Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't think someone going to pick up your food and bring it to your house requires a tip?
No I don’t. I live in California so we pay $9-11 in fees on a $20 order, because we also pay for the drivers to have benefits. I’m not tipping you when I’m helping pay your health insurance. I don’t even get health insurance through work!
My job, which requires a graduate degree, pays $50/hour. I don't get paid for any time that I don't work, and that includes bathroom breaks. No job security, no vacation, no benefits. But for some reason, I have to tip everyone else, and the people receiving these tips think the minimum wage should be as high as 25/hour.
I do support a much higher minimum wage. But tipping needs to go. And also, if minimum wage is even 15/hour, then entry level jobs requiring a BA need to pay more since they barely pay more than the equivalent of 15/hour now. And then if those jobs are paying the equivalent of 25-30/hour, then mine should be paying at least 70. I don't think minimum wage workers understand that a lot of people are making 35K per year with a college degree and aren't getting any tips.
I agree with no tipping. But why should graduate degrees automatically entitle us to more pay?
Why do you think?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't think someone going to pick up your food and bring it to your house requires a tip?
No I don’t. I live in California so we pay $9-11 in fees on a $20 order, because we also pay for the drivers to have benefits. I’m not tipping you when I’m helping pay your health insurance. I don’t even get health insurance through work!
My job, which requires a graduate degree, pays $50/hour. I don't get paid for any time that I don't work, and that includes bathroom breaks. No job security, no vacation, no benefits. But for some reason, I have to tip everyone else, and the people receiving these tips think the minimum wage should be as high as 25/hour.
I do support a much higher minimum wage. But tipping needs to go. And also, if minimum wage is even 15/hour, then entry level jobs requiring a BA need to pay more since they barely pay more than the equivalent of 15/hour now. And then if those jobs are paying the equivalent of 25-30/hour, then mine should be paying at least 70. I don't think minimum wage workers understand that a lot of people are making 35K per year with a college degree and aren't getting any tips.
I agree with no tipping. But why should graduate degrees automatically entitle us to more pay?
Anonymous wrote:It's fake and they are both in on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't think someone going to pick up your food and bring it to your house requires a tip?
No I don’t. I live in California so we pay $9-11 in fees on a $20 order, because we also pay for the drivers to have benefits. I’m not tipping you when I’m helping pay your health insurance. I don’t even get health insurance through work!
My job, which requires a graduate degree, pays $50/hour. I don't get paid for any time that I don't work, and that includes bathroom breaks. No job security, no vacation, no benefits. But for some reason, I have to tip everyone else, and the people receiving these tips think the minimum wage should be as high as 25/hour.
I do support a much higher minimum wage. But tipping needs to go. And also, if minimum wage is even 15/hour, then entry level jobs requiring a BA need to pay more since they barely pay more than the equivalent of 15/hour now. And then if those jobs are paying the equivalent of 25-30/hour, then mine should be paying at least 70. I don't think minimum wage workers understand that a lot of people are making 35K per year with a college degree and aren't getting any tips.
You know by now that income does not correlate with education.
My dd is in NYC, early 20s, among the thousands trying make it in the arts. She works part time at night in a private dinner club as a host. Her base salary is $45 per hour. Tips more than double her salary. Before that she worked in a high end restaurant as a hostess. $15 per hour plus tips. People would hand her $100 for seating them. Some of the regular Wall Street guys would give all the front house staff a $50 bill when they walked in.
The 1% are not cheap. It’s the middle income that’s cheap. The working class guys will tip their last dollar because they understand.
Strippers make a lot of money too.
This scenario is irrelevant and yes, income does correlate with education. Why else do we send our children to college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't think someone going to pick up your food and bring it to your house requires a tip?
No I don’t. I live in California so we pay $9-11 in fees on a $20 order, because we also pay for the drivers to have benefits. I’m not tipping you when I’m helping pay your health insurance. I don’t even get health insurance through work!
My job, which requires a graduate degree, pays $50/hour. I don't get paid for any time that I don't work, and that includes bathroom breaks. No job security, no vacation, no benefits. But for some reason, I have to tip everyone else, and the people receiving these tips think the minimum wage should be as high as 25/hour.
I do support a much higher minimum wage. But tipping needs to go. And also, if minimum wage is even 15/hour, then entry level jobs requiring a BA need to pay more since they barely pay more than the equivalent of 15/hour now. And then if those jobs are paying the equivalent of 25-30/hour, then mine should be paying at least 70. I don't think minimum wage workers understand that a lot of people are making 35K per year with a college degree and aren't getting any tips.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I let drivers know up front the tip is $0, how is it my problem when I let them know in advance there is no tip? I’m in Los Angeles and get my orders within 30-45 mins weekly. We pay super high feee for their gas, benefits, La la la la la etc. I’m letting you know up front it’s a no tip order, how can you possibly be upset when I tell you in advance??? I’m not tip baiting, I don’t put $20 tip and then change it to zero. I’m 100% letting you know that if you choose to deliver my order, you are choosing zero tip. What is the problem here?
I would be afraid the delivery person would tamper with my food.![]()
+1 with good reason~
Nah I live in California and we have tamper seals in the delivery food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I let drivers know up front the tip is $0, how is it my problem when I let them know in advance there is no tip? I’m in Los Angeles and get my orders within 30-45 mins weekly. We pay super high feee for their gas, benefits, La la la la la etc. I’m letting you know up front it’s a no tip order, how can you possibly be upset when I tell you in advance??? I’m not tip baiting, I don’t put $20 tip and then change it to zero. I’m 100% letting you know that if you choose to deliver my order, you are choosing zero tip. What is the problem here?
I would be afraid the delivery person would tamper with my food.![]()
+1 with good reason~