- cross-posted to:
- news@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- news@lemmy.world
Starbucks will pay about $35 million to more than 15,000 New York City workers to settle claims it denied them stable schedules and arbitrarily cut their hours, city officials announced Monday, hours before Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani and U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders visited striking baristas on a picket line.
The development came amid a continuing strike by Starbucks’ union that began last month at dozens of locations around the country.
The workers want better hours and increased staffing, and they are angry that Starbucks hasn’t agreed on a contract nearly four years after workers voted to unionize at a Buffalo store. Union votes at other locations followed, and about 550 of Starbucks’ 10,000 company-owned stores are now unionized. The coffee giant also has around 7,000 licensed locations at airports, grocery stores and other locales.



$2,333 per worker, not nearly enough
It’s not evenly split, it’s $50/week for each week worked between 2021-2024, up to ~$7,700/worker.
It’s still not enough. Especially because that’s roughly equivalent to 200 minutes of minimum wage pay for NYC.