Starbucks Corp was back in hot water on Friday, three months after a branch manager called the police on two black men — this time for seemingly mocking a customer with a stutter.
When the customer, called Sam, gave his drink order in a Philadelphia Starbucks on June 27 he stuttered over his name.
The barista replied “Okay, S-s-s-sam” and, retrieving his iced coffee, found the label was marked “SSSAM,” said Tan Lekwijit, who is Sam’s friend and a business school student.
When Sam e-mailed the company to complain, he was offered US$5 credit, but Lekwijit said Starbucks had “missed the point” and took to Facebook to “raise awareness.”
“It was about how you treat people with speech impairments, not how you write names,” he wrote.
“I am writing this not because I want to get anybody into trouble, but because I want to raise awareness among the employees,” he said.
“There are many people with speech disorders who are in a worse position than my friend’s and struggle with self-esteem and self-confidence,” he said. “Getting this kind of treatment from people, especially service employees, only scars them — and I beg Starbucks employees to have this in mind.”
The employee has been sacked, Starbucks said on Twitter on Thursday.
“We have zero tolerance for discrimination and are addressing this immediately,” the company wrote on Lekwijit’s Facebook page.
On May 29, Starbucks closed more than 8,000 US stores to train 175,000 employees against racial bias, following outrage sparked by the April 12 arrest of two black men in a different Philadelphia branch.
The manager called the police after one of them asked to use the restroom and the pair sat waiting for a third person without ordering anything.
A video that went viral showed uniformed officers questioning then handcuffing the two men, who put up no resistance, while a white client repeatedly asked an officer: “What’d they do? What’d they do?”
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