari |
Jesse Turner | Zoe Nelson |
and including 47 who wish to remain anonymous.
Read the full open letter to Starbucks.
Are you a Starbucks Support Partner and want to add your name?
Reach out internally to someone named above or send an email to partners@starbuckspartnersunited.org.