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Grande computer glitch

Starbucks’ stores go dark; Durango keeps it light

SEATTLE – Starbucks was back in business Saturday after a computer outage forced thousands of its stores to close early the night before.

The company said the outage was resolved Friday night after several hours. The glitch affected registers at 7,400 company-operated stores in the U.S. and 1,000 in Canada and prompted some stores to give away drinks.

“All Starbucks stores in the U.S. and Canada are expected to open for business as usual on Saturday,” the company said in a statement late Friday. “We apologize to our customers for this inconvenience.”

Starbucks said the outage was caused by “a failure during a daily system refresh.” Jim Olson, a company spokesman, stressed it was an internal issue and that no external breach was involved.

The problem began in the evening Friday on the East Coast, with workers posting hand-written “Cash Only” signs on windows and giving away free drinks and food because they were unable to ring up orders on registers. Starbucks initially said stores would remain open during the outage, then changed course and said it decided to close stores early.

At a Starbucks in Seattle, customers were told workers couldn’t process orders and were offered coffee at no charge.

At the company’s downtown Durango location at College Drive and Main Avenue, store manager Thomas Twitchell said they remained open and met their customer’s needs despite the computer glitch.

“We did some free coffees and pastries,” Twitchell said. “It would be better to make people’s day today and they’ll come back tomorrow.”

He said despite the viral glitch, store employees made the best of it.

“It was a good time, the baristas handled it really well,” he said.

Others at a Starbucks in Phoenix weren’t as happy.

“I have a sleeping baby in the back, and I’m waiting for a prescription,” said Claudia Larson, of Scottsdale. “I wanted a coffee! I’m bummed!”

Starbucks stores typically are busiest in the mornings when people are on their way to work, meaning the impact of the outage on sales could have been far worse. Still, the company has been trying to attract more customers in the late afternoons and evenings with an expanded menu of food and drinks.

Most fast-food and restaurant chains have some type of computer system that lets them track sales at registers companywide, said John Gordon, a restaurant industry analyst and consultant. But Starbucks is different from many others because it owns the majority of its locations in the U.S., whereas chains like McDonald’s are mostly owned by franchisees.

That could mean the sales register system Starbucks uses is far more integrated across stores, Gordon said.

In Williamsburg, Virginia, Tom Roberts was part of two couples who stopped by a Starbucks after dinner. He said they accepted the store manager’s offer of free coffee or tea.

“They were super polite in coping with it,” he said of Starbucks’ staff.

Some customers took the news harder than others.

“One guy had been driving all day; he was anxious for a nice fancy Starbucks – but she gave him a large coffee, and he was cool,” Roberts said. “I think he had a little craving going.”

Associated Press writer Traci Carl contributed from Phoenix. Brandon Mathis of The Durango Herald also contributed to this report.



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