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Re: Coffee Shop Workers Who Voted to Unionize Protest Chain Shutting Down 

By: De_Composed in 6TH POPE | Recommend this post (3)
Tue, 18 Jun 24 5:34 AM | 35 view(s)
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Msg. 54261 of 60008
(This msg. is a reply to 54260 by Beldin)

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Where's the problem? Local 80 and the unemployed workers are probably in touch already with Starbucks Inc. to demand that it open three new shops in Philadelphia. I bet there are dozens of would-be franchisees in the area champing at the bit for a chance to run stores at a loss in exchange for helping the community. It's a scenario straight out of Atlas Shrugged and destined for the same happy conclusion!




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Coffee Shop Workers Who Voted to Unionize Protest Chain Shutting Down
By: Beldin
in 6TH POPE
Tue, 18 Jun 24 5:16 AM
Msg. 54260 of 60008

http://twitchy.com/brettt/2024/06/17/coffee-shop-workers-who-voted-to-unionize-protest-chain-shutting-down-n2397371

We're never sure if we're supposed to boycott Starbucks or not. They offer their employees good benefits, including college tuition, but apparently aren't doing enough about the genocide in Gaza.

The ready solution was to patronize your local coffee shop instead. That's going to be tougher in Philadelphia, where OFC Coffee has just shut down its three stores just a week after employees voted to unionize. And now the employees are protesting to bring their capitalist oppressor back:

End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) ~ Employees at the OCF Coffee House in Philadelphia voted to unionize.

1 week later, all 3 stores closed down.

Now they're protesting the closure:
Video ~ http://twitter.com/i/status/1802440351115772332

You're protesting its closure? Too late ... you already killed it. Wow ... your arrogant sense of entitlement is simply astounding ... and childishly idiotic. 

Not Simo Häyhä (@h2av8tor) ~ Econ 101. When it becomes too much of a hassle or not profitable to run a business, the owners close it down. Now these workers have the opportunity to open their own coffee house.

John Hawkins (@johnhawkinsrwn) ~ Unionizing a job you can train high school students to do in a week is always a bad idea.

Cash Loren (@CashLorenShow) ~ This is why you don't hire a bunch of blue-haired leftists.

Glenda (@Glendaragnarson) ~ Another classic case of liberals voting themselves into misery. Tale as old as time.

Planet Of Memes (@PlanetOfMemes) ~ Instead of protesting the closure, they should be job searching.

The Chasing Ghosts Podcast (@wbuppert) ~ The real minimum wage is always zero.

Abugen Sans (@bugensbooks) ~ Many of these people are probably seeing for the first time in their lives that actions have consequences - an important lesson that doesn't seem well-understood by the left.

I was curious about the circumstances behind this, so I dug a little deeper ... 

All OCF Coffee House locations close permanently, a week after workers moved to unionize

http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/all-ocf-coffee-house-locations-close-permanently-a-week-after-workers-moved-to-unionize/ar-BB1nZ7de

By Michael Klein & Jenn Ladd
The Philadelphia Inquirer

Real estate developer Ori Feibush announced the immediate closure of his three OCF Coffee House locations on Monday, a week after OCF workers informed him of their intent to unionize.

Feibush, who met with available staff in person Monday afternoon, called the shutdown a difficult decision, citing rising costs, reduced sales, and the expiration of leases for a business that he said was never profitable during its 13 years.

”But we pushed forward because we understood the positive impact we were making in our communities and the importance to maintain a level of compensation and benefits ... that you each deserved,” he wrote in an email announcing the decision to staff who did not attend Monday’s meetings. Combined with financial and logistical headwinds, however, “the administrative and legal costs associated with your desire to organize has regrettably moved us beyond any cost that we could sustain,” he wrote.

Feibush said about 45 people worked at OCF’s coffee shops, two in South Philadelphia and one in Fairmount. He said that the company would provide workers health, vision, and dental benefits for three months, and that some would receive severance. Feibush said workers had received $20 to $25 an hour in salary and tips, plus benefits.

Serving coffee ... these malcontents were already receiving $20 to $25 per hour in salary and tips, plus benefits! What more do they want for such a low-skill job? 

Twenty-three OCF workers presented Feibush a letter on June 3 asking for voluntary recognition of their union. They went public with their organizing campaign on social media the same day, announcing their intent to join Local 80, the barista union that represents workers at several Philadelphia cafes, including Elixr, ReAnimator, two Ultimo shops, and all three Philadelphia locations of Bluestone Lane (where workers voted unanimously to unionize in May). They formally filed a petition with the National Labor Relations Board for a union vote on June 5.

Reached Monday night, OCF Fairmount baristas Alex Simpson and Ava Alabiso said they were still reeling from the announcement of the abrupt closures, which they learned of via email. “This does feel like retaliation,” said Alabiso, who was also an assistant manager. “It’s all just so incredibly sudden. We’re all just in the lurch trying to figure out what to do.”

"Retaliation"??? You idiots ... the owner is under absolutely no obligation to continue losing money in order to fund an increase in your standard of living, especially when you are not doing anything to make the enterprise profitable. He's not your sugar daddy. 

Simpson said the workers involved in OCF’s union campaign had considered this potential outcome but had not thought it was likely.

Yeah, you didn't think - THAT is painfully obvious. 

“There was some talk of shutting down but we genuinely believed that our connections with the community, especially in Fairmount, are so strong that he wouldn’t do it — we’re where people get their drinks and their lunch and have meetings every single day,” Simpson said. “I just think it’s really reflective of how little Ori actually cares about the community to shut down these locations.”

Alex Riccio, a Local 80 spokesperson and the organizing coordinator of the Philadelphia Joint Board (PJB) of Workers United, shared a statement on behalf of PJB Workers United, of which Local 80 is an affiliate.

“OCF workers took a courageous stand against a bully boss and slumlord to say that enough is enough and they demand better working conditions,” Riccio said. “That same bully boss chose to shutter his operations, without even the grace of advance notice.”

ROTFLMAO! "Bully boss" and "slumlord," eh? These malcontents were already being paid handsomely, and by their own words, they enjoyed their time at OFC Coffee - and they desperately want their employment to continue. Your would-be union members did not give him any advance notice before extorting him with union demands, did they? The owner's decision is perfectly understandable. 

Riccio said PJB Workers United would mobilize labor and community allies to protest the OCF closures, beginning with a protest Tuesday morning outside the Fairmount shop, where a “sip-in” had previously been planned. “There is a movement behind these workers,” Riccio said, “and this movement has a long memory.”

There's nothing behind these workers, you asshole ... they won't be in your union ... they are now scrambling for other jobs, most likely outside your union's domain. You pumped 'em up with false hope and then left them high and dry. 

Mounting costs

Reached by phone Monday, Feibush said OCF’s shops had always been subsidized financially by both OCF Realty, his development company, and by Feibush personally. The cafe chain’s post-pandemic contraction from six locations to three had helped stem the losses. More changes were in the works. As the leases for stores at 20th and Federal Streets and 18th and South Streets came due this summer (while Feibush manages those properties, he does not own the buildings), he had planned to consolidate those locations to a single shop on Washington Avenue. The Fairmount Avenue shop’s lease was set to expire in a couple of years.

“We had closed our least profitable stores over the years and we were losing less money every month than we had historically,” Feibush said.

But the costs associated with responding to the union organization were “staggering beyond anything — tens of thousands of dollars in just the [last] week and a half,” he said. “It put its finger on the scale in such a profound way as it relates to the finances of the organization that it was just a strain that we couldn’t reliably overcome.”

Feibush said he himself has patronized his shops every day for the last 13 years, and that he wrestled the difficult decision to close over the last week. “This is a significant part of my personal and professional life,” he said. “I’m sad that it’s abrupt as it is and this is certainly not the narrative or the story that I had hoped for,” he said. “This just feels like everyone’s a loser.”

After deciding to close, Feibush wanted to deliver the news in person. The Inquirer reviewed an email staff received on Friday informing them that all three shops would close early on Monday afternoon for nonmandatory (“but encouraged”) meetings with Feibush in their respective locations, and offered options for alternative times and one-on-one meetings. Feibush said only seven employees across the three stores attended the meetings, including four managers. (Feibush said he had offered some managers the chance to run any of the locations on their own — taking over the lease and operating independently.)

Only 7 employees (4 of which were managers) showed up to talk with the owner. That tells you everything you need to know, right there ... the malcontent employees did not care what the owner had to say ... they just wanted to use the union to unilaterally dictate terms to the owner about his own business. Like it or lump it. Well, boys and girls - he lumped it. Happy now?! 

“I just wanted to be in front and accessible to the folks that work for me,” Feibush said. “It’s also strange to me that in every opportunity, folks didn’t want to speak, didn’t want to have a conversation.”

Union drive

Simpson and Alabiso said the 23 workers who signed onto last week’s union letter had decided to skip the meeting in advance. “We expected Ori to talk to us out of unionizing,” Simpson said. “If Ori wanted to talk about what changes could be made to the workplace, we could’ve done that with a mutually agreed-upon contract.”

Organizing efforts began at OCF in January, the baristas said. Alabiso cited verbally guaranteed raises that weren’t followed through on and discrepancies in pay and working conditions between front and back of house. “We realized that we had no way to fight back besides individually when things like that were happening,” Alabiso said.

While they were both still absorbing the swift closure of OCF’s shops, Alabiso and Simpson do not see it as the end of their efforts. They both expressed gratitude for Local 80, which has organized a GoFundMe for former OCF workers. Other Local 80-affiliated baristas have reached out in solidarity.

“We have now support from labor organizations, including legal support for us, so we can continue to fight,” Alabiso said.

Oooh, having other Local 80 union members reaching out in solidarity must be of YUGE comfort, eh? Helps you pay all of your bills, does does it? BWHA HA HA HA HA HA!!! "Continue to fight"? All you're going to be doing is kicking a brick wall with your bare foot. 


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