Buffalo, New York, has been a key hub within the current uptick of worker-led, store-level union organizing, especially among baristas and food service and grocery workers. From SPoT Coffee to Starbucks, the Lexington Co-op to Remedy House, the city has generated a collection of inspiring union victories and a growing layer of skilled labor organizers.
Now, another well-known Buffalo shop may be joining the union ranks. Around two dozen workers at Elmwood Taco and Subs (ETS), the cityās popular food shop, areĀ votingĀ on a union tomorrow. Workers went public with their union on October 23,Ā citingĀ a range of grievances and a desire for better treatment from management.
Since announcing their union, ETS workers toldĀ TruthoutĀ that theyāve faced numerous instances of employer retaliation and have been subjected to a captive-audience meeting. Workers United, the union representing the ETS workers, has filed a charge with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) that alleges 17 unfair labor practices.
Despite the pushback, workers have remained determined and confident in victory, boosted by their own culture of friendship and solidarity, and supported by others in the Buffalo-area labor movement.
āI really feel like weāve got an amazing chance here to turn things around and make sure that people are paid living wages and not struggling,ā said ETS Shift Supervisor Zach Eyler. āWeāre fighting for whatās right for everybody.ā
āItās Just a Systemic Problemā
If youāre a Buffalonian, you almost certainly know about Elmwood Taco and Subs, a mainstay in the heart of the cityās iconic Elmwood Village. Youāve probably even stopped by ETS after a late night out or to soothe a morning hangover. Itās a fun place for customers.
But behind the counter, workers say itās a different story.Ā TruthoutĀ spoke with several unionizing ETS workers who described a deeply stressful work environment and major grievances around everything from hours and wages to sick pay policies.
Workers say they were promised raises over the summer that they never received. They say they are penalized for missing a shift even if they find a replacement, and that their hours can change significantly from week to week, leaving them struggling to pay their bills. They say their shifts are moved around without proper communication.
Workers said that owners only give them a half day of sick pay even when they take a full day off because they are sick. One worker, Abel Lopez, said the owners have asked for a doctorās note when workers call in sick. āThat really made everyone upset,ā Lopez toldĀ Truthout. āSome people just get a common cold.ā
WorkersĀ TruthoutĀ spoke with added that these workplace issues stem from a larger problem at ETS: the management style of the co-owners. Workers overwhelmingly spoke of a stressful work environment, created by the two sibling co-owners who manage ETS, marked by fear, anxiety and micromanagement.
Workers say management controls and intimidates workers through a write-up system. Some expressed fear of being ridiculed or yelled at by the owners. āThey just give a lot of people anxiety,ā said Lopez. āWe all fear that we will lose our jobs.ā
Since the union was announced, workers say the hyper-control has gotten worse, with the owners now constantly in the store, closely watching them. It makes work ā50 times more difficultā when theyāre there, said Shift Supervisor Violet Seguin.
ETS is owned and run by the Lucchino family. Ron LucchinoĀ openedĀ the store in 1975, and his children, Jackie Kooshoian and Mike Lucchino, now run ETS. The Lucchinos have extensive property holdings in Buffalo, having accumulated parcels for nearly aĀ half-century. They own the bulk of the coveted Elmwood Avenue block that ETS calls home.
ETS workers toldĀ TruthoutĀ the owners have made comments about their appearances that they feel are inappropriate. Many are upset over recent firings of cherished coworkers that they feel were unjustified.
āItās just a systemic problem,ā said ETS worker Ash Shanahan.
āIām Going to Fight for My Coworkers and My Friendsā
In early September 2023, a few ETS workers met with some organizers from Workers United Upstate New York, whose ranks include former Starbucks baristas who, in 2021, initiated the current union drive at the retail coffee giant. They spoke for hours. ETS workers were unsure about trying to unionize for fear of retaliation, but the conversation with Workers United convinced them that something had to be done.
āThey really helped us all understand what the point of the union is,ā said Seguin. āItās to help workers get our voice out.ā
Buffalo offered a supportive setting for ETS workers. The first StarbucksĀ to unionizeĀ in late 2021 is literally right next to ETS. Workers knew about other local food and coffee stores that have unionized āĀ SPoT Coffee, theĀ Lexington Co-op,Ā Remedy HouseĀ ā and have friends who work in those places. Workers United, and its embrace of worker-led, store-by-store organizing, has a growing presence in Western New York.
Some workers remember seeing the first Starbucks store unionize in December 2021, right next to ETS. āWe saw them unionizing,ā said Eyler, āand we were like, āGod, we wish that were us.āā
Eyler knew about unions from reading about the struggles of coal miners a century ago. āThey fought for their rights, and they got them,ā he said. āWho says we canāt?ā
By mid-September, the union drive was on. ETS workers met in each otherās apartments. They joined group chats. There was a lot of enthusiasm about the union, even if it was coupled with some nervousness.
Shanahan, who had become increasingly frustrated with management decisions, heard about the union in early October. āI was like, āIām totally down to do that,āā she said.
The friendships between many ETS workers were a major factor in the unionās growth. They care about each other. Some socialize outside of work. A union, they say, would mean stronger protections and better working conditions for their coworkers.
When Lopez heard about the union drive, he was immediately interested. āI love everybody at my job,ā he said. āI was like, āYes, Iām going to do it. Iām going to fight for my coworkers and my friends.āā
Shift Supervisor Seguin agrees. āI feel like the union brought us a lot closer,ā she toldĀ Truthout. āWeāre actually talking about our struggles together.ā
The decision to go public with the union came quickly after the owners learned that workers were organizing. On October 23,Ā a group of workers handedĀ one co-owner aĀ letterĀ stating their intent to unionize. āWe represent a majority of our coworkers and are requesting to bargain,ā it said. It states grievances around firings, a write-up system, shift changes and the need for a raise.
āWe stand together, and shall advance with the utmost confidence, professionalism and love for craft into the future of ETS,ā the letter reads.
āI Feel Like Theyāre Working Me Twice as Hardā
ETS workers have been energized by their union drive. Many now sport union pins on the job. They have beenĀ making signsĀ together and handing out leaflets in front of their store. Theyāve been buoyed by the support in Buffalo, a region withĀ 23.5 percentĀ union density. They feel confident going into the November 28 NLRB vote.
At the same time, the lead-up to the vote has also been stressful. Workers tellĀ TruthoutĀ they are experiencing retaliation for unionizing and facing numerous employer anti-union tactics.
The owners have constantly been in the store since they learned about the union, whereas before they were present much less, workers toldĀ Truthout. Some workers say their hours were cut after the union announcement, and organizers set up aĀ GoFundMeĀ to support them.
Workers say rules that were hardly mentioned or enforced before the union announcement, such as around phones and uniforms, are now strictly monitored. (Starbucks workers who have unionized have allegedĀ similarĀ management tactics.)
āItās been pretty stressful the past couple of weeks because theyāre over-supervising everyone now,ā said Seguin. āI feel like theyāre working me twice as hard.ā
WeĀ reached out to ETS for comment but did not receive a response.
Workers United has filed an unfair labor practice charge against ETS that they shared withĀ Truthout. The charge includes 17 alleged unfair labor practice violations such as āsurveilling employees using security cameras in the store,ā āinterrogating employees about their union activity,ā and āthreatening employees that the employer is going to change the schedules and restructure the workplace,ā all āin response to union activity.ā
The union says that ETS also held a captive audience meeting with workers to discourage unionization. The union showed us photographs of a multipage handoutĀ that workers received that contains numerous anti-union talking points.
For example, it asks āCan the union actually deliver what it promises?ā and then cites the lack of a contract, so far, for Starbucks Workers United ā but fails to mention Starbucksās historic union-busting campaign that has resulted inĀ hundredsĀ of unfair labor practices charges and numerousĀ rulingsĀ that Starbucks has violated federal labor law.
The handout also states that āETS Does Not Believe That a Union Is Necessary For Employees To Be Heard For Your Work In a Small Family Business.ā
John Logan, an expert on the anti-union industry at San Francisco State University, toldĀ TruthoutĀ that employers use captive audience meetings to inundate workers with āanti-union propagandaā and foster fear and intimidation about unionization.
āTheir purpose is really to terrorize employees. They want to create an incredibly tense, stressful atmosphere,ā he said. āBut of course, the thing thatās causing the stress for workers is the employerās anti-union campaign and their captive meetings ā itās not the union.ā
Logan notes that NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo hasĀ pushedĀ to make employer-run captive audience meetings illegal.
Workers say the ETS owners are also claiming that shift supervisors shouldnāt be included as part of the unionās bargaining unit because of their āsupervisorā roles. ETSās handout from the captive audience meeting says that it āreserves the right to challenge any vote by any supervisor in the election, or any attempt to include any supervisor in the union.ā
But ETS workers thatĀ TruthoutĀ spoke with say shift supervisors donāt possess real managerial authority, including hiring and firing power, and mostly do the same work as everyone else.
āEmployer manipulation of the bargaining unit has long been a strategy in NLRB elections,ā said Logan. Trying to cast workers as āmanagersā is āmore common in smaller workplaces,ā he said, āand itās obviously particularly true if those workers are likely to be pro-union.ā
All this has caused stress for some ETS workers. āIāve lost a little bit of sleep over it,ā Eyler toldĀ Truthout. But he remains undaunted in his support for the union.
āIn the end itās going to be worth it,ā he said. āWeāre doing the right thing.ā
āWe Just Want a Healthy Work Environmentā
Workers hope a union will improve bread-and-butter issues for them. They want better wages, stable and sufficient hours, and better sick day policies, among other things.
But perhaps most of all, they want to transform their work environment to feel more supportive and safe. They believe a union will give them the power, voice and protection to do that.
āThe biggest thing would be being able to go into work and just not be afraid of being punished or reprimanded,ā said Eyler.
āThe union will help to negotiate better working conditions,ā said Lopez. āWe finally have a team to back us up. My coworkers arenāt scared anymore.ā
ETS workers toldĀ TruthoutĀ that their goal in unionizing isnāt to damage ETS but to make the store a better place for everyone.
āI hope that our bosses understand that weāre not trying to hurt the business,ā said Lopez. āWe just want a healthy work environment and we just want the workers to be treated like normal human beings.ā
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