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BEYOND LOCAL: To what extent should employers control tips in the hospitality sector?

Hospitality workers across the country are concerned about efforts by employers to zero in on their tips. The ongoing labour dispute at the Rainforest Cafe in Niagara Falls underscores the alarm
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This article, written by Alison Braley-Rattai, Brock University, originally appeared on The Conversation and is republished here with permission:

The ongoing labour dispute at the Rainforest Cafe in Niagara Falls, Ont., highlights a growing concern among hospitality workers across the country — employer control over their tips.

Unionized servers, bussers and hostesses at the Rainforest Cafe have been on strike since early April. They are trying to bargain their first collective agreement with their employer, Canadian Niagara Hotels. Canadian Niagara Hotels owns the Rainforest Cafe location, as well as several local-area hotels and attractions.

Both the substance and the administration of the employeror’s tip-sharing policy remains a key sticking point in the dispute.

They can’t take my tips, can they?

Tips make up a substantial portion of a server’s income. And yet, prior to 2016, there was nothing in Ontario law that prevented employers from taking servers’ tips for any reason whatsoever: to cover breakage, theft by patrons, general renovations and other capital investments, to redistribute to other workers, or, simply, to keep them.

Tips are not counted as wages. And, contrary to the popular view, until recently, servers were not legally entitled to them.

Across Canada, regulation of tips and tip-sharing is more or less robust. For instance, Québec gives complete control over tip-sharing arrangements to the employees themselves. Not only are employers forbidden from imposing tip-sharing arrangements upon employees, but the employer has no role in the administration of any such arrangement except at the request of the employees.

Newfoundland and Labrador’s statutory language is similarly clear in terms of giving individual employees control over the tips they earn. By contrast, some provinces do not regulate tips at all, meaning employers may do with them as they please.

While Ontario and British Columbia do regulate tips, they give employers large discretion over them. Both jurisdictions forbid employers from taking tips to pay for business expenses. But beyond that, the employer has nearly complete control over any tips and tip-sharing arrangements. This includes how much is to be collected, as well as administration over the redistribution process, and — to a very large extent — who is to be included in what’s known as the “tip-out pool.”

In Ontario, and under amendments introduced in B.C. in late April, proprietors are forbidden to participate in tip-out pools except under certain narrowly specified circumstances. Whether front-line managers can participate —and under what circumstances — is less clear. The inclusion of front-line managers in tip-out arrangements is a central focus for striking Rainforest Cafe workers and others.

Tipping-out is the new battleground

Tip-sharing is not a new phenomenon. It has been described as a means of remedying the pay inequity between serving and non-serving staff. This certainly sounds laudable and is perhaps appropriate in some circumstances. After all, some non-tipped workers (bussers, kitchen staff) may also face precarious conditions — low wages, uncertain hours — and they contribute to the ability of the serving staff to do the job for which they receive tips.

But employer control over tips is a new battleground for many hospitality workers. Servers object to unilateral increases to tip-out amounts and the extension of tip-out pools to previously excluded employees. They say it amounts to clawing back gains made through improved employment standards legislation, notably minimum wage increases.

Servers are concerned that tips are being funnelled to higher-paid or salaried employees as a means to maintain a particular compensation level for those employees; “taking from Peter to pay Paul.

Employer control over the arrangement also makes it vulnerable to abuse. In Ontario, there is no real way to ensure that tips are being collected and redistributed in accordance with any employer policy or even in compliance with the law; the requirement to provide pay stubs, for instance, does not extend to information about tips.

This is concerning given revelations of systemic violations of employment standards and Ontario’s recent cutbacks to proactive enforcement measures.

Strong legislation and strong unions

The dispute at the Rainforest Cafe highlights both the need for strong employment standards legislation and strong unions.

Robust employment standards legislation is necessary if we’re serious about ensuring workers receive basic protections. For example, tip-sharing should be regulated, at a bare minimum by requiring transparency.

But even where employment standards are strong, rarely are individual workers able to enforce rights on their own; a tip-sharing policy that violates employment standards would not likely be rectified by an individual employee. Unions provide workers with effective grievance procedures, as well as expertise that individual employees cannot otherwise normally access.

Workers at the Rainforest Cafe decided to unionize in March 2018 over the employer’s tip-sharing policy. They wanted a say over both its substance and its administration. Nearly a year later, they are on strike against a highly profitable employer that is intent on redistributing servers’ tips in response to minimum wage increases.

How the dispute will resolve itself is still an open question, but the strike has brought attention to a gap in public policy that allows employers to “take from Peter to pay Paul.”The Conversation

Alison Braley-Rattai, Assistant Professor Dept. of Labour Studies, Brock University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.