• Hanging out at Starbucks will cost you as company reverses its open-doo

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 14 07:36:29 2025
    XPost: alt.crime, alt.society.homeless, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
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    If you want to hang out or use the restroom at Starbucks, you�re going to
    have to buy something.

    Starbucks on Monday said it was reversing a policy that invited everyone
    into its stores. A new code of conduct � which will be posted in all company-owned North American stores � also bans discrimination or
    harassment, consumption of outside alcohol, smoking, vaping, drug use and panhandling.

    Starbucks spokesperson Jaci Anderson said the new rules are designed to
    help prioritize paying customers. Anderson said most other retailers
    already have similar rules.

    �We want everyone to feel welcome and comfortable in our stores,� Anderson said. �By setting clear expectations for behavior and use of our spaces,
    we can create a better environment for everyone.�

    The code of conduct warns that violators will be asked to leave, and says
    the store may call law enforcement, if necessary. Starbucks said employees would receive training on enforcing the new policy.

    The new rules reverse an open-door policy put in place in 2018, after two
    Black men were arrested at a Philadelphia Starbucks where they had gone
    for a business meeting. The individual store had a policy of asking non-
    paying customers to leave, and the men hadn't bought anything. But the
    arrest, which was caught on video, was a major embarrassment for the
    company.

    At the time, Starbucks Chairman Howard Schultz said he didn�t want people
    to feel �less than� if they were refused access.

    �We don�t want to become a public bathroom, but we�re going to make the
    right decision a hundred percent of the time and give people the key,"
    Schultz said.

    Since then, though, employees and customers have struggled with unruly and
    even dangerous behavior in stores. In 2022, Starbucks closed 16 stores
    around the country � including six in Los Angeles and six in its hometown
    of Seattle � for repeated safety issues, including drug use and other disruptive behaviors that threatened staff.

    The new rule comes as part of a push by Starbucks' new chairman and CEO,
    Brian Niccol, to reinvigorate the chain's sagging sales. Niccol has said
    that he wants Starbucks to recapture the community coffeehouse feeling it
    used to have, before long drive-thru lines, mobile order backups and other issues made visits more of a chore.

    https://www.sfgate.com/living/article/hanging-out-at-starbucks-will-cost- you-as-company-20032318.php

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