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After exposing Starbucks boss as union-busting liar, worker gets his job back

A whistleblowing organiser is to return to work on June 7, reports MARK GRUENBERG

JAYSIN SAXTON, the Starbucks worker who exposed for the US Senate and the world to see that company CEO Howard Schultz lied about not busting unions, will get his job back.

Saxton told the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists (CBTU) convention in New Orleans that the National Labour Relations Board ruled for him, deciding Starbucks illegally fired him from its Augusta, Georgia, store last year because of his union advocacy. He’ll walk in the store door on June 7 to reclaim his post.

Once there, he declared during a series of panels on May 25 on organising, the atmosphere in the store will be totally different “and Starbucks isn’t ready for it.

“I can’t wait to get back.”

Saxton played a key role in exposing Starbucks’ abuses and exploitation of its workers nationally. With one other worker, Saxton followed Schultz to the witness chair earlier this year before the Senate health, education, labour, and pensions committee. There, he described in detail his mistreatment and ultimate firing from the Augusta store.

Schultz, the Starbucks founder who had just stepped down as its CEO — but who’s still on the board and is the firm’s biggest stockholder — denied then under oath that his firm ever illegally fired anyone for advocating unionising. Saxton point by point, then and at the CBTU, exposed that lie.

Starbucks is supposed to be tolerant and friendly to customers and workers, Saxton noted. “You can get fired on the spot for cursing,” he commented. “But you can be racist or homophobic or commit sexual assault” on a worker and nothing will happen. “When partners complained, they got written warnings.” “Partners” is Starbucks’ nickname for its workers.

At Augusta, Starbucks “fired the store manager we all loved” and brought in another manager “who started firing all of us ‘to make us work harder’.” The new manager also made working conditions difficult by constantly changing machines’ positions within the store. And the manager insisted workers have a “meaningful connection” with customers in a maximum of 60 seconds allowed baristas to produce coffee and food. “I don’t know anyone who could do that,” Saxton said.

The workers responded to such conditions by first staging a two-day strike in honour of the fired manager, and then unionising, by a vote of 26 to 5, in April 2022, after Starbucks Workers United, a Service Employees sector, aided their grassroots organising drive.

Starbucks responded by firing Saxton and another organiser and forcing the workers to be “more efficient.” Half of the 40 workers have left.

But with 20 workers now doing the work of 40, the store “is on assignment” and at risk of closing. Starbucks believes the remaining workers will be afraid of unionising, but the company will be wrong, Saxton predicted.

Bosses thought “they had fired enough of us to destroy morale.” But now the workers will “have proof” Starbucks broke labour law when Saxton returns to his job under National Labour Relations Board orders. The remaining workers, he believes, will see that “Jason got fired, and now he’ll get his job back… We’re going to build it (the store) back up and give it (unionisation) right back.”

This article appeared at Peoplesworld.org.

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