This post was co-authored by Lambda Legal Staff Attorney Sasha Buchert and Lambda Legal Senior Attorney Natalie Nardecchia.
For wait staff earning the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, a proposed Trump administration regulation would make all of their tips the property of their employer – thus permitting the employer to legally pilfer them. This new regulation would reverse the longstanding practice of the Department of Labor and an Obama-era regulation that tips are property of the employee.
So, what does this mean, exactly? It means that when you go to a restaurant and leave a tip for your server, you’ll have no guarantee that the server will actually get to keep any of that gratuity. The employer controls those funds and has complete discretion.
The new regulation, viewed widely as a gift to the restaurant industry, could lead to employers legally taking an estimated $5.8 billion worth of their workers’ tips as their own property.
This regulation is touted as giving employers “freedom to share” tips with “back of the house” workers such as dishwashers and cooks (who are certainly underpaid), but there is no requirement that employers actually share and distribute tips instead of lining their pockets or using them to pay general bills. And ultimately, employers should not be permitted to rob one employee of their wages and property in order to subsidize the cost of paying another employee a living wage.
Workers in the restaurant industry – particularly people of color, immigrants, young people and women – are already vulnerable to rampant wage theft, along with discrimination and harassment. LGBTQ restaurant workers also often face their own brand of discrimination and harassment as well. This can manifest in pressure to conform to gender stereotypes or conceal their identity in order to obtain employment, earn tips and avoid retaliation. LGBTQ restaurant workers’ complaints are also often not taken seriously, despite the fact that they face high rates of sexual harassment on the job.