Crime Starbucks to close 5 Seattle stores over safety concerns

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Starbucks will close six Puget Sound-area stores where the company says crime rates have climbed recently as part of a broad initiative to boost security at the cafes.

Five stores will close in Seattle — in the Central Area, on Capitol Hill and in the Roosevelt neighborhood, as well as at Union Station and Westlake Center — and one in Everett. In total, 16 U.S. stores will close by July 31, the company announced Monday.

The closure decisions were based on how many crime-related complaints were logged at each store, a company spokesperson said, and whether attempts to lower those rates were successful. Going forward, store managers will be allowed to choose whether bathrooms are open to the public, and future stores will be redesigned for safety, the company said.

Some of the safety concerns include drug use, theft and assault, a Starbucks spokesperson said.

Workers at the stores that are closing can ask to be reassigned to neighboring stores, the company said. The stores at Union Station and East Olive Way are unionized, and employees who relocate to unionized stores will continue to be represented.

Erin Bray, who works at Union Station, said that she asked for more security, including guards in the cafe lobby, after assaults occurred there.

Starbucks said there is a full-time security guard at Union Station, with an additional security support worker at times. The cafe’s hours were adjusted for safety and the store was closed on weekends.

Bray said additional security wasn’t hired, but that workers generally felt safe and never thought they needed to close the store.

“I just feel helpless,” Bray said Monday, after learning her store would close.

In addition to the 11802 Evergreen Way store in Everett, these Seattle stores will close:

  • 2300 S. Jackson St.
  • 6417 Roosevelt Way N.E.
  • 1600 E. Olive Way
  • 505 Fifth Ave. S.
  • 400 Pine St.
Labor law requires Starbucks to hold collective bargaining with workers at Union Station and East Olive Way before closing those cafes, Bray said. Workers can try to negotiate to keep the store open, Bray said, but it’s an uphill battle.

“We’re supposed to come to the table with proposals,” Bray said. “And I don’t know what we can propose realistically when it seems that fighting to keep the store open is a losing battle.”

In a memo to employees Monday, Denise Nielsen and Debbie Stroud, Starbucks senior vice presidents for U.S. operations, said the changes are in response to crises around “personal safety, racism, lack of access to health care, a growing mental health crisis, rising drug use and more” that play out at Starbucks stores.

Interim CEO Howard Schultz, who has returned for a third stint as chief executive, said during a New York Times panel last month that Starbucks was considering closing cafe bathrooms to the public in response. Instead of a companywide policy, individual store managers will decide if bathrooms will remain open, the company said Monday.

Store layouts will be rearranged. New front-line workers will be trained on how to deal with active shooters and use conflict de-escalation, according to Starbucks. Workers will also receive more mental health benefits as they deal with difficult safety situations, the company said.

Redesigning for safety will include “adjusting store formats, furniture layouts, hours of operation, staffing, or testing store-specific solutions,” according to the memo. Those fixes could include restroom occupancy sensors and new alarm systems, as well as paid Lyft rides for workers.

The changes align with five goals also announced Monday by Schultz aimed at “reinventing the Starbucks experience.”

“We’re seeing unprecedented cultural division and economic trauma — all while navigating a pandemic, and it seems as though every day there is a new crisis to address,” Schultz wrote in a letter to employees.

The current Starbucks is not built for the future, said Camille Hymes, vice president of U.S. community impact.

“Consumer demands have changed. We recognize the external environment has changed, so we’re responding to that with urgency,” Hymes said.

In June, the company announced a “Heritage Market” initiative at three of Starbucks’ most important stores in downtown Seattle. Each store would have a theme of past, present or future. One of the stores is in the petitioning process for union elections. The Workers United union has petitioned the National Labor Relations Board, arguing the Heritage Market is a union-busting tactic.

Bray said she is scared that if she moves to a nonunion store, she will lose the protections a union offers.

Starbucks said it will increase minimum hours to help ensure continuity for workers reassigned to other stores.

This story has been updated to correct the location of the unionized stores and clarify the neighborhood of the Roosevelt Way store.
 
I follow a few west coast homelessness Instagram accounts because I'm a glutton for human misery. Holy shit does the situation out there look out of control. There are maybe 5-6 bothersome homeless in the downtown area of my mid-size midwestern city and even that seems like too much, and they're just doing things like yelling occasionally while sitting on the sidewalk. The idea that people tolerate mass tent encampments blocking pedestrian access, people wandering around in the middle of traffic with machetes, and public shitting, is unbelievable to me. How can anyone be paying West Coast property taxes/rent and think this is an acceptable thing to have to live with?

Sanction of the Victim Syndrome.
 
Store layouts will be rearranged. New front-line workers will be trained on how to deal with active shooters and use conflict de-escalation, according to Starbucks. Workers will also receive more mental health benefits as they deal with difficult safety situations, the company said.

Redesigning for safety will include “adjusting store form, furniture layouts, hours of operation, staffing, or testing store-specific solutions,” according to the memo. Those fixes could include restroom occupancy sensors and new alarm systems, as well as paid Lyft rides for workers.

And this is for coffee shops, in the United States? Damn. These sound like security measures that would be needed for shops in cities like Port Moresby, Bangui, or Mogadishu.

In a memo to employees Monday, Denise Nielsen and Debbie Stroud, Starbucks senior vice presidents for U.S. operations, said the changes are in response to crises around “personal safety, racism, lack of access to health care, a growing mental health crisis, rising drug use and more” that play out at Starbucks stores.

That's an interesting way to say, "We are sick of people shooting up in our stores, robbing them, and/or harassing and frightening the workers."

The open bathroom policy must have been horrific in some of the more sketchy neighborhoods. I wonder how many times workers found either dead bodies (due to drug overdoses) or literal shit smeared all over the walls.
 
Última edición:
New front-line workers will be trained on how to deal with active shooters and use conflict de-escalation, according to Starbucks. Workers will also receive more mental health benefits as they deal with difficult safety situations, the company said.

"Mental health benefits" i.e. here's a 30 minute required webinar and/or a free basic subscription to a therapy app. I think it's very telling that there's no mention of Starbucks increasing employee pay in exchange for having to act as amateur cops/social workers in addition to their actual job of being baristas. I could see this being a very creative form of union-busting in addition to the usual non-response to homeless/criminal fuckery.
 
The store manager was ASIAN???
Well, damn, I didn't hear that part. From the way the news reported it, I was sure it was a white person.
Yes. Kind of like how the media did not exactly go out of their way to mention the three people that Kyle shot were all white. Causing a lot of people to believe he went out there and shot three black guys. Because that narrative is better.
 
Starbucks is a scam. My brother literally pays almost $100 per week from buying Starbucks everyday (their overpriced coffee, food, etc.) and here I am just brewing $0.30 cent coffee every few days if I really need the 'buzz', lol.

idk much about Seattle but I bet people aren't missing out much.
Between that and shit like Door Dash and Grub Hub it's absolutely insane how much more money people could have with even just the slightest amount of discipline.
 
So all the Starbucks stores closing (except the two in Philly and DC) are in West Coast cities, particularly the Northwest. Nice.

Seems like Washington and Oregon went full retard quicker than California ever could manage.
 
Going forward, store managers will be allowed to choose whether bathrooms are open to the public

I humbly apologise on behalf of Philadelphia for starting that whole debacle. You let randos use the bathroom without buying anything and you are asking for trouble. You might as well tell all the addicts and thuglifes to come in and loiter all day and harass real customers.

I feel the best solution is armed guards. But muh police state so...

Wawa is pretty much exclusive to the east coast. Its AM/PM.

They're pretty good though and are still doing the $2 any size iced coffee promotion and the loaded fries are reasonable and there are tons of topping combos you can customize. If you have one in your area fuck Starbucks. Their coffee tastes burnt anyway and the only good Starbucks I ever had was at a hospital.
 
And this is for coffee shops, in the United States? Damn. These sound like security measures that would be needed for shops in cities like Port Moresby, Bangui, or Mogadishu.



That's an interesting way to say, "We are sick of people shooting up in our stores, robbing them, and/or harassing and frightening the workers."

The open bathroom policy must have been horrific in some of the more sketchy neighborhoods. I wonder how many times workers found either dead bodies (due to drug overdoses) or literal shit smeared all over the walls.
Years ago I chatted with a gal who was a manager at Starbucks a stone's throw from the ones getting shut down. In downtowns of west coast cities there's literally a Starbucks on every block, usually as part of the office worker hive on that block, and she worked at the one that was at the apex of all the businessperson traffic and all the hobo traffic. It makes too much money to shut it down but it had constant problems. She'd had to call 911 for ODs more times than she could recall and had found a dead body. Stayed in the job for the health insurance coverage. :|
 
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