KEY POINTS
  • Starbucks has informed workers at two stores in Seattle and Kansas City, Missouri, that the locations will be closing.
  • The coffee chain said union activity at the locations is not the reason for the closures.
  • The union for Starbucks workers says the company is retaliating for organizing activity.
A sign is seen as Activists participate in an event dubbed the Un-Birthday Party and picket line for Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz on July 19, 2022 in New York City. Activists gathered near Schultz's West Village home on his 75th birthday to protest the treatment of Starbucks workers attempting to unionize, as well as Schultz's recent announcement to permanently close 16 locations.

Starbucks has informed workers at two locations that their stores will be closing, a move that the coffee chain's union says is retaliation for organizing efforts.

The company said the union activity isn't the reason for the closures. It said a Kansas City, Missouri, location, where vote results are pending, is closing due to safety issues. It said a Seattle location, where workers voted to organize in April, will close and reopen, operated as a licensed location by a neighboring grocery store. Starbucks will engage in bargaining with the union to seek an agreement that gives workers there the opportunity to transfer to other stores.