KEY POINTS
  • The union organizing Starbucks workers alleges that the coffee chain is threatening to take away gender-affirming health care coverage for transgender employees.
  • Starbucks denied the union's claim.
  • More than 100 of the coffee chain's 9,000 U.S. cafes have voted to unionize under Workers United in the last seven months.

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A protester waves a sign near the Country Club Plaza Starbucks store where dozens of Starbucks employees and union supporters protested alleged anti-union tactics by the company Thursday, March 3, 2022.

Starbucks is telling its baristas that unionizing could jeopardize the gender-affirming health care coverage for transgender employees that the company offers, according to a complaint filed with the federal labor board.

The complaint comes after more than 100 of the coffee chain's 9,000 U.S. cafes have voted to unionize under Workers United in the last seven months. Under interim CEO Howard Schultz, Starbucks has been trying to counter the union push by emphasizing the potential shortcomings of collective bargaining, such as federal labor laws that prohibit the company from unilaterally hiking wages across unionized cafes without contract negotiations.

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