Anonymous wrote:I think servers are against it based on hopes and dreams and unknowns, much like many people are against a change, particularly if a well-funded industry group has been whispering in your ear for a long time that this will end badly for you.
I'm voting for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think servers are against it based on hopes and dreams and unknowns, much like many people are against a change, particularly if a well-funded industry group has been whispering in your ear for a long time that this will end badly for you.
I'm voting for it.
Because you know more about what's better for them than the people actually working in the industry?
Anonymous wrote:I think servers are against it based on hopes and dreams and unknowns, much like many people are against a change, particularly if a well-funded industry group has been whispering in your ear for a long time that this will end badly for you.
I'm voting for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s a very recent job listing for a parking attendant in DC. Starting pay is $12.50 an hour. This list is TOTAL BS.
https://g.co/kgs/u8AAx8
Uh, so? Your n=1 "evidence" is meaningless.
That doesn't mean all garages are paying that much. That's the payment if you speak English and have the necessary technology in your personal possession to answer an ad. Other places hire via word of mouth and pay less, especially if you speak limited English.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s a very recent job listing for a parking attendant in DC. Starting pay is $12.50 an hour. This list is TOTAL BS.
https://g.co/kgs/u8AAx8
Anonymous wrote:Here’s a very recent job listing for a parking attendant in DC. Starting pay is $12.50 an hour. This list is TOTAL BS.
https://g.co/kgs/u8AAx8
Anonymous wrote:BS. Show me ONE massage therapist making $3.33 an hour.
Anonymous wrote:Folks, here's the list of jobs that would be affected by this. All these jobs are making the minimum "tipped wage" of $3.33/hour because they also get tips.
While all the focus has been on restaurant workers, these other job categories get nowhere near close to actual minimum wage based on tips. And in many cases their employers refuse to pay them the differential, as required by law.
It's absolutely insane to me that nail salon workers are making just over $3/hour. Absolutely ridiculous.
List of jobs that would increase to $15/hour with an 8 year phase-in period by voting Yes on 77:
-Front of house restaurant employees (servers, hosts, etc)
-Back of house restaurant employees (dishwashers, food prep, janitorial)
-Car washers
-Nail salon workers
-Parking attendants
-Valets at the hotel
-Landscapers
-Housecleaners
-Hair stylists
-Massage therapists
-Baristas
-...basically anyone who may get a tip.
The list is bonkers of individuals in the service industry who get these artificially low wages, simply because they may (or may not!) get a tip.
However, this debate overlooks that in the District of Columbia, nearly 60 percent of tipped employees work in non-restaurant industries—including the hair stylists, manicurists, cosmetologists, hotel workers, taxi drivers, delivery drivers, parking lot and garage attendants, car wash workers, and others that make up the approximately 17,000 tipped workers not in the restaurant industry.
...
If passed, Initiative 77 would immediately raise the base wage for tipped workers to $4.50 in July and provide increases of $1.50 every year thereafter until reaching $15.00 in 2025.[1] By 2026, the wage for all workers would be $15.00 and indexed to increases in the consumer price index.
...
D.C.’s regulations provide a list of tipped employees that reaches far beyond the restaurant industry: “waiters, waitresses, counter personnel who serve customers, bus persons, server helpers, service bartenders, car wash attendants, parking lot attendants, parking garage attendants, bootblacks, hotel doorkeepers, bellhops, hat checkers, cosmetologists, manicurists, pedicurists, shampooers and aestheticians.” Out of the 17,000 tipped workers not in the restaurant industry, car wash workers represent about 500, personal care workers (like hairdressers, shampooers, and manicurists) alone number at least 1,000 in the city, hotel concierges and baggage porters around 1,500, and parking lot attendants almost 2,500.[6] Many workers in the gig economy who work for tips may also not be accounted for in official estimates.