Plover Union Organizer Fired By Starbucks
Company faces labor complaints, fired organizer days after workers voted for union at Starbucks in central Wisconsin.
A union organizer at a central Wisconsin Starbucks says he was fired just days after employees there voted to unionize.
Kolton Gosnell was one of two organizers at the Starbucks in Plover to go public with the unionization push in February. Efforts to unionize local stores are also part of a national movement involving workers at the coffee chain in New York state, Michigan, North Carolina and elsewhere. In Wisconsin, workers in Oak Creek and Madison have also announced union drives.
“We won our election on Wednesday,” said Gosnell, 21. “I came in on Friday morning, and (managers) sat me down after I’d opened and worked a little over half my shift. They read me a piece of paper; it was their statement of separation.”
The stated reason for his termination was that he’d broken company rules by being in the back of the store while he was off the clock, and being present in April after the store closed when he was off the clock. Gosnell admits that he did those things. But he calls the policies selectively enforced.
“I 100 percent believe it was related to my union organizing,” he said. “The rules were applied unevenly on one person.”
Federal law protects union organizing and prohibits employers from retaliating against those involved in union drives.
A spokesperson for Starbucks declined to address the specifics of Gosnell’s case, but in a statement said “a partner’s interest in the union does not exempt them from the standards we have always held.”
“We will continue to enforce our policies consistently for all partners,” the company’s statement said.
Last week, the National Labor Relations Board filed a lengthy complaint against the Seattle-based company for allegedly retaliating against union organizers in Buffalo, New York by firing them, reducing their pay, intimidating organizers and other means. And last month, federal officials in Phoenix told a judge the company had taken similar actions there, asking for reinstatement of three fired union activists. In both cases, Starbucks has denied the allegations.
Gosnell said he’ll seek reinstatement to his job, including back pay from missed shifts. He said he is scheduled to speak with a National Labor Relations Board investigator this week. In the meantime, one of the fired Starbucks workers from Phoenix created a GoFundMe page for Gosnell.
“Obviously it is stressful being fired by a company,” Gosnell said. “But I am completely shocked by the amount of support I’ve seen on social media.”
Wisconsin union organizer says Starbucks fired him days after union vote was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.