Starbucks to Pay
$85,000 to Settle Suit Over Fired Barista with Bipolar Disorder
(June 21, 2007) -- Starbucks Corporation will pay $85,000 to settle a
disability discrimination lawsuit filed by the US Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the agency announced on June 13, 2007. The
EEOC claimed that a Starbucks in Seattle, Washington discriminated against a
barista because of her disability — a psychiatric impairment — in violation
of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). According to company
information, Seattle-based Starbucks owns or licenses more than 9,000 stores
in all 50 US states and more than 3,000 in 39 foreign countries. Christine
Drake, who has
bipolar disorder, performed her barista duties satisfactorily for two
years at a Starbucks shop in the Queen Anne area of Seattle after being
granted an accommodation allowing for extra training and support, according
to the EEOC's lawsuit (No 206-CV-1323 MJP). But, during her third year, new
management told her she was "not Starbucks material," refused to continue
the accommodation and ultimately fired her for discriminatory reasons, the
agency alleged.
Starbucks agreed to pay Drake $75,000 and donate another $10,000 to the
Disability Rights Legal Center, which provides legal representation for
low-income people with disabilities facing discrimination, as part of the
settlement. In addition, Starbucks reaffirmed its commitment to the ADA and
agreed to train managers and supervisors about discrimination prohibited by
law and to voluntarily provide information to the EEOC concerning its
handling of disability discrimination complaints for the next year.
"The facts of this case illustrate how relatively minor accommodations are
often all that disabled people need to be productive members of the work
force," said the EEOC's San Francisco district office director, Joan
Ehrlich. "It is important that all of Starbucks' managers understand their
legal duties regarding disabled employees and provide them with the tools
necessary to succeed. This is in everyone's best interest."
Source: WaltersKluwer
Last updated: 06/07
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