A few months after a widely publicized incident involving a worker’s political shirt, the retail giant is updating its employee dress code.
Starbucks implemented a new dress code on May 12, limiting baristas to black tops and black, khaki, or blue denim bottoms. Over 1,200 Starbucks employees staged walk-outs at roughly 100 stores to ...
The new dress code rules go into effect this summer.
Starbucks announced in April they would be implementing a more strict dress code for employees. The new rules began this week and now more than 1,200 Starbucks union workers have gone on strike to ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Starbucks workers at roughly 100 stores have launched walkouts over the company's new dress code policy. File Photo by Kevin ...
Starbucks employees in three states are suing the company over its new dress code. The lawsuits allege Starbucks illegally failed to reimburse workers for new clothes required by the updated policy.
A workers union says that more than 1,200 Starbucks employees have gone on strike to protest a new dress code policy that went into effect this week. Walk-outs have taken place at roughly 100 stores ...
In April, Starbucks announced that the dress code for its baristas would change in May, severely limiting their options when it comes to what they can wear to work. Last week, the dress code change ...
Starbucks announced in April their employees would have a more strict dress code. The new policy was put into place and enforced this week, and now more than 1,200 Starbucks union workers have gone on ...