In 'open carry' states, guns and Starbucks mix uneasily
Loading...
| San Francisco
Starbucks has become something of an unwilling pawn in a growing dispute over gun rights.
Advocates of so-called 鈥渙pen carry鈥 laws, which give citizens the right to wear unconcealed weapons without a permit, are hailing it for not kicking gun-toting customers out of their stores. Gun foes, meanwhile, say the coffee chain should keep its stores firearm-free (while not refusing any espresso-sipping police officers, of course).
As for Starbucks, it would rather stay out of the debate altogether.
鈥淭he political, policy, and legal debates around these issues belong in the legislatures and courts, not in our stores,鈥 the company said in a Wednesday.
When it comes to the gun issue, Starbucks said it will abide by state laws. If a locale in which one of its shops is located allows open carry, it鈥檚 not about to tell anyone wearing a revolver to get their latte elsewhere. That, the company said, would put their employees 鈥渋n an unfair and potentially unsafe position.鈥
Starbucks found itself in the middle of this debate after open-carry advocates began gathering at coffee shops as part of a loosely organized movement to raise awareness about gun rights and to protest policies that limit concealed weapons permits.
In California, where it's legal for residents to display unloaded weapons without a permit, businesses are within their rights to forbid guns on their premises. After the open carry groups began gathering at Peet鈥檚 Coffee and Tea and California Pizza Kitchen, both chains opted to ban guns. (The Monitor wrote about the growing open carry movement here.)
The anti-gun violence Brady Campaign has urged Starbucks take a firm stance against open carry.
"The practice of packing heat in places like Starbucks is intimidating and could be potentially dangerous to our families and communities 鈥 and it must be stopped," the group said in a . It has launched an online petition to pressure the coffee chain to change its policies.
While Starbucks hasn鈥檛 taken sides on the debate, it's suddenly become the gun advocates鈥 favorite coffee shop.
At, a forum for open carry information, , "I've never been a fan of Starbucks coffee, but i may have to buy one here and there now."