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Starbucks has a new dress code, and it’s not going over well with some of its team members.. On April 14, the coffee giant announced an updated employee dress code, and it that went into effect ...
“The biggest update to our dress code is simple: wear a black shirt — either your own or one we provide,” Phil Gee, director of partner and labor communications at Starbucks, tells TODAY.com ...
Starbucks Workers United, which represents about 11,000 workers at 570 of Starbucks’ 10,000 company-owned U.S. stores, said the “regressive” dress code needs to be subject to collective ...
The recent walkouts, sparked by a new dress code requiring employees to wear black clothing under their aprons, have been organized by Starbucks Workers United — the union representing employees ...
Starbucks implemented a new dress code on May 12, limiting baristas to black tops and black, khaki, or blue denim bottoms. Over 1,200 Starbucks employees staged walk-outs at roughly 100 stores to ...
But the new dress code — which took effect on Monday, May 12 — only allows baristas to wear a black top, while their bottoms are required to be black, khaki or blue denim.
The new dress code took effect May 12 and requires solid black short or long-sleeved crew neck, button up or collared shirts — a shift from its previous policy that allowed a range of dark ...
Starbucks said it would give two free black T-shirts to each employee when it announced the new dress code. Starbucks said Wednesday that the strike was having a limited impact on its 10,000 ...
Striking Starbucks Workers Say Black Shirt Dress Code Makes Them See Red The union representing the coffee chain’s baristas filed unfair labor practice charges, alleging the dress code change is ...
The dress code allowed baristas to wear any colors from the approved color palette, which includes black, grey, navy blue, white, brown and khaki. And tops were allowed to feature subdued or muted ...
More than 2,000 Starbucks baristas across the U.S. have walked off the job to protest changes to the employee dress code, Workers United said.
More than 2,000 Starbucks baristas across the U.S. have walked off the job to protest changes to the employee dress code, Workers United said.