KEY POINTS
  • Starbucks baristas at a Seattle location unanimously voted to unionize, a first in the company's hometown.
  • The growing union push is among the challenges that incoming interim CEO Howard Schultz will have to tackle once he returns to the helm of the company.
  • The Seattle location is the seventh company-owned Starbucks cafe to vote in favor of unionizing under Workers United.

In this article

Starbucks Barista Gianna Reeve, part of the organizing committee in Buffalo, New York, speaks in support of workers at Seattle Starbucks locations that announced plans to unionize, during a rally at Cal Anderson Park in Seattle, Washington on January 25, 2022.

Starbucks baristas at a Seattle location on Tuesday unanimously voted to unionize, a first in the company's hometown.

The Seattle location on Broadway and Denny Way joins six other company-owned Starbucks cafes in Buffalo, New York, and Mesa, Arizona, in deciding to form a union under Workers United, an affiliate of the Service Employees International Union. Only one location, in the Buffalo area, has voted against unionizing, giving Starbucks Workers United a win rate of 88%.

In this article