Starbucks said Thursday that the company will allow anyone to use its bathrooms after two black men were arrested for sitting inside one of the coffee chain’s Philadelphia shops.

Howard Schultz, the coffee shop’s chairman, said while speaking at a Washington think tank that the company wants everyone to feel welcome, according to The Washington Post.

“We don’t want to become a public bathroom, but we’re going to make the right decision a hundred percent of the time and give people the key,” Schultz said, “because we don’t want anyone at Starbucks to feel as if we are not giving access to you to the bathroom because you are less than.”

Schultz also addressed the April 12 incident in Philadelphia when Rashon Nelson and Donte Robinson were taken away in handcuffs for sitting inside the location while waiting for a business associate.

“We were absolutely wrong in every way. The policy and the decision [the store manager] made,” he said. “It’s the company that’s responsible.”

Starbucks implemented an anti-bias training, which Schultz said is a part of the company’s responsibility to address race issues.

“We can all remember with horror and shame what we witnessed as Americans in watching Trayvon Martin and Eric Garner and others be murdered,” he said about two black men who were killed during altercations with a police officer and a neighborhood watchman.

“We know this is the third rail. We know how difficult it is… but let’s have the moral courage to try and elevate the conversation.”