good things are happening
As Starbucks partners like Miguel Barajas support front-line responders – volunteering shoulder-to-shoulder in response to the global pandemic – Starbucks as a company is too, providing free coffee and making donations to strengthen their mental health.
Store manager Ann-Marie Lee-Teahen began volunteering with the Canucks Autism Network, located across the street from her Starbucks, to help out.
This week, Starbucks store lead Kirti Sharma and her all-female team opened a new café in the heart of Delhi, one of two new Starbucks stores in India staffed entirely by women.
The beloved pets of customers going through the drive thru are featured on a Georgia stores’ “Four-legged Wall of Fame."
About a third of the residents of the Navajo Nation don’t have access to running water, which is a big problem during a health pandemic when handwashing is one of the primary risk-reducing recommendations.
Massive peaceful protests for racial equality at the Wisconsin state capital gave way to destruction and shattered windows in a historic Madison neighborhood.
From delivering coffee to every police station in Washington D.C. to an Illinois store manager giving his cell number to ambulance drivers to call when they need a boost.
When doctors and nurses in hard-hit New York City called for coffee, Starbucks partners delivered.