The new code of conduct also bans discrimination or harassment, consumption of alcohol, smoking, drug use, and panhandling in ...
If you want to hang out or use the restroom at Starbucks, you’re going to have to buy something. Starbucks said Monday it was ...
Enforcement of in-store policies often falls to front-line workers. The union that advocates for their interests wants them ...
Planning to pop into Starbucks to meet a friend, use the restroom or the internet? You better order a latte or cold brew ...
Its "open door policy" is now being altered, ostensibly to "deter homeless people and non-paying customers who have come to ...
Starbucks, the Seattle-based coffee chain, has been in business since 1971. It recently reversed its open-door policy — and ...
Starbucks is ending its open-door policy, which allowed anyone to use its restrooms or hang out without making a purchase.
Starbucks is reversing its open-door policy after almost seven years, now requiring that people make a purchase if they want ...
And the people needing to use the facilities aren’t just people out on a shopping trip. They are Uber drivers, Amazon drivers ...
Starbucks announced reversing its open-door policy, initially introduced in 2018 to promote inclusivity. From January 2025, non-paying visitors will no longer have automatic access to its spaces.
The days of walking into Starbucks to use their free Wifi are over unless you make a purchase. The major coffee franchise recently changed its code of conduct.
Starbucks announced the company would reverse its "open door" policy, limiting the use of its premises to paying customers ...