KEY POINTS
  • Starbucks disclosed that it has reached an agreement with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in its third civil rights assessment from Covington & Burling.
  • The company said that it made a deal with the EEOC earlier this year after the agency alleged racial discrimination in its store-level promotions, based on data from 2007 through 2011.
  • As part of the agreement, Starbucks is making a number of changes to make its promotion process more transparent and formal.

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Starbucks bags with free items, in recognition of the Starbucks coffee shot that is slated to go in at the CollegeTowne location, Reading, Pennsylvania, January 12, 2021.

Starbucks said Wednesday it has resolved allegations from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission about alleged racial bias in its employee promotions, based on data from 2007 through 2011.

In a letter to employees, CEO Kevin Johnson said that Starbucks does not know what prompted the EEOC allegations and that the company's analysis of its own data did not show systemic discrimination in store-level promotions.

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