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A judge just said a RUH Starbucks can't *only* speak English.

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Starbucks in RUH got issues, my people

Okay, so this is actually wild. You know how you just want to grab your coffee, maybe a scone, and carry on with your day? Apparently, at the Royal University Hospital Starbucks, it's not that simple. A Saskatoon judge just ordered the Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission to hear a complaint about a Starbucks employee allegedly telling a customer, Vanessa Casila, that staff could *only* serve people in English. According to the employee, it was due to a Saskatchewan Health Authority policy.

Now, hold on. Saskatoon is a city that will invite you to a farm-to-table dinner and then make you defend the concept of a city for twenty minutes, but we also pride ourselves on being welcoming! The idea that someone at a Starbucks, especially one in a hospital, would tell a customer they can only be served in English because of some policy? That just doesn't sit right with my spirit. We have people from all over the world coming to RUH for care, for work, for visits. Imagine being in a vulnerable situation, and then being told you can't even order a latte in your own language. It's like, what is really going on here?

### What This Means for Saskatoon

* **Hospital Vibes:** Hospitals are meant to be places of healing and comfort, not language barriers. RUH is a huge part of our community, sitting right there on the riverbank near the U of S campus. You expect a certain level of inclusivity.

* **Customer Service in the Bridge City:** We are a diverse city. From the Broadway Bridge to the Farmers' Market, you hear so many languages. Our businesses, especially those in high-traffic areas, need to reflect that.

* **The "Policy" Question:** Is there *really* an SHA policy like this? And if there is, why? This whole situation just raises more questions than answers about how we’re serving our community, literally and figuratively.

This isn't just about a coffee order; it's about whether our public spaces, even franchised ones, are truly accessible to everyone in Saskatoon. Because if you can't even get your caffeine fix without a language barrier, what does that say about the bigger picture?

Blessing Adesanya, MiTL Sports Desk, Saskatoon — seven bridges, two rivers, and something happening you haven't heard about yet.

My people on the morning show are always on top of these stories — catch the full scoop live at mornings.live!

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The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →