Starbucks shuts 8,000 stores for
anti-bias training
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[May 30, 2018]
By Lisa Baertlein
(Reuters) - Black leaders who are advising
Starbucks Corp <SBUX.O> on its anti-bias training program, which begins
Tuesday, hope it will reinvigorate decades-old efforts to ensure
minorities get equal treatment in restaurants and stores, setting an
example for other corporations.
Starbucks committed to the training after a Philadelphia cafe manager's
call to police resulted in the arrests of two black men who were waiting
for a friend. The arrests sparked protests and accusations of racial
profiling at the coffee chain known for its liberal stances on social
issues such as same-sex marriage.
Anti-bias training is intended to get participants to recognize their
own unconscious biases and avoid unintentional discrimination.
Starbucks is closing 8,000 company-owned U.S. stores at around 2 p.m.
local time on Tuesday as a first step in training 175,000 employees on
racial tolerance. Some 6,000 licensed Starbucks cafes will remain open
in locations such as grocery stores and airports, and those employees
will be trained at a later time.
Starbucks' training could have a lasting impact on its employees'
behavior and pave the way for other companies to finally tackle racism
in their own eateries and shops, said Heather McGhee, president of
public policy group Demos.
McGhee said one of her earliest memories as a black girl was being
chased from a penny candy store by a white store manager.
McGhee and NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (NAACP LDF)
President Sherrilyn Ifill, who are both advising Starbucks on its
program, said they have been in regular contact with company executives,
particularly Chief Operating Officer Rosalind Brewer, who also is
African-American.
"People forget that the effort to be treated as full citizens with
dignity in public spaces in this country was central to the civil rights
movement, from the Freedom Riders to the Montgomery bus boycott to the
lunch counter sit ins" of the 1950s and 1960s, said Ifill.
The NAACP LDF in the past sued Abercrombie & Fitch <ANF.N>, Wet Seal and
Denny's Corp <DENN.O> for racial bias. Each of the companies reached
multimillion-dollar settlements and vowed to change their practices.
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A man looks at a closed sign (C) from outside a Starbucks coffee
shop as a manager stands by inside the door after it closed Tuesday
afternoon along with more than 8,000 branches nationwide for
anti-bias training in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New
York, U.S., May 29, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Starbucks in a preview of Tuesday's four-hour program said employees
will watch videos featuring company leaders, hip hop artist Common and
experts from the Perception Institute as well as a short documentary on
the history of racism in public spaces. They also will participate in
discussion and problem-solving sessions on identifying and avoiding
bias.
The company already has issued employee guidelines for addressing
disruptive customer behavior, including sleeping, using abusive
language or taking drugs. The guidelines encourage workers to ask if
they would take the considered action with any customer, to verify
the perceived situation with a co-worker and to dial 911 if the
situation becomes unsafe.
Starbucks did not comment on future training plans. It has said it
intends to eventually share its training program with other
companies.
Corporate America began to embrace anti-bias training after the 2014
killing of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager by a white
police officer in Ferguson, Missouri.
Most anti-bias programs involve education on what unconscious bias
is, why humans have it, its impact on social interactions and
society and mitigation tools.
"Most people want to think of themselves as being fair ... if you
give them the tools to do that, their better angels take over," said
Howard Ross, author of "Everyday Bias" and founding partner of Cook
Ross, which offers training on unconscious bias and gave Starbucks
input on its program.
(This version of the story corrects 9th paragraph to show that past
actions taken by NAACP LDF, not by the NAACP, a separate
organization)
(Reporting by Aishwarya Venugopal in Bengaluru; editing by Patrick
Graham)
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