KEY POINTS
  • Workers at three Starbucks stores in Buffalo, New York, have petitioned to form a union.
  • The coffee giant responded Tuesday by telling partners it would request that the National Labor Relations Board open up the voting group to the full Buffalo market.
  • In recent days executives including Rossann Williams and Starbucks founder Howard Schultz visited the market to hold listening sessions with workers.

In this article

A worker stands inside Starbucks in midtown during the coronavirus pandemic on May 20, 2020 in New York City.

After workers at three Starbucks stores in Buffalo, New York, petitioned for a vote on whether to unionize, the company has told the National Labor Relations Board that all 450 workers in the city should be allowed to vote, according to a memo Starbucks sent to its employees that was obtained by CNBC.

"We believe this will make this process fair and respectful for every partner in Buffalo. It will ensure that all of you are afforded the voting rights, and the voice that you deserve in this process," wrote Allyson Peck, Starbucks regional vice president, Northeast region, in the note to the Buffalo employees.

In this article