Starbucks

Starbucks in an anti-union company that exploits its coffee shop workers as well as the people who grow the coffee beans it uses...
... why not download this flyer, run a pile of copies off, get a group of your friends and picket Starbucks on Saturday 18 August. (Also below is a special IWW-No Sweat flyer for use on 18 August).
Read our short Briefing http://www.nosweat.org.uk/node/559 - then you'll know what you're talking about!

Alternative Starbucks logo:
http://www.nosweat.org.uk/node/568
Practical use in Chicago:
http://www.starbuckscoffee.org.uk/jpegs/chicago-fuckoff.jpg

We are asking activists to spend 1 hour leafleting outside a store on 18 August. In London local protests will take place from 11.00 to 12.00 and then a central London protest will start at 2.00.
If you decide to do an action or a protest of some sort, let us know what you're up to and we'll publicise it. Take some photos and write a short report, and send them to us!
And why not set up a meeting to discuss Starbucks' record? We can mail you/your group a copy of a film made by pro-union activists in New York, Coffee Sirens (35 minutes). And we can provide speakers.

Why not help us: more details: admin at nosweat.org.uk

Union links:
In the US: http://www.starbucksunion.org/
In the UK: http://www.baristasunited.org.uk/

German Starbucks workers' news (German text)
http://www.fau.org/termine/dat_070705-173956
http://www.nrhz.de/flyer/beitrag.php?id=11182

CNT-F site, Starbucks page (French text)
http://www.cnt-f.org/

General issues:
Black Gold, a brand new film about the reality of the coffee house industry. "Multinational coffee companies now rule our shopping malls and supermarkets and dominate the industry worth over $80 billion, making coffee the most valuable trading commodity in the world after oil. But while we continue to pay for our lattes and cappuccinos, the price paid to coffee farmers remains so low that many have been forced to abandon their coffee fields."
http://www.blackgoldmovie.com/
Where you can see Black Gold in the UK:
http://www.blackgoldmovie.com/screenings.php
Oxfam US ran a long campaign against Starbucks in defence of Ethiopian coffee farmers. Oxfam got Starbucks to back down:
http://www.oxfamamerica.org/whatwedo/campaigns/coffee/starbucks/

Oxfam coffee reports:
'Mugged' (4 page PDF, 2002)
http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what_we_do/issues/trade/downloads/mugged_summ.pd...
'Bitter coffee: how the poor are paying for the slump in coffee prices' (14 page PDF, 2001)
http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what_we_do/issues/trade/downloads/bitter_coffee....

This is fun:
This 'coffee calculator' will tell you who gets what when you buy a coffee:
http://www.blackgoldmovie.com/CoffeeCalculator/

Pictures below: Starbucks workers discuss with activists in Paris
German posters for Starbucks union meeting
Poster for French Starbucks workers' union

More details: watch this space

Starbucks
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Text of leaflet aimed at customers in US

The truth is Baristas genuinely enjoy providing you with your drink. For most of us it is the highlight of our workday. To make this work sustainable we've formed a union and wanted to tell you why.

We work very hard at a highly profitable company yet we live in grinding poverty

* The starting wage for a Barista is $7.75/hour - far below a livable amount
* After six months on the job we get a raise amounting to some cents, one of us received an 11 cent raise while another received 23 cents, just to give two examples
* We have access to a 401(k) and other financial vehicles but almost never have any money left over after paying rent and other necessities to contribute anything into them
* No Baristas are allowed full-time status, so we're never guaranteed any amount of hours per week making it exceedingly difficult to budget for rent, utilities, and food
* Some employees work enough hours per quarter to qualify for purchasing health insurance through Starbucks but once again many of us don't have enough money left over to do so

Our workday is characterized by undue repetitive stress and unsafe conditions

* We know you detest the long lines at Starbucks, so do we! To save money Management refuses to have enough Baristas on the floor to serve guests without having to work at staggering levels of speed
* Because employees must prepare beverages, operate the cash registers, and so forth at such high speeds, repetitive stress injuries are endemic at Starbucks
* As you know, we are working with very hot drinks sometimes as hot as 200 degrees, it is simply irresponsible for Starbucks to force Baristas to do this kind of work at unsafe speeds
* Starbucks coffee shops are not ergonomically sound resulting in workers needing to bend, reach, and lift in a manner conducive to musculo-skeletal ailments

We are now exercising our right to form a union and would appreciate your support. Baristas are standing strong as the union certification election approaches. The Union urges Starbucks and Chairman Howard Schultz in the strongest possible terms to refrain from intimidating workers or otherwise attempting to obstruct a fair vote

Your support in this struggle would mean so much to us:

1. Tell the managers at your local store that you support the right of Baristas to organize
2. Contact Chairman Howard Schultz at hschultz@starbucks.com and Starbucks at 800-235-2883 to express your support for the Union

For more information e-mail starbucksunion@yahoo.com

IWW IU/660-------------The Retail Workers Union