Inside Starbucks' Dirty War Against Organized Labor [View all]
By Megan K. Stack
Contributing Opinion Writer
July 21, 2023
NOTTINGHAM, Md. Agnes Torregoza came to this country when she was a toddler, brought from the Philippines by her parents. Her mother found a teaching job in the Baltimore County Public School District, and the family set about cobbling together a new life.
Both parents eventually got union jobs in the public schools and moved with their children into a prefabricated home in the unincorporated reaches of the Baltimore suburbs. Her parents, Ms. Torregoza explained, had very definite ideas about the aesthetics of the American dream everything should be fresh.
My parents are really into, Oh, were in America, Ms. Torregoza, 20, said. I want to have a brand-new house. I want to have a new car.
When it came time to forge her own path, Ms. Torregoza, a slight woman with a black fringe of bangs and exactingly applied makeup, puzzled over her options. Shed graduated from Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, a competitive magnet high school, and took some community college classes. She dreamed of attending a liberal arts college, but found the cost of tuition both unattainable and philosophically repellent.
FULL story:
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/21/opinion/starbucks-union-strikes-labor-movement.html