Business & Tech

Sephora Store In Towson Is Closing One Day This Week

The beauty product retailer is closing its stores, including its Towson location, the morning of Wednesday, June 5.

The Sephora store in Towson Town Center will be closed Wednesday morning for diversity training.
The Sephora store in Towson Town Center will be closed Wednesday morning for diversity training. (Google street view)

TOWSON, MD — The beauty retailer Sephora will close its more than 400 stores nationwide, including the store in Towson the morning of Wednesday, June 5. Closing will allow Sephora's 16,000 employees to go through diversity training.

The move comes after Grammy-nominated R&B singer SZA said she was racially profiled while shopping at a store in Calabasas, California.

Sephora, which is owned by the Paris-based luxury goods maker LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vitton, does business at Towson Town Center, 825 Dulaney Valley Road, in Towson.

Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The Towson store is on the second level of the mall.

Store closures for diversity training have been in the works for several months and were not "a response to any one event," Sephora spokeswoman Emily Shapiro said in an email to Reuters.

Find out what's happening in Towsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In April, the singer SZA, who is black, said an employee she identified as “Sephora Sandy” called security on her to make sure she wasn’t shoplifting.

Sephora apologized a day after she complained, writing in a tweet:

“You are a part of the Sephora family, and we are committed to ensuring every member of our community feels welcome and included at our stores. We want to let you know we take complaints like this very seriously and are actively working with our teams to address the situation immediately.”

The “inclusion workshops” — which employees in all U.S. stores, distribution centers and corporate offices will be required to attend — is part of a larger “We Belong to Something Beautiful” campaign that has been in the works for about a year to promote diversity within both its staff and customers, the company said.

Sephora said it “will never stop building a community where diversity is expected, self-expression is honored, all are welcomed, and you are included.

— By Patch editors Beth Dalbey and Elizabeth Janney

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