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Under California’s Fair Employment & Housing Act, employers may require their employees to follow “reasonable workplace appearance, grooming, and dress standards.” ...
Companies should consider changing their dress codes in 2025 as a way to boost employee retention and better reflect their company’s culture. That’s the consensus of experts in the wake of the ...
The new dress code will be enforced in North American locations starting May 12 Starbucks Starbucks is changing up its look. The coffee chain announced on Monday, April 14, that it will be ...
But the new dress code — which takes effect on Monday, May 12 — only allows baristas to wear a black top, while their bottoms are required to be black, khaki or blue denim.
Starbucks implemented a new dress code on May 12, limiting baristas to black tops and black, khaki, or blue denim bottoms. Over 1,200 Starbucks employees staged walk-outs at roughly 100 stores to ...
The change appears to align with the company's 'Back to Starbucks' strategy under CEO Brian Niccol, who assumed the role in August. The barista union has objected to the dress code change.
It’s not just at restaurants that the dress code has become more relaxed; it’s pretty much everywhere. People don’t dress up for the theater, the opera, work or travel.