6 Latinx and Other People of Color Owned Coffee Shops In Your Hood To Know
Two black men walked into a Philadelphia Starbucks store, sat down to have a conversation while waiting for a friend, without an order of coffee. Some time later, they were handcuffed and walked out by local police. National protests erupted mainly staged at Starbucks locations. The Starbucks Philadelphia store manager was fired for calling the cops on the black men and Starbucks corporate was swift in the announcement of a shut down of 8,000 stores to hold a racial-bias training to 175,000 employees on May 29th. Starbucks is expected to lose between $6 to $8.5 million dollars in revenue due to the shutdown. The rep of Starbucks is damaged for sure! The two black men were awarded a financial settlement along with college funding from Starbucks. The city of Philadelphia responded in mutual agreement with the two black men, with a $1 million dollar settlement and a pledge to set up a $200,000 program for young entrepreneurs.
People of color/Black/Latinx/Indigenous have to walk with the possibility of being racially targeted, at the hands of ‘white fear’ into spaces that may not be diverse in people. The question comes, how can the restaurant industry avoid the ‘Starbuck’s incident’ so that patrons and employees can exist in harmony?
You know how BoldLatina do it – we love our Starbucks on the corner, but we know we have options – coffee shops and cafes owned, operated and preserving space for community, for all, including people of color.
OAKLAND
Hasta Muerte a worker owned collective coffee shop in the Oakland neighborhood of Fruitvale made headlines earlier this year for refusing to serve police officers. Fruitvale was on the map for where Oscar Grant died at the hands of police brutality – widespread protests later prompted the birth of the Black Lives Matter movement.
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SAN FRANCISCO
Tierra Mia Coffee is a well-know franchise in California, both northern and southern locations serve up horchata latte frappes and the tres leches muffins are to die for. Bernal Heights is one location we love!
LOS ANGELES
Porto’s Bakery in Burbank, Buena Park, Glendale and Downey is where the bomb Cuban cortadito can be found. You can also find hearty Cuban sandwiches and their famous potato balls.
CHICAGO
Currency Exchange Café serves up Mexican, Filipino and American style café classics. It’s dope.
WASHINGTON DC
DC Conscious Café “feeds the mind, body and soul’ for real. The black owned social enterprise café offers community dialogue and much more through their innovative business model for the local community.
ATLANTA
Urban Grind Coffee House is a black owned coffeehouse that holds Thursday night open mic nights, poetry slams and other cultural art events.
Updated 5/4
Head over to our Instagram post for a growing coffee shop list contributed by our readers!