Volume 2, Issue 10 - December 04, 2007

IWW Home Page Photo Gallery Starbucks Union Wobbly City Archive


Union Calls on Starbucks to Pay Holiday Premium on Martin Luther King Day
By Starbucks Workers Union




December 18, 2007

Coffee Giant Must Make Real Commitment to Diversity

New York, NY- The IWW Starbucks Workers Union (SWU) called today for the world’s largest coffee chain to honor slain civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. by paying workers a holiday premium on the federal holiday named for him. While Starbucks claims a commitment to racial diversity and pays a holiday premium on federal holidays including the Fourth of July and New Year’s Day, baristas receive no added compensation for working through the MLK Day holiday.

“Dr. King is a hero to many baristas and it’s only right that Starbucks- with its claimed commitment to diversity- treat his holiday with respect,” said Liberte Locke, a member of the SWU. “King stood up courageously for economic justice and no doubt would smile upon low-wage fast food workers taking home much needed extra money at the end of the day.”

Starbucks claims a commitment to diversity but has a poor record when it comes to equal opportunity. While 30% of Starbucks employees are people of color, only 15% of Starbucks executives are of color, according to the company. Starbucks will hire workers of color for low-wage barista positions, but such workers are significantly underrepresented in upper management.

The SWU is currently in a dispute with the coffee chain over African-American barista Simone Gordon who was targeted by a racist Starbucks store manager, demoted, and eventually fired by Starbucks.

MLK day will be celebrated on January 21 in 2008 and the union insists that Starbucks should signal a real commitment to diversity by honoring the holiday. A tireless advocate for economic justice as well as civil rights, Dr. King was murdered while supporting the right of sanitation workers in Memphis to join a labor union and assert their human dignity. 1 out of 3 employers give workers a paid day off for MLK Day; the union is making the modest demand of a holiday premium for Starbucks workers.

Though it spends lavishly on social responsibility PR, Starbucks is a poverty-wage, anti-union employer. In addition to wages as low as $6 or $7 per hour, the coffee giant requires all its baristas to work part-time with no guaranteed hours of work. Starbucks deceived the American people into believing that it was a leader in employee healthcare when it actually insures less than 41% of its workforce- worse than Wal-Mart which covers 47% of workers.

The IWW Starbucks Workers Union is an organization of employees at the world’s largest coffee chain united for higher wages, secure work schedules, and respect. Starbucks has fired eight SWU members for union activity and has been cited by the Labor Board multiple times for illegal union-busting conduct. The SWU uses direct action on the job and in the community to win workplace demands and to win respect for their contribution to the company.

TAKE ACTION



New Starbucks Union Poster Unveiled
By Wobbly City




December 04, 2007

In her most recent artistic efforts for the IWW, Nicole Schulman designed this awesome poster for the IWW Starbucks Workers Union. Schulman, an IWW member and talented artist, recently won a nationwide contest for the poster. Her work also appears in the book Wobblies! A Graphic History and the magazine World War 3 Illustrated. Copies of the poster are available by getting in touch with the Wobbly City editor.

Statement from the contest organizers:
The American labor movement has an amazing history of graphic production, creating some of the most effective political images in the history of this country. However, work and workers, along with the labor movement, are often depicted as experiences of the American past: paintings of Joe Hill, photographs from the early 1900s of children working in factories, historic strikes and Rosie the Riveter.

Today’s workforce looks dramatically different from the majority of images used to depict labor. To address this issue, Graphic Work collects posters artists have created that depict contemporary jobs, the people that do them and the issues workers now face.

What we found was startling. Most young politically-engaged artists have little or no relationship to the organized labor movement. If they are interested in it, they identify the Industrial Workers of the World, day laborer organizing, and immigrant farm worker campaigns.

Now more than ever it is important to create new images of labor. The posters here are the beautiful beginning of a new wave of labor art. Graphic Work is a call to action for all artists: we invite you to create similar posters depicting today’s workers and the labor movement you envision. Thank you to the artists here for leading the way.

Graphic Work is curated by Josh MacPhee and Zoeann Murphy.

Sponsored by the Workforce Development Institute, Bread and Roses Cultural Project of ll99SEIU and Justseeds.org.




About the Union:

The Industrial Workers of the World, NYC

General Membership Branch meets the first Sunday of each month at 2pm.

Industrial Union 460/640 meets the first Monday of each month at 6:30pm.

Meetings are held at 44-61 11th Street 3rd Floor Long Island City, NY 11101


How to contact us:


IU 460/640 - Billy Randal 646-645-6284
Starbucks Union - 917-577-1110
E-mail: iww.nyc@gmail.com
Mail: PO Box 7430, JAF Station, NY 10116
http://www.IWW.org
http://www.starbucksunion.org
Wobbly City: wobblycity@yahoo.com