Pamela,
Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol is paid 6,666 times what the average barista makes―and instead of coming to the bargaining table with Starbucks Workers United, the union that represents more than 600 of Starbucks' stores, Brian is nowhere to be found. That, along with thousands of unresolved Unfair Labor Practice complaints, is why Starbucks workers went on strike.
Starbucks' CEO Brian Niccol takes a company jet from his home in southern California to the Seattle headquarters. But Starbucks also built him a private luxury office a few minutes away from his home.
Brian thinks he can hide―on his private jet, in his luxury office, or in one of his many homes, but we'll find him. The Labor Force is launching a mobile billboard to look for him, and build pressure to bring Brian Niccol back to the bargaining table. Can you chip in to fund this mobile billboard?
If you've saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your secure donation will go through immediately:
We're driving this billboard to Brian's home, to the airport where his private jet is waiting for him, and to the Starbucks he might stop at on his way. We're going to make sure he sees this message.
Can you help keep our billboard on the road?
We'll send pictures once it's on the streets.
In solidarity,
The Labor Force
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