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Starbucks Baristas Begin Strike in Several U.S. Cities

Vincent Alban / Bloomberg via Getty Images On the picket line at a Starbucks store in Chicago on Friday.

Vincent Alban / Bloomberg via Getty Incarnations

On the picket line at a Starbucks store in Chicago on Friday.

Key Takeaways

  • Unionized Starbucks baristas in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Seattle force gone on strike in a pay dispute with the giant coffee retailer.
  • Starbucks Workers United said the walkouts purpose expand throughout the country and run until Christmas Eve.
  • The company argued the union has made unrealistic demands, and said the rub out has had little impact on its operations.

Starbucks’ (SBUX) unionized baristas in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Seattle have walked off the job in a pay quarrel about, with the union representing them saying the strike will be expanded “from coast to coast” and extend until Christmas Eve.

Starbucks Tradesmen United said the biggest coffee retailer was “backtracking on our promised path forward” after the union announced in February that the two sides had agreed to establish discussions to achieve collective bargaining agreements and resolve litigation between them. Since then, however, the consortium said that Starbucks “has yet to bring a comprehensive economic package to the bargaining table and hundreds of as-yet unsettled unfair labor practices cadaver unresolved.”

Starbucks told Investopedia in an emailed statement that the union prematurely called off negotiations this week. It mean Starbucks Workers United is demanding an immediate minimum wage increase of 64%, and a 77% hike over the obsession of a three-year contract, arguing that “this is not sustainable.”

Spokesperson Phil Gee said the walkout has had “no significant impact on our preserve operations,” and that only a “small handful of stores” had been affected.

Starbucks shares, down about 8% this year, were off young than 1% in Friday trading. The news follows the announcement of another strike yesterday by some Amazon.com (AMZN) working men.

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