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#24886 |
Illiterate
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Careful Hitch, you'll get us relegated to the Sand Box AKA Politics and Religion.
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#24887 | |
Not scared!
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Certainly, here in the UK, that kind of tax penalty is not in place, so it's good to be made aware that, when I visit the States, it's an entirely different ballgame when it comes to tipping. Last edited by Bilbo1967; 10-28-2014 at 06:49 PM. |
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#24888 |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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#24889 | |
Wizard
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#24890 | |
Opsimath
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However, as more Americans have been traveling outside US borders, they are carrying their tipping with them, and we see many places in Asia these days putting 'Tip Boxes' next to the cash register. Worse still is that in many small restaurants in S.E. Asia, the employer requires his staff to turn over all tips to him! He then doles out a small percentage to them, keeping the larger slice for himself. Perhaps it's time for the US to join the rest of the world (adopting the metric system wouldn't hurt either,) and have employers pay their waitstaff instead of requiring customers to do so. There is no doubt that excluding waitstaff from the Minimum Wage Laws helps the employer's bottom line. Stitchawl |
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#24891 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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As I said: Offer those same waiters and waitresses that alternative--no tipping, but a basic wage--and see EXACTLY how many take you up on it. I think some of you are seeing the picture from one unique viewpoint that isn't necessarily echoed by the same persons you're trying to "help." (And if bad service means that a waitress doesn't make a great wage on one week, her service will be BETTER the next, won't it? Evening the payment field rewards bad servicepeople and penalizes those who work hard; it's right up there with "pooling tips." ) Hitch |
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#24892 | |
Opsimath
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However, having lived in a country where doing one's job to the very best of one's ability is expected, and the concept of tipping not required for the salary of the employee, I've seen that it can work very well for both sides. If that is a 'service industry,' it means providing service to the best of one's ability, not to generate tips, but because that is what 'self-respect' is all about. Unfortunately, in the US, doing one's job to the very best of one's ability is the exception, not the rule. We Americans tend to do our jobs to the level that will satisfy the employer, and little more. The exceptional ones rise to the top, but they are few and far between. In a previous post you stated "I was easily making $150/night, on a regular night (more on weekends), hauling nothing but cocktails.....making $750-$1000 week doesn't sound like the same kind of dough that a Googler makes, but I was barely out of high school, going to school, and it was the 70's. That was a LOT of money." As you say, at this point in time you were just barely out of high school. At this same time period, an Elementary School or middle school teacher who had already spent four to six years studying and training for their profession, and spent a LOT of money to do so, was lucky to be making $35 a day, teaching all day and spending half their evenings and weekends correcting student papers and planning for the next day's lessons. Personally, I'd rather see my money used to pay teachers rather than cocktail waitresses. But that's just me. Stitchawl Last edited by Stitchawl; 10-28-2014 at 10:24 PM. |
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#24893 | |||
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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(Nor will I talk much about just how much FUN it is to be a young woman waitress in a bar with a bunch of boozehounds. You think that Tiffany is having FUN, batting her eyelashes? While she ducks grabby hands and everything else? You've probably never had a drunken patron waiting for you when you come out of the ladies', to paw your bits, right? Well, trust me: Tiffany has.) The flip side for the waitperson is that there's not really any upward mobility; a teacher can move to a better-paying school, or become a principal, etc. Waitpersons are essentially doomed to a life on their feet--which also isn't much fun. Would you feel that a 35-y.o. waitress was "more entitled" to a living wage than one just out of High School? For doing the same job? What if the 20-something was better at it than the 35-y.o.? Is she entitled THEN? Or is only "educated" people that are entitled to earn what a teacher does--someone who works 9 months out of the year? (And that's not to "diss" teachers; but comparing one to the other is a bit ludicrous, in the context of "tipping.") Quite frankly, if anyone in the US gave two hoots about teachers and payment, they'd be supporting charter schools, so that teachers WOULD get paid in accordance with THEIR value, too. (As they, too, would be "tipped" by the people paying for their children's educations, by the tuition payments.) But that's a discussion for another day, and another forum. I don't feel that paying waiters and waitresses tips is "extortion." In fact, it is in keeping with my general take on the world, that good performance is rewarded. What amazes me is that so many people think that restaurants make so much money that they could afford to pay in wages what a waiter or waitress earns, otherwise, in tips. I mean, let's run the actual, real-life numbers: what IS the wage for a waiter in a decent restaurant, in Bangkok? Given that you don't tip there? How much per hour? How much is that person that you're not tipping making, per year, compared to what it costs for someone to live--comfortably--there? Can they buy a house on it? Have a family? What are the real numbers? Hitch |
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#24894 | ||||||||||
Opsimath
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A) during those 9 months puts in 12-16 hour days five to six days a week, and B) In most states, starts working back at school a month before the students arrive, and doesn't finish for almost a month after the students are done. Quote:
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Stitchawl |
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#24895 |
Professional Adventuress
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Ok, it's late, or early, and I am once again up at an hour when I should be sleeping. I've been watching this wondering where it would go, I'm only going to address a little right now;
Stitch, Hitch has lived a lot more places (and traveled to) than you are aware of. First, you've been using this phrase of "required tipping" in the US. I'm not sure where that is coming from. Apologies to all who have had other experiences, but other than notices along the lines of; "parties of over "x" (abd it's usually at least 12) will be automatically be charged "x" gratuity". I've seen that since I was in my early teens, long before this b.s. tax thing came about. As an individual, or with a small party, I have NEVER been required to pay a tip. In fact I'm pretty sure that I have shared that when I traveled all the time for work, I would periodically sacrifice a $20 for the cause of learning about service. I would rip a 20 into quarters periodically . When the food was reasonably good but the service attrocious and I knew not only that I would never be back, but it was a small way too make a statement, I'd leave a ripped quarter of a 20 as the tip. Hopefully, if there were even a few grey cells running around in the brain housing group, they would realize that I wasn't cheap, after all, I'd already committed a 20, but due to the desecration of the bill, they couldn't do anything with it. This was my major signal that they, by their service had desecrated my dining experience. Since the end of my constant work travel, I've reduced my sacrificed bill to a 5. Not making as much. I've known career waitstaff that do indeed make between 50-100 a year. These are people at unique restaurants that are closely scrutinized before they come on, and everyone knows that their service, knowledge, etc is what has gotten them to where they are. These are a special class of servers and represent the higher end Hitch is describing, and quite honesty tend to more often be male. The mid range servers, that are at the chains like, oh, I dunno, olive garden and the like ( where I never eat ) are going to get the 15-20% tips. These are the supplemental incomes, probably not the primary earners. Then there are the stand alone, family owned/greasy spoons. .. regulars probably tip 15-20, traveers 10-15. Where I'm expected to tip in the US; Manicurist/pedicurest better tip if I expect to go back and have decent service. And I'm already paying about 50-60 an hour (at least and depending how much in having done, they can cram a lot of services together) Beautician, oh, hell yeah! Cut and color? 150 to 300 charge. If you want to come back again and Make sure you don't walk out bald or with green hair, your tip will be well north of 30. Massuse; the legal kind, but not one your insurance is paying for, about 35 and that's with a 75-100 hour charge OTHER EXPECTATIONS; mailman once a year at least Newspaper, same. Garbage, same. If you have regular lawn service, same. OH! I FORGOT! Motel maids, bell boys, homes you visit where there is hired help that isn't necessarily full time, taxis WHERE I'VE BEEN TIPPED AND DIDN'T EXPECT IT; Ski instructor riding instructor VERY LAST PLACE I EXPECTED IT; White Water Guide, reason; "You didn't let us die " So, it's late/early. I need some more sleep, and will address other countries later. You 2 take your corners. I like and respect both opinions. |
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#24896 | ||||||
Opsimath
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The point is, a 'gratuity' isn't gratuitous if you have to pay it just to get served a second time. It's a hostage payment. In the US, the custom is well established, as it is in major chain hotels in foreign countries where American visitors stay. Get away from the places where we Americans go for vacations and you see almost no tipping 'expected.' Tips ARE given gratuitously for extra special service received. They just aren't expected or required for good service the next time. There is a big difference between freely offering a gratuity for service over and above the norm, and a bribe to allow you to return to some service offering safely. Stitchawl |
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#24897 |
Professional Adventuress
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Just a quick comment after not much more sleep... I felt that I was held hostage by the tipping mentality much more from the word go in Mexico going back to the early 70s, traveling with my folks than I ever have here. This is up to and including making sure that you had a car in the morning.
So, now, after not enough sleep, I'm going to go welcome my first Boulder morning and see if I an ready to face the day |
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#24898 |
Tea Enthusiast
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I have done a fair amount of travelling and am well aware of the difference in pay and expectation of tipping.
When I lived in Italy, my Italian friends wanted me to go out to dinner with them because the presence of an American meant better service and food. Why? Because Americans typically left tips even though the gratuity was already included in the tip. So the servers strived to provide better service because they would make more money. I have found the same thing to be true throughout Europe. I know that I don't have to tip because I have travelled and I check the travel guides before going anywhere. I don't tip in places where it is not the norm for that reason. I still get better service then the natives in the restaurant, you can tell by the number of refills and check ins and the time of food delivery. This tells me that many people are not giving you their best effort when tips are not expected. Tips are not a guarantee of good service but they do seem to improve service. I don't think that you would be able to pay a waiter enough to get the type of service people want when they go out. Minimum wage is not going to draw people into the business. I don't mind tipping because I will leave a smaller tip when the service is bad but I don't buy for a second that the service would be as good without the tip. |
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#24899 | |
Illiterate
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#24900 |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Moderator Notice
The discussion of tipping should now cease, or move to the P&R forum. Thank you. |
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creepy crawlers!, dell computers, monteverdi, thread that never ends, tubery, unutterable silliness |
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