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Servers and bartenders create a website to preserve the tip credit

in Credit
3 min read
Servers and bartenders create a website to preserve the tip credit
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In a swipe at the pro-union forces lobbying to kill the tip credit, two groups of restaurant servers have joined forces with an employer-backed industry think tank to explain why they’re fighting to preserve a payroll break for their bosses. 

The parties have collaborated on a website where 19 veteran servers attest that their livelihoods and lifestyles would worsen considerably if the credit was taken away, a direct refutation of the argument sounded with vigor by union-backed groups such as Restaurant Opportunities Centers United (ROC). The credit allows restaurants and other employers of regularly tipped employees to treat gratuities as part of their wages. Instead of paying at least $7.25 an hour, as federal law mandates, those employers only have to pay $2.13 directly to waiters, waitresses and bartenders, provided those individuals collect at least another $5.12 in tips.

ROC and affiliates such as the Service Employees International Union maintain that paying a lower direct wage to servers is unfair, and contend that the convention subjects waitresses to sexual harassment and other unacceptable behavior because they can’t risk the loss of a tip by resisting. 

Other proponents, including many servers, base their support on purely financial considerations. They figure that killing the credit would bump up the income of waiters, waitresses and bartenders by forcing their employers to pay a full minimum wage in addition to whatever tips they collect.

But that may not be the case, say the servers who posted their videotaped opinions on the new website, Our Industry, Our Voice. Included among the testimonials is one from Joshua Chaisson, a server at the Porthole in Portland, Me., who saw his income erode when Maine dropped its tip credit as the result of a ballot referendum. Customers figured they no longer had to tip, since Chaisson was collecting a full wage, and the higher outlay of his employer did not cover what he lost in gratuities. Servers in Maine banded together and convinced state lawmakers to reinstate the credit. 

They also lent their support to servers in other jurisdictions where a discontinuation of the credit was under consideration, forming a national group called Restaurant Workers of America. A similar group, DC Bar and Restaurant Workers Alliance, came together in Washington, D.C., after residents of that jurisdiction voted in a ballot initiative to drop the credit. District lawmakers subsequently reinstated it.  

The two employee groups joined forces with the Employment Policies Institute, a research and public opinion think tank affiliated with well-known restaurant lobbyist and political insider Rick Berman, to launch Our Industry, Our Voice. The Institute is backed by restaurant chains and suppliers.

Testimonials on the site contend that killing the credit would greatly cut into the flexibility that many servers and…



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