KEY POINTS
  • Starbucks baristas at its New York City Reserve Roastery voted in favor of forming a union on Friday, becoming the ninth company-owned location to unionize.
  • Manufacturing workers at the Reserve Roastery were slated to vote on whether to unionize on Thursday, but the union pulled the petition for an election.
  • The Reserve Roastery locations were the brainchild of Howard Schultz, who returns as CEO on an interim basis on Monday.

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Employees serve customers at a newly opened Starbucks' Reserve Roasteries in the Meatpacking District on on December 14, 2018 in New York City.

Starbucks baristas at its New York City Reserve Roastery voted 46-36 in favor of forming a union on Friday, dealing a blow to incoming interim CEO Howard Schultz that may be more personal.

The Reserve Roastery is the ninth company-owned Starbucks to unionize. On Tuesday, the National Labor Relations Board counted votes for a Knoxville cafe, but a challenged ballot left the results of that effort uncertain. The union was winning by a single vote. Last week, a cafe in Starbucks' hometown of Seattle and a second location in Mesa, Arizona, also voted to unionize.

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