What Will It Take to Unionize Chipotle?
Workers in Michigan became the first Chipotle employees to ever win union recognition. Three years of fighting management for a contract they didn’t get taught them everything the next Chipotle union campaign will need to know.

Even though union efforts have yet to result in contracts, Chipotle workers and their campaigns demonstrate what is possible. (Scott Eells / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
In August 2022, workers at a Chipotle in Lansing, Michigan, voted 11-3 to unionize, becoming the first and only employees at the chain to ever win union recognition. Three years later, they still don’t have a contract. After years of bargaining, the Chipotle corporation and Teamsters have indefinitely paused negotiations, and workers no longer anticipate a collective bargaining agreement at their store.
The Chipotle Union of Teamsters (CUT) is now winding down its campaign, but the organizers who built it don’t consider it a failure. Core members of the CUT organizing committee, Atuyla Dora-Laskey and Harper McNamara, are now looking back on their three-year campaign and its anticlimactic close and still finding reasons for optimism.
Despite the outcome in Lansing, Dora-Laskey told Jacobin, “I think it’s really possible. I know this is hopeslop but actually doing it and getting so close to it happening made it actually feel like way more possible than it was when it first started.” If workers are interested in organizing other locations or other restaurants altogether, she advises, “You should unionize.”