Politics & Government
National Labor Board Formally Recognizes WI Colectivo Union
The board rejected management's appeal to block a union forming at Colectivo outlets in Milwaukee, Madison and Chicago.

March 25, 2022
The National Labor Relations Board has rebuffed Colectivo Coffee’s management appeal to block employees from being represented by a union that won a majority vote at the company last year.
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The board, in Washington, D.C., acted Thursday, issuing a one-sentence decision rejecting the Milwaukee-based company’s petition to review an earlier order that certified the union to represent the employees. The company’s appeal “raises no substantial issues warranting review,” the NLRB decision states.
The union election covered employees at all 15 of Colectivo’s outlets in Chicago, Milwaukee and Madison. It was the largest successful union drive in Wisconsin in at least a decade, covering as many as 400 or more workers in the coffee chain’s stores as well as in its production and shipping operation.
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A majority of employees whose votes were counted in the union election a year ago voted for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) to represent them after a group of Colectivo workers began organizing in 2020.
Employees who sought union representation said they were frustrated by concerns about equipment maintenance, scheduling and pay, including during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The owners and management of Colectivo Coffee have said numerous times publicly that once the process has run its course to exhaustion, they would bargain in good faith with their workers,” said Dean Warsh, business manager for IBEW Local 494 based in Milwaukee, in a statement the union issued Friday. “Well, that time is finally here and we look forward to the owners and management of Colectivo Coffee joining us and their workers at the bargaining table to begin negotiations on a fair, equitable and historic first contract.”
Colectivo management did not respond immediately to a request for comment that was made through its Milwaukee public relations firm, Mueller Communications.
The company had staunchly opposed the union drive, claiming unionization would harm the “culture” of the business. That opposition drew widespread attention, with critics inside as well as outside the labor movement calling it inconsistent with the company’s longstanding cultivation of a socially and politically progressive image.
The election, using mail ballots, was held over a three-week period in March 2021. The initial count in April was tied at 99 votes for and against the union, but with an additional 16 ballots that remained sealed because of challenges to the eligibility of the voters. Seven of those voters were ultimately ruled as eligible and their ballots were opened in late August; all seven elected the union, resulting in the 106-99 final tally.
The union’s certification at Colectivo is believed to make the coffee chain the largest in the country with union representation.
Nationally, employees at Starbucks Coffee outlets around the country have been organizing, with pro-union votes prevailing in several elections that have been held so far. That campaign, unlike the one at Colectivo, has been conducted at individual stores rather than company-wide.
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