Form DFAN14A - Additional definitive proxy soliciting materials filed by non-management and Rule 14(a)(12) material
February 22 2024 - 4:00PM
Edgar (US Regulatory)
SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
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by the Registrant o
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Preliminary Proxy Statement |
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) |
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Definitive Proxy Statement |
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Definitive Additional Materials |
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Soliciting Material Under Rule 14a-12 |
Starbucks Corporation
(Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
Strategic Organizing Center
Service Employees International Union
Mary Kay Henry
Ahmer Qadeer
Michael Zucker
Maria Echaveste
Joshua Gotbaum
Wilma B. Liebman
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if
other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check all boxes that apply):
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No fee required. |
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials. |
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Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a6(i)(1) and 0-11. |
Copies of materials posted to the Strategic Organizing
Center’s (the “SOC”) website, www.BrewABetterStarbucks.com, are reproduced in Exhibit 1 hereto. From
time to time, the SOC may refer shareholders of Starbucks Corporation to a recent article from The Guardian, a copy of which is reproduced
in Exhibit 2 hereto.
Exhibit 1
Exhibit 2
Twenty-five US universities face calls to cancel Starbucks contracts
The Guardian
By Michael Sainato
February 21, 2024
Student organizers, faculty and workers protest
against coffee company’s response to union organizing efforts.
Student
organizers, faculty and workers at 25 university campuses across the US are calling for their institutions to cancel their contracts with Starbucks in
protest against the company’s response to union organizing efforts.
The
“Starbucks gets an F” actions will take place on Thursday at campuses including the University of Chicago, the University
of South Florida, UW-Madison, New York University, Georgetown and Rutgers.
Hundreds
of college campuses have Starbucks locations on them, either through licensing agreements or through contracts with third-party vendors.
Student
organizers are circulating petitions pushing their universities to cut contracts with Starbucks on their campuses and raise public awareness
about their efforts to hold the company accountable and support workers’ unionizing efforts at Starbucks.
“We
want to make sure that our tuition dollars aren’t continuing to enable this company and the injustices they commit,” said
David Ramirez, a student organizer at UCLA where students submitted a petition in January
to the university to cut its contract with Starbucks in response to the company’s aggressive campaign against unionization efforts
in its stores.
“We’re
seeing many universities across the country also taking a stand against Starbucks, and now many people are realizing that this company
isn’t as progressive as it claims, and that we have a real voice in how these companies treat their workers and it’s our responsibility
to take a stand,” he said.
Nearly 400 Starbucks stores around
the US have won union elections to join Starbucks Workers United since December 2021, when stores in Buffalo, New York, first unionized.
On Tuesday, 21 Starbucks stores filed for union recognition, the single largest single-day
filing for the union campaign.
But
a first union contract for any store has yet to be reached.
Students
at Cornell successfully pushed the university to not renew its contract with Starbucks,
in response to local union campaigns where workers faced significant pushback, including the closure of a store. In the wake of that success,
similar campaigns have emerged at several other college campuses around the US.
Haya
Odeh worked as a barista at Starbucks in North Carolina and was a leader in union organizing
efforts until her transfer request –when she started college at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill – was denied.
Now she is leading student organizing efforts on campus as part of a campaign against the
company.
“We
are college students. We are the next generation of workers and consumers. We’re just not going to let Starbucks slide with the
injustices they pass on to workers. Their union busting is just the very tip of the iceberg. Their labor practices and how they treat
their workers, we want to push the message that we’re not going to stand for this as students,” said Odeh.
Since
the Starbucks Workers United campaign first started, workers have filed hundreds of unfair labor practice charges against Starbucks with
the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).
Starbucks
has not admitted wrongdoing over the union campaign.
In
a recent post-hearing brief before an NLRB administrative judge, Starbucks attorneys joined attorneys at Trader Joe’s, Amazon and
SpaceX in arguing that the NLRB is unconstitutional in beginning proceedings over labor law violations by these companies. In January,
Starbucks praised a decision by the US supreme court to hear their appeals case over firing
seven Starbucks workers at a unionized store in Memphis.
A
Starbucks spokesperson denied all allegations of union busting in response to the actions.
“We
disagree with claims that Starbucks engages in ‘union-busting’.” they said in an email.
“While
Starbucks believes that our direct relationship as partners is core to the culture and experiences created in our stores, we respect our
partners’ right to organize and collectively bargain – and remain committed to our stated aim of reaching ratified contracts
for US union-represented stores in 2024.”
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