Apple Closes Only Unionized US Store While Offering Transfers Elsewhere

What You Need to Know
- Apple closing unionized Towson store while offering transfer rights to non-union employees at two other closing locations.
- Collective bargaining agreement ties transfer rights to new store opening within 50 miles; no new store planned.
- Towson Town Center mall has declined for years; Apple exiting underperforming locations aligns with broader business strategy.
- Unionized workers voted to organize in 2022, ratified contract in 2024, store closing eight months later.
The real story here is not that Apple is closing three stores. It is that the only unionized Apple retail location in the United States is being shut down while its workers are denied the transfer rights offered to employees at the two non-union stores closing the same day.
Apple’s stated reasoning is contractual. The collective bargaining agreement signed in 2024 ties transfer rights to a new store opening within 50 miles of Towson. No new store is planned, so Apple says severance is the correct remedy under the contract the union itself negotiated. That framing is legally tidy, but it sidesteps the obvious optics problem: non-union employees at Trumbull and North County are being moved to nearby locations, while the union members at Towson are being paid to leave.
Towson Town Center’s decline is real. The mall has shed anchor tenants for years, and Apple closing there is consistent with its broader strategy of exiting underperforming mall locations. That context matters because it makes the closure defensible on business grounds alone, which is precisely what makes the situation useful to Apple regardless of intent.
The Union’s Narrowing Options
IAM has accused Apple of union busting and is pushing for equal treatment before the June 20 closure date. Some Maryland lawmakers have backed the workers publicly, but no legal mechanism has surfaced that would delay or reverse the closure. The union’s leverage here is almost entirely reputational.
The Towson employees voted to unionize in 2022, bargained for two years, ratified a contract in 2024, and are now watching the store close eight months later. Whatever Apple’s intentions, that sequence is the one other Apple retail workers will remember when considering whether to organize.
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