I feel betrayed that these laws are enacted without capping or preventing the practice of tipping. I doubt that tipping could be banned constitutionally due to past supreme court precedents but we really should re-evaluate and try to get rid of this practice. Why does a certain class of workers get this benefit that perpetuates race and age discrimination (white and young employees get tipped a lot more).
Wouldn’t a blanket ban on “asking for tips” be an infringement on a person’s freedom of speech? It’s essentially just asking for some money, which surely anyone is free to do
It depends if you mean the individual asking, or if they're asking because of company policies.
We ban businesses from having signs that are too tall or too bright, from doing door to door soliciting, making phone calls without consent, and a pile of other behaviors that could all be labeled as "speech", but which people find extremely irritating.
The difference is temporal: tip is for a "past" already rendered product or service. Sbf, Holmes, et al, it's about a promise for "future" services, which have a risk associated of no delivery or render. When you've already eaten your burger there was no risk of uncertain delivery. The causal relationship is reversed
True generally, but it gets murkier all the time. Just last week I ate at a traditional restaurant that stated up front that there is a 15% service charge on all checks. This was in a city that has a very high minimum wage even for tipped employees. More traditionally, parties of a certain size at a restaurant always are charged a fixed gratuity.
Then there’re the square terminals that are normalizing up-front tipping for everything, not even just food service anymore. I’m sure I’m not the only person who has tipped up front for something and the service wound up being terrible. So there are three examples of tipping towards the future.
There’s another future component to tipping: in many places there is regulation that states if the tips don’t make up the prevailing normal minimum wage, the employer must pay the difference in salary. I’ve personally never seen this happen and I worked for tips for about 7 years.
That could be tricky. When I live, a cold burrito in a refrigerator cabinet is considered to be groceries, and is untaxed. Heat up that burrito, and it's a taxable meal. Also, some non-profit organizations aren't taxed on purchases, so the sticker price is the final price for them.
You can't pre-calculate the final taxed price using the local tax algorithms as they are today. They number can't be known until the transaction takes place.
if that is the case then the rules are too complicated and need simplifying. that is not automatically an argument to not have a rule to list the full price, but it could also be an argument to remove or change other rules that make things more complicated. the lawmakers here need to weigh the pros and cons for each.
For a given class of goods Europe generally has one VAT rate for the whole country.
In the US the sales tax for a given in-person sale is the state sales tax, plus possibly county sales tax, city sales tax, and sometimes even special tax district sales tax.
For remote sales, it is similar except the tax is computed using the buyer's location rather than the seller's location.
They can do that but that costs money so they never will. We worship the dollar like its a god above gods. No way we're going to willingly do something that costs the rich a dime more than absolutely necessary.
VAT is deductible if the buyer is a VAT registered business. The amount of VAT is still printed on the receipt by law, so you can still know how much you pay.
Companies already manage seperate ads in the EU for language, currency and price discrimination reasons, it's really not a huge bother.
So customers cannot deduct VAT from their personal taxes...
I also doubt that separate ads per township are common in EU. For example, in Los Angeles the city is made from several separate townships with different sales taxes, two shops on the same street may have different taxes because one can be in LA and another in Santa Monica.
Em.. no, the advertised price usually says "latte 4.50" but at the register it gets mysteriously padded with sales tax, tip tax, foo tax and bar tax, so you have to pay 6.50.
Nobody thinks anything is getting "padded" with sales tax other than Europeans who have never heard of the practice before and can't get over the fact that ~5% (the median US sales tax is 5.1%) wasn't disclosed as if that is making their breakfast unaffordable.
You're never required to tip so the "advertised price" and the price at the register are identical. You choosing to leave $2 on top of that doesn't change anything, even if it's only done through social pressure.
Which bit do you not understand? End point taxes are not ubiquitos, and at least other countires have decent laws so people can see what they actually pay.
> You're never required to tip so the "advertised price" and the price at the register are identical. You choosing to leave $2 on top of that doesn't change anything, even if it's only done through social pressure.
Taxes and tips aren't the same thing. Their $2 example is something you are required to pay.
Silly attempt at shrugging off legitimate complaints notwithstanding, at least use an average sales tax when you do.
Now it just comes across as you saying that half the country is above 5%, which would’ve been a more honest statement as it seems considering few states however around 5% combined sales tax: https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/2023-sales-tax-rate...
Revoke the alcohol license if there are tip jars present, if its mentioned on receipts, the point of sale system, or if staff brings it up
Other discretionary things can be revoked too. Easements, performances, outdoor dining. This is entirely easy.
Have random audits to see how often payments match the receipts
Have a consumer protection agency launch random lawsuits and distribute funds to patrons
Encourage staff to mention that everyone is paid a full wage and have similar disclaimers on the menu and receipt, just like they put shellfish and undercooked disclaimers on the menu and in some places have to state it verbally
Create liability so that any private lawyer can try to sue everyone just like was done to create California’s cancer disclaimer, they can function alongside the consumer protection agency
Make it illegal for point of sale systems to push tipping for certain merchant codes, merchants have to snitch on the POS provider and vice versa when anyone questions why the system is guilt tripping them into a tip
Everyone is a node within a network, graph theory, you can control behavior by regulating the intermediary, the nodes will flip their behavior in a distributed fashion. Think about everything that way and you can find how to control all facets of life under any governance system.
When the town clerk is processing your building permit they can't ask for a tip. Well, they can and do in some cultures, with the understanding that you'll get better service! But it's illegal in the US.
So it's not too difficult to imagine that it can be done.
One option is to ban a business from asking soliciting tips, or regulation on payment processors who do business in Chicago to remove the tip line. It's possible but it would see a lawsuit for restriction of speech. IANL but that may not be enough of a defense, since the customer is still free to give a tip (speak with money) but the business would not be allowed to solicit gratuity's.
This is true, but two things mitigate it. The first is that if you're the one paying the bill, it's pretty easy to do so in a way that nobody you're with can tell how much, or if, you tip. The other thing is that the social consequences aren't that large.
To be transparent, if I saw someone not tip when they took the bill I’d say something. I’ve heard of people looking explicitly at tips when evaluating dates, because it’s perceived as a (vague) proxy for empathy. I’ve also seen workers complain to the customer over not tipping, so you can totally be “outed” by them too.
I’m against tipping like a lot of this thread, but it’s a standard practice in the US. Being the one non-tipper is not changing the system, you’re just hurting the service worker.
In San Francisco..yeah. At least when I lived there the general mentality of servers was a littlw militant. Not tipping a bartender by mistake had one almost come across the bar at me. If I were not tipping in a major city, I would hustle out before the server noticed.
Attractiveness isn’t a protected class, and gender in this case goes opposite the direction people usually complain about. If you want moral sympathy for a cause, it’s helpful to pick a subset of the intersection between your cause and the morality that will be most impactful.
I was strategizing with a friend recently about how they could get a fresh start somewhere new. They're broke, have been unemployed for years and are dealing with fairly severe mental health issues. They have some skills, but will likely need a flexible, unskilled job in the beginning. So I started scouting out cheap cities and noticed an interesting trend. The rent for a 1-bedroom in a decent part of a city in Kansas is about the same as an equivalent in South Dakota, arounds $700/mo. The difference? The lowest you can get paid in SD is 33% higher than in KS. $7.25 (the national min wage) versus $10.80.
It would take a lot more work for a thorough analysis, but my quick assessment found SD and neighboring Nebraska ($10.50) to be top states to live off of minimum wage in large town/small city.
I was very focused on finding nice-ish apartments in core downtown areas, which changes the equation a bit. Bakersfield has 1-bedrooms for under $800/mo, but nowhere near their downtown. In Spokane I'm seeing virtually nothing for under $800/mo, let alone downtown.
A number of states have minimum wages substantially higher than $10.80, and also have large towns/small cities. I might look at one of the smaller cities in California (minimum: $15.50), Illinois ($13), NY ($14.20), or Maine ($13.80). Note that I am specifically not talking about the "flagship" cities in the big states here, where costs are much higher than the rest of the state.
One can rent a 1BR in the $700 range in all of these states. And while some aspects of cost of living may be higher, the $4.70/hr difference between SD and CA translates to an additional $752/mo of income.
I mentioned in another comment, but I was looking only for nice 1-bedrooms in core downtown areas, which is a big limitation. But I will expand the search. Maine sounds especially interesting.
I'm still in contact with someone who lives in the west slope of Colorado. Lives in a small city of ~20,000, and splits a 2BR with a friend. His share of the rent and utilities is under $350/mo. I think the actual rent is $550/mo. He's in walking distance (5 - 15 minutes) of everywhere he needs to go, including no fewer than two supermarkets and a Wal-Mart.
The Dakotas do tend to be very cheap, but also parts of the Rocky Mountain rain shadow, parts of Appalachia, and a few other pockets around the country.
Do employers in KS actually pay only minimum wage? Minimum wage in Utah is a joke if you actually want to find anyone to work for you anywhere near Salt Lake City.
Good. I can take or leave the practice as a customer. I generally tip 20% unless the service is exceptionally good or bad, so it'd work out mostly the same for me if restaurants just raised their prices 20% and got rid of tipping.
But there are a couple of recent developments I absolutely loathe:
1. Mandatory service charges on top of the bill. No, sorry, that's bullshit. If you want to charge more, charge more. Yes, that will make your published price reflect the real cost. That's a feature, not a bug. When I find out I'm at such a place -- usually too late, after I've eaten -- I tip max(0, 20% - service fee). In other words, I apply the service fee toward what I would have tipped. If the servers aren't getting that fee and they quit because their tips suck, that's on the owners.
2. Asking for tips for everything. Earlier this week I went to a shop that sells cakes that're made off-site and shipped in. I asked a cashier for the cake I wanted, she turned around and picked it off a rack and handed it to me, and the checkout terminal asked for a tip. For what? Nothing against the cashier, but I'm offended at the shop for having the nerve to even ask.
I get why employers like tipped positions: they can get away with paying less, guilt tripping customers to make up for low wages with donations. Nah. I'll continue tipping people I would've tipped 5 years ago, like waitstaff, barbers, etc. I'm not going to start tipping every not-traditionally-tipped employee just to cover for their employers.
I have to wonder how much the tips on those new advanced checkout terminal actually go towards the particular worker; most of the time it just seems like a default situation where the business barely understands how to setup the terminal let alone turn it off
But _should_ they go to just that particular worker?
In HS, I washed dishes in a restaurant in my hometown. The waiters (all white, young attractive 20 somethings) would _occasionally_ share out a few dollars of tips to us on a very busy night. The dishwashers were highschool students immigrants. The work for dishwashers naturally scales linearly with the number of orders.
Certainly I think it's BS that as a customer, I'm not sure whether the management is just taking these (and telling their workers "oh, you're getting minimum wage; you don't need tips"). But if we're gonna be tipping for _every_ service, should the person that takes your coffee order get the whole tip, rather than the person who's making drinks, or doing prep work in the back?
Does anyone know if all the time, it is not possible for the staff to know if you tipped or not when using the terminal? Not for post-pay but pre-pay, e.g. buying a coffee. I would generally be inclined not to tip in these situations but am worried my drink will be contaminated if I don't.
I have a feeling the answer is yes, or don't know, and if there were any regulation enacted the best would be to ensure gratuities before service provided are either banned or guaranteed to be hidden. Gratuities after service provided don't seem to require any restriction.
Disclaimer: I live in a country without tips and love it, would feel better on trips to the US if it were the same.
Visa/Mastercard also have an incentive not to help the shop owners not remove the tipping screen, because Visa/Mastercard charge a percentage of the transaction size. Removing the tip option has an impact on their profits.
No one seems to know how to configure them. I'm in Australia and the tip screens show up on them now so the staff press "skip" on it before they hand it to you. Including the business owners.
Well, you don't _have_ to give a tip even if prompted. Part of the struggle here is learning to ignore any internal shaming mechanism for valid conditions where no tip is warranted - specifically, taking a product off a shelf and charging you money for it. There is no circumstance where I'm tipping in a retail environment, specifically basic shopping activities. I'm starting to wean myself off of pandemic-era tipping for take-out orders (I tip 10% for to-go now).
Part of the whole donation industry and now tipping-everywhere practice is just basic money-harvesting, like putting a net in the river and seeing what they can harvest from randos at scale. But there is some interest-balancing that needs to be considered, specifically my need to not hemorrhage money. At some level the expectation gets kind of insulting. Checking out at a grocery store? Want to round up to donate to some non-audited cause you never heard of that has a plausibly good name? Wassamatta? You hate kids/puppies/poor/refugees/war victims/elderly???? No, I hate being taken advantage of and hate my kindness being leveraged, GTFO.
I'm good about turning that potential internal shaming into annoyance with the employer. For me, that means that every ridiculous request for tips gives me a bad feeling about the business, either shame for being pushed into tipping, or frustration that I had to spend emotional effort to avoid it. Either way, it leaves me with a bad feeling about the place, and makes me less likely to go back.
Picking up, I tip excessively for delivery, and honestly it's because I've been both a delivery driver and standing at the ovens, so it's purely a personal sort of nostalgic solidarity/empathy/love to send some joy their way in the form of cash. I know I appreciated it back in the day and was very grateful for it. I don't have any love or respect for the social glare or tip shaming, however. It's gotten out of hand.
The thing that really gets me, which I've only ever seen in Chicago is this mysterious 3-5% fee added to every bill, but which the restaurant will immediately remove for you if you ask what the hell it's for.
In DC we call that a tourist fee. Several of the restaurants near the National Mall will add a "guest fee" or "tourism fee" to the bill, but you won't find it explained or listed anywhere. They probably rake in a lot of money from foreign tourists that way.
I don’t agree with all of that, like no way I’m tipping at a buffet where I’m not receiving any service. It’s more illustrative of how weirdly complex this all gets.
I was always under the impression that the mandatory service fees (like for groups of x or more) was just a way to make sure that the wait staff don't get stiffed. If the service fee is 20%, I just tip 0% unless I feel inclined to tip more on top of that.
That's the interpretation I'm going with. Here, though, there are quite a few restaurants that add a service fee to all dining. If you eat there alone, you're getting a 20% fee.
The headline seems incorrect, though. In Los Angeles, the minimum wage is $16.04 across the board, because California doesn't allow employers to deduct tips from base wages (aka "tip credit", the loophole that allows subminimum wage for tipped workers in most places).
Also, New York is larger than Chicago, and the minimum wage for tipped service employees is $12.50 ($10 for tipped food service workers) in the hospitality industry, and $15 for any tipped service workers not employed in hospitality. That's technically "subminimum" because it's less than the minimum wage in New York City, but in most places the tipped minimum wage is closer to $2 (ie, basically all earnings are due to tips), which is a very different situation from being guaranteed $10-$12.50/hour.
The fourth paragraph in the article explains LA already does it and lists every state. The first paragraph and the original title users the word "independently" to emphasize it was Chicago's choice and not a statewide mandate like LA.
Really, this should be fixed as a misleading change-of-title when posting to HN. Who can summon dang?
California is the worst state for tipping as of today. [1]
Once it’s fully phased in I’ll change my tipping percentage to 10% from the typical 20%. I expect most people will rationalize this since menu prices will rise.
I wonder what that means for the culture of tipping. A real side effect of this will probably be restaurant prices going up (no idea of the amount), and that might make people less likely to tip. There's also a psychological effect that not tipping or tipping less doesn't feel as bad now that the workers are getting a real wage on top of tips.
I wonder if this will be the end of tipping. That seems simpler than trying to remember how much to tip is normal where based on laws like this.
I don't see why it would effect tipping at all. Instead of people saying, "wait staff makes less than minimum wage, so don't eat out unless you plan to tip", they will now say "wait staff makes only minimum wage...".
Ah, Californian checking in here. In both CA and NV (states I'm familiar with), tipped employees always get the full minimum wage on their check (none of that 'credit' nonsense).
You're still expected to tip.. but you're not going to ruin someone's day tipping $2 at dennys when you're by yourself. Or the usual 15% (which at Dennys is probably $2 anyway lol). (I'm sure people will disagree, but YMMV)
As for price increases: Yea, whenever the minimum wage goes up, some places will use it as an excuse to raise their prices. The actual price does not necessarily correlate with the amount the businesses are trying to raise their prices lol. It's kinda funny to watch that because some franchise owners like McDonalds and Subway have raised their prices so much that their prices are higher than a restaurant or a higher end place like Carls Jr or Five Guys lol.
I've already eliminated a huge portion of my tipping, because I'm actively angry about those tip prompts and that everyone and their dog is actively asking for tips these days.
We went through the same transition here in 2022. With actual restaurant data in hand, comparing August 2019 (in an effort to try and avoid any skew COVID might have created) and August 2023 recorded tips, I see no effective change. 2023 saw a nominally higher tip payout per hour, but in line with the rate of inflation.
Tipping certainly hasn't come to an end. That much is for sure.
If you go to some fancy downtown restaurant yea of course haha. But if you are just going to dennys or ihop or red lobster or something? nah just the usual. I mean.. if it's an expensive place, 15% is still going to be a fair amount of money haha.
If waitstaff make the federal minimum wage, they would only be making around 10 dollars (probably less) an hour less than back of the house in my area. Back of house is by far the worse job, so I'd probably start flat tipping 5 - 10 dollars per visit rather than a percentage to bring them to parity with boh.
You’re not legally obligated to tip so I’m not sure how it would be abolished. Best just to stop doing it if you don’t want to.
I’m not sure a law explicitly stopping people from giving more money would pass, but maybe one explicitly asking restaurants to stop asking for tips would work.
The way I've been putting this into practice is to ask my server for their venmo/cashapp and tipping them through that, then writing on the receipt "I don't believe in tipping"
This is the only way I've found to attack the structural problem of tipping without hurting the workers.
This is still tricky for the worker, because waitstaff management uses tip totals as a proxy for worker productivity. I try to offset that by writing on the receipt, which the worker can share to demonstrate it wasn't because they did a bad job.
The rest of the incentives are impacted in the way I want them to be, except for taxation, which I believe in, and the kitchen staff who are usually underpaid with the expectation that a percent of tips will flow to them.
> which the worker can share to demonstrate it wasn't because they did a bad job
Friends in hospitality. Unfortunately, there is a contingent of assholes who do this in lieu of tipping at all. This doubly fucks the server in a place with pooled tips; their colleagues now question whether they stole the tip.
If the tip is for good service, which is ostensibly what it is for, then why should it be pooled in the first place?
If it is out of fairness to the back of kitchen staff, then they should take a front of house job instead. That’s like an engineer demanding to get part of a sales guy’s commission on a sale.
I was at a restaurant the other day and on the bottom of the menu it said "a 2.5% tip will be added to all transactions to help us pay our staff" and all I could think was why can't they just add a dollar to some/all of the menu items instead? If a restaurant needs more money to pay its employees, they should just charge more money. I really don't get it.
No, to me that's totally fine! They know what their costs are and they charge you accordingly.
What bothers me is "the price is $X, but if you don't pay $Y our workers won't be able to make ends meet, please support them!" I don't know how much your workers need, that's your job when you set prices! (And if the price is too high, I won't eat there, no harm done.)
I just wonder if they expect you to also add an additional tip, since 2.5% is so much lower than the standard percentage.
My take is that this is just brainwashing. Technically other than farming and a couple other things (not restaurants), the business owner must pay them the minimum wage if tips don’t meet it, so I personally don’t see any issue.
That being said I generally get take out because many restaurants in my area have a kitchen appreciation fee when you dine in.
> You’re not legally obligated to tip so I’m not sure how it would be abolished.
You legally require it be removed from receipts and PoS systems, and mandate that all tips be taken by the venue rather than going to the workers (or at minimum be distributed evenly between all workers).
A decade or so ago, there was some talk of it eventually being banned by he Supreme Court due to it being de-facto racial discrimination in pay.
Sure, you can always slip them something under the table, but right now it's mostly an official, sanctioned part of their pay.
I like this, but mainly because it will help get rid of tipping.
I suppose alternately some restaurants will add automatic tips to the receipt, which will go to the owner, and the employees will be 100% wage, and no tips. Which basically works out to the same thing with extra steps.
I'm not so sure it will actually cause the employee to take home more money though, I suspect they'll end up with less.
This is already the law in many places, including the entirety of California, and it has neither resulted in the end of tipping nor in restaurants confiscating tips.
Thankfully, it says this in the 4th paragraph, but it still feels misleading, as I was a California hourly worker 25 years ago and, as far as I remember, even then it was not legal to pay tipped workers less than the state minimum wage. So Los Angeles has had this law much longer as a larger city, but yes, that is due to state law, not a city law. But there is clearly not much point in passing a city law saying the same thing as a state law employers in your city already have to abide by. If anything, doing it this way seems too easy to circumvent by attempting to put your site in the suburbs or doing shit like carving out Beverly Hills as its own city.
Or for enforcement purposes. The city may want to put enforcement resources behind the initiative within the cities jurisdiction, but cannot enforce a state law.
Everyone talking about getting rid of tipping is weird to me. I enjoy tipping... It's a privilege to have someone waiting on me, and I want them to know I appreciate it.
EDIT: These replies are wild. Everyone should be able to make a guaranteed living wage (at minimum). Of those in the service industry, I enjoy being able to show my appreciation with a tip. Pretty simple.
Almost anyone coming from overseas to the US thinks it's pretty weird that the US has permitted the creation of a class of workers who can be paid dirt and must live off the gratuities of an informal societal expectation.
Why on earth you've not got strictly enforced mandated minimum wages in many places, where the wages are above the poverty line and there should be a low to nil expectation that as a customer I'm having to reach in to my wallet to pay for their services when I'm also paying the business seems abhorrent.
Tipping should be something that is an exception for exceptional service, and an unexpected act of good will, rather than an expectation.
They still are guaranteed to make minimum wage: if the tips + salary don’t pass the minimum wage threshold, the employer still has to pay the difference.
They almost certainly will be fired. At every restaurant I’ve worked at, the servers made well above minimum wage. If some server is not getting tipped, then management will assume they are doing a horrible job. And I’m not talking about fancy restaurants, just casual places like Red Robin/Applebees.
And then they eat at absolutely any restaurant in the country, and are doubly confused at how the US service employees are so cheerful and helpful and etc.
It fulfills some function, whether or not it's +EV.
So do you apply this rule for everyone who does something for you in your daily life? Do you go into the kitchen and tip the cooks? What about the person who grows the food, and the one who drives it across the country? Do you tip the bus driver and subway train operator who took you to the restaurant? It should be a privilege for you to tip all of them.
There are millions of people "waiting on you" every day so you can live your life comfortably. There is really no logic behind why the pretty waitress deserves tips and everyone else doesn't other than the fact that you grew up with this practice and so it seems normal.
> It's a privilege to have someone waiting on me, and I want them to know I appreciate it.
It’s only a privilege in the same way that any other commercial transaction is. You’re already paying them for a service. Do you care whether the guys operating your local power plant know that you appreciate your electricity?
Its very telling when this is the kind of equivalence someone tries to make about service industry workers.
The act of physically SERVING someone and answering to their every whim is a unique role in society. If you lack the empathy to comprehend that role, then that's on you.
Tipping is not equivalent to empathy. You show empathy by being polite and thanking the person. And in a properly functioning country you can know that the staff are properly paid at least a minimum wage which is sufficient to live properly.
No one said tipping was equivalent to empathy... I said your inability to comprehend the difference between a service industry position and a "power plant worker" displayed a lack of empathy and understanding.
There was an anti-tipping movement in the interwar period in the US, on the basis that such a relationship of explicit subservience and having one's compensation for work subject to the whims of a master is un-American. I tend to agree.
By "interwar" you mean between the Civil War and WWI? Because it was a movement then. Between WWI and WWII (what I would read "interwar" to mean) the anti-tipping movement receded and tipping became commonplace.
I meant between WWI and II. I wasn't aware of the earlier movement. I first became aware of it watching the 1936 film version of The Petrified Forest, which features anti-tipping as a minor background element, and has a contemporary (to its release) setting—the play it's based on was published in 1934.
As I understand it, you were seeing the last vestige of the anti-tipping movement (just based on the timeline) in the movie. A few states even had anti-tipping laws before WWI that disappeared during the 20s.
What’s weird is that for some reason there happens to be just enough people in the US that believe and demand that I have the responsibility as a customer to take care of an employee’s wage negotiation, payroll and in some cases “productivity metrics”. Thus we end up with this stupid “debate”.
It's a privilege to have any service done for you, not just waiting tables.
You are free to give them extra money if you feel that service received exceeds the price that you paid for but it shouldn't be mandatory.
Customer should pay for products and services that's agreed upon. Employer should pay their employees to ensure the quality of the said products and services. There's no reason why a quality of service should be variable based on how generous I feel.
In the places where I am immediately able to tip, I do. Coffee shops, bars, salons, tattoo artists, valets, servers, furniture movers, you name it, I've tipped them.
I think the difference is that I get a tinge of embarassment having anyone wait on me. There's a weird power imbalance I don't like. Tipping helps offset that imbalance and lets them know I appreciate their service.
> It's a privilege to have someone waiting on me, and I want them to know I appreciate it.
If that's what tips indicate, I'd be with you. But it isn't. Tips are expected, and in a sense culturally mandatory. That removes them entirely from being an indicator of appreciation.
Also, tips are now being demanded by pretty much everyone, not just for personal service.
Wasn't considered a "privilege" when I served coffee and pizza from behind a counter at 3am to drunks for no tips except the occasional loose change, that was shared among workers.
I hope so. I’ll probably tip much less (maybe 10%) when there when it’s in full effect. Which is probably too bad for waitstaff. They pulled in much more than minimum wage in most cases and most it wasn’t taxed. I had a friend that cleared $500/night working the Olive Garden back in the day. With this new scheme he’d make $250 if you cut tips in half which I think people will rationalize now.
If you look at California, where we haven't had a separate tipped minimum wage since at least 2016, people still tip the nationwide norm between 15% and 25%.
Certainly looks like a downwards trend though. California is now the worst tipping state. If money continues to get tighter it will become more and more normal to justify a smaller tip. I think you can justify 10% now.
Good! Now for everywhere else, too. That you can legally pay below minimum wage to people working such jobs is a terrible thing for everybody except the business owners who get to underpay people.
The amount of complaining about tipping baffles me. Tipping is a progressive form of price discrimination, where the added profit goes straight into the pockets of labor rather than capital.
Meanwhile, as the customer, I effectively get to bid on the quality of service I receive. One just needs to go to a restaurant in Europe to recognize the vast gulf in quality of service compared to the US, with tipping being the big difference.
This is primarily an accounting and enforcement change. The sub-minimum wage always legally had to be bumped up to minimum wage if the tips were insufficient to do so. The problem was that enforcement (and knowledge of workers rights) was lacking and retaliation was common.
> This is primarily an accounting and enforcement change.
No, it is not primarily an accounting and enforcement change. Previously the first $6.80/hour in tips were simply donations from customers to the employer, because the worker wouldn't see one additional cent from that. Now, 100% of tips are required to be paid to the workers.
Wage theft is still a massive problem - theft due to minimum wage violations alone are larger than larceny, burglary, and auto theft combined - so enforcement is still an issue, not to mention the risk of retaliation. But this law is a material change for people working tipped minimum wage jobs, not just an accounting change.
And now that they aren't taking the tip credit for waitstaff, that money can be combined into a tip pool and shared with the back of the house, who can then have their wages lowered by the expected share of the tip pool. Which could easily be $6.80/hr/waitstaff of savings.
Or, more explicitly, they could make waitstaff tip out the back of the house $6.80 an hour and lower the back of the house wages that explicit amount.
But maybe the back of the house doesn't make enough money to make it up already. I'm not 100% sure of the economics of running a restaurant.
> And now that they aren't taking the tip credit for waitstaff, that money can be combined into a tip pool and shared with the back of the house, who can then have their wages lowered by the expected share of the tip pool.
Not only is this is completely orthogonal to the change in law that's being discussed, this is also already illegal. Tipped workers in Illinois (and most states) cannot be forced to share tips with untipped back-of-house staff.
I'm not aware of Illinois law, and maybe it is different there. (Edit: As of now, , I see no evidence this is a special Illinois law, instead of being the US law discussed below. I continued the thread because maybe someone can show a citation.)
US federal law says that tipped workers cannot be forced to share tips with untipped back-of-house staff unless the tipped workers are paid normal minimum wage. In which case all non-supervisory staff can be added to the same tip pool.
It does not matter for the federal law if the "normal minimum wage" was legally required or optional.
As for orthogonality, the question was "is the first $6.80/hr of tips subsidizing employer wage obligations". If the server is getting more money from the employer but the chef is getting more money from the servers and less from the employer, it's just an accounting change and the total takehome pay of waitstaff, chef and management/owner remains the same.
> I'm not aware of Illinois law, and maybe it is different there. US federal law says that tipped workers cannot be forced to share tips with untipped back-of-house staff unless the tipped workers are paid normal minimum wage. In which case all non-supervisory staff can be added to the same tip pool.
Okay, but we're talking about Chicago, which is in Illinois, and in Illinois this is illegal.
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/state/minimum-wage/tipped
I feel betrayed that these laws are enacted without capping or preventing the practice of tipping. I doubt that tipping could be banned constitutionally due to past supreme court precedents but we really should re-evaluate and try to get rid of this practice. Why does a certain class of workers get this benefit that perpetuates race and age discrimination (white and young employees get tipped a lot more).