Massachusetts ballot question 5 debate: Raising the minimum tipped wage

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  • Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025

Комментарии • 112

  • @GBHNews
    @GBHNews  3 месяца назад +3

    Where do you stand on ballot question 5?

    • @leonardomineo7641
      @leonardomineo7641 3 месяца назад +3

      No on.5

    • @jrho8033
      @jrho8033 3 месяца назад +3

      Yes on #5

    • @GML_123.
      @GML_123. 3 месяца назад +2

      No

    • @Chan12282
      @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +1

      @@GBHNews yes, benefits the customers and servers as customers are likely to still tip even after it’s raised.

    • @sab3295
      @sab3295 3 месяца назад +2

      as a former waitress I'm all for it. I spent many snowy nights in a restaurant making crap. It would be nice to go to work and be able to be like this is what I'm making as oppose to be like I might make this.

  • @myxoplic
    @myxoplic 3 месяца назад +15

    He said burgers now are $15 and would go to $20...no, right now they are already over $20+

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

  • @Chan12282
    @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +17

    Why do they keep bringing up sharing tips. RESTAURANT OWNERS CAN BE REQUIRED TO PAY MINIMUM WAGE AND CUSTOMERS CAN TIP GOOD SERVERS AND TIP POOLING IS NOT REQUIRED. THERE IS NO PART OF THE LAW THAT SAYS TIP POOLING IS REQUIRED.

    • @Krystalhail
      @Krystalhail 3 месяца назад +4

      BECAUSE IT CAN BE MANIPULATED AND THEY CAN START THE BOH AT A LOWER WAGE TO END UP BREAKING EVEN ON LABOR COST. THUS EVERYONE THINKING THEYRE STICKING IT TO THE MAN ARE BEING BAMBOOZLED. critical thinking please. we DONT want to share our tips when we make $50/hr some nights. pooled tips will result in a pay cut and most of us will be filing underemployment with the state of this passes.

    • @Shark97281
      @Shark97281 3 месяца назад

      Not to mention the price for food will go up and a lot of restaurants will close because they can’t afford to give employees more money.
      Tips are a part of the economic system of owning a restaurant. Tampering with that sets things off balance.
      When the actual waiters and waitresses are making signs that say “vote no on question 5”, they are in fear of losing their jobs.

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад +3

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

    • @AnthonySopran0
      @AnthonySopran0 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@willisapril Don't go out to eat them. I'm a line cook and we don't get jack while servers and owners make tons of money. There is NO data that supports your claim and this law has passed in several states.

    • @Shark97281
      @Shark97281 3 месяца назад +1

      @@AnthonySopran0 At this point im curious. This is the first time ive heard someone working at a restaurant actually in favor of question 5.
      Can you elaborate?
      Because the way i see it, a higher wage would mean a higher bill that customers would have to pay, and the less people would show up. If less people show up, then the restaurant would close.
      Im not starting an argument. Im genuinely curious. Why are you in favor of question 5?

  • @a_drop_in_the_ocean
    @a_drop_in_the_ocean 3 месяца назад +24

    If eliminating the Tip-culture would end up rising the cost of restaurant meals by 20-25%, it would make no difference for the customer since a 20-25% tip, on top of the menu price, is expected here anyway.
    So, no shortage of customers hence no restaurant closures would be justified by such a change, this is a scarecrow strategy to keep the industry's employers profitable with minimum effort.
    Pretty sure that the U.S. is the only country in which the Tip-culture is prevalent and extreme; elsewhere, tips exist but are only offered for above-standard service and/or food quality.
    And yet, the general American restaurant experience has still to match the one offered by most comparable restaurants abroad, both in quality and affordability. Whose employees are paid a respectable wage, where restaurant owners compete for highest quality on offer and the customer gets the best possible experience. As it should be the case, always, in the service industry.
    The humble opinion of a gourmet globetrotter, that's all.

    • @markcollins2666
      @markcollins2666 3 месяца назад +2

      Being from MA, and having spent 16 years living outside the US, I would agree with the idea that the status quo needs to go. On the other hand, it makes me despair of the whole dining out experience altogether. The pro-quo guy wasn't kidding when he said that restos compete with everyone. And I would be more inclined to patronize my local grocery and liquor stores, rather than dine out, in future.

    • @Chan12282
      @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +1

      I fully agree with you!!

    • @MrScott1212ful
      @MrScott1212ful 3 месяца назад +3

      The reasoning is that customers will still be asked to tip the 20% and then the total price will be higher. It depends on if the practice changes. You are right if tips were to be totally halted. There is a lot of nuance on how it will play out. If some servers now average $30 in tips an hour, will they be offered $36 an hour in wages? What about the rest of the workers. The law allows for spreading out of the tips to all workers. What will happen if servers lose more of the tips than the wage provides due to this expanded tip out? The fallout could very well be higher prices, unhappy servers, and unhappy customers leading to unhappy businesses.

    • @katkarantbb
      @katkarantbb 3 месяца назад

      @@MrScott1212ful BINGO ! 👏🏼

  • @Larathen
    @Larathen 3 месяца назад +5

    "Prices of restaurant will go up 20-25% in prices."
    General tipping as is is recommenede at 20% minimum. 15% if you're lowballing. The difference will be minimal in terms of how much the customer has to spend eating out. The difference is now tipping won't be mandatory, as that extra cost will cover the minimum wage gaps. tl'dr different allocation of consumer income.

  • @GurahkWeavile
    @GurahkWeavile 3 месяца назад +6

    I wish I had known this beforehand. I feel like I got fleeced by the campaign ads that, in hindsight, appeared to be bankrolled by the lazier and cheap restaurants.

  • @freedkristen
    @freedkristen 3 месяца назад +14

    I will vote no. I am a professional server who has worked in the industry for 35 + years in six states. I have chosen to do so because of the money. Yes there are days I don’t make a lot of tips, but this is balanced out by the days in which I do. I already never make less than minimum wage. If my employer didn’t follow that law, I wouldn’t work there and would report them.
    Rather than focus on what I make each night, I choose to focus instead on what I make each year, which is considerable (from a low of 55,000 in WV, which then and there was considerable, to a high of over six figures, to somewhere in between as I begin to cut back on hours as I age).
    Also, being on the front lines of the hospitality industry is especially challenging. From ensuring guests with allergies are protected, to handling guests who become enraged at what they mistakenly perceive to be some intentional slight, to having to work long hours without a break, let alone time to eat or use the restroom. Not to mention the fact that sick days and vacation days are paid at minimum wage, which means that taking them, especially in season, means taking a significant financial hit.
    Overall however, my concern with tip sharing is that what will happen is what has happened already to service charges, which at some point were reclassified as revenue, such that the employer can then distribute that tip to any employee the employer wishes, including the employer himself. I once worked at a wedding venue that did just that. One day, the employer’s yacht pulled up to the dock, dwarfing the wedding venue. I knew then, without a doubt, that it was time to go. This is what I fear will happen if question 5 is passed.

    • @AnthonySopran0
      @AnthonySopran0 3 месяца назад

      And I'm a line cook who has worked for a decade in the industry. We never get tips and make less in a week than some of you do in a weekend. We are sick of it. Employers, servers, and bartenders are almost the only people against this.

  • @DavidMarkun
    @DavidMarkun 3 месяца назад +6

    Very interesting discussion. I wish I had heard it before I voted. Are we on our way to a model in which tipping is not customary?

  • @Sept2cfm1953
    @Sept2cfm1953 3 месяца назад +13

    Some business owners cut their employees' hours to part-time, so they don't have to give benefits. Thus seems abusive.

  • @confidentwreck
    @confidentwreck 3 месяца назад +12

    “Affordable restaurants will be wiped out”
    Spare us the dramatics, Doug.

  • @tooniami
    @tooniami 3 месяца назад +18

    If the restaurant owner claims that workers are already guaranteed minimum wage and then later states that prices will go up, where did the increase in price come from? Could it possibly be that they are not being paid a fair wage?

    • @Chan12282
      @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +9

      It’s because employees is guaranteed to make minimum wage. The question is who does it come from. With tipping culture, employers can pay their employees as low as $6.75 or so an hour while tips from customers pays the difference. A yes would require employers to pay minimum wage ($15) indefinitely so employers can’t rely on customer tips to pay their workers. That’s not to say that if workers are making minimum wage, that customers cannot tip, they still can, but it’ll be in addition to the minimum wage rather than helping them reach minimum wage.

    • @AnthonySopran0
      @AnthonySopran0 3 месяца назад

      Because it won't, they did this in California and it didnt raise anything.

  • @mattcoorey2580
    @mattcoorey2580 3 месяца назад +6

    Yes
    Tipping has allowed lower-quality restaurants to stay in business by masking the true cost of dining out. Whether people acknowledge it or not, when you go to a restaurant, you mainly focus on the price of each food item. Tipping has become almost a secondary expense, something most people mentally separate from the original cost of the meal.
    Now imagine if the tip were already included in the price of the food. For example, if a dish that used to be $18 is now listed as $25, you’d likely question whether it’s really worth that higher price. Even though, with the tip, the total cost would be the same as before, consumers only notice the listed price.
    Restaurants that are able to raise their prices successfully do so because consumers believe the quality of their food justifies the cost. But for businesses that can’t deliver on quality, they’ll eventually be forced to close-and I have no problem with that.

  • @mattcoorey2580
    @mattcoorey2580 3 месяца назад +6

    Servers should absolutely support this change. Many have likely received 15-20% tips despite offering subpar service, simply due to the tipping culture we’re stuck in. The reality is, if you’re good at your job and work at a quality restaurant, you’ll likely earn well above minimum wage because restaurants will need to offer competitive pay to attract staff.
    Plus, tips would still exist, but customers would be more selective-rewarding only truly exceptional service. For skilled servers, this is a positive change. For those not performing well, it may mean leaving the industry-and frankly, that’s a necessary improvement.

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

    • @mattcoorey2580
      @mattcoorey2580 3 месяца назад

      Voting “yes” will allow people to see the real cost of the food they’re paying for. If a restaurant can’t sustain itself because it doesn’t deliver the quality that justifies its prices, then I believe it’s fair for it to close. I have no problem with businesses shutting down if they can’t meet a standard customers are willing to support
      Voting no will allow subpar restaurants to still be in business

  • @tomgeraci9886
    @tomgeraci9886 3 месяца назад +4

    The whole argument that people are advocating for the article from California is weird. California is one of the biggest success stories in the US of tipped workers being paid a full minimum wage (16-20 an hour) by the employer

    • @12KevinPower
      @12KevinPower 3 месяца назад +2

      @skippyzk so mixed bag. Other countries have no tipping necessary and seems to operate as usual.

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

  • @tom-kz9pb
    @tom-kz9pb 3 месяца назад +2

    A key point that I have not seen highlighted is that under current Massachusetts law, employers are ALREADY required to make up the difference if tips do not raise the employee's net pay at least to minimum wage level. I was prepared to vote "yes" at the thought that tipping might become an excuse to allow some employees in practice to earn less than minimum wage, but I changed my mind when I discovered that this was not the case.

    • @mikezamora2145
      @mikezamora2145 3 месяца назад +5

      The fact that the law already states that employers are required to make up the difference in wages is literally the first argument made in this debate

  • @almightymachine9930
    @almightymachine9930 3 месяца назад +1

    When this guy "hustles" the back of the house has to put up with the order flow. He hustles, they hustle... he gets tipped, but the goons in the back of the house get nothing but grief. Is it me?

    • @xxSoundstruckxx
      @xxSoundstruckxx 3 месяца назад +1

      no i agree. its very odd. the tone of this seem a little...off

    • @almightymachine9930
      @almightymachine9930 3 месяца назад

      @xxSoundstruckxx I've been at the sink washing dishes from a busy night while I watched "the hustlers" count their tips and sip drinks... where tf is my tip? (I got a tip for ya right here BTW)

  • @katkarantbb
    @katkarantbb 3 месяца назад +1

    BBIG NO ON 5 . Thanks

  • @xxSoundstruckxx
    @xxSoundstruckxx 3 месяца назад +1

    so this is very 2v1.
    I mean why do we have minimum wage?
    i mean what about placed like Qudoba and Ben and Jerrys? you have the option to pay tips and they get minimum wage.
    Why can't they have both? Seems like they still get tips if they perform as well as before. what the take away? is it the fact you don't have to push the responsibility on customers vs the owners?
    I mean if another country (Germany) can have that system with no issue why not us?

  • @MattRawrXd
    @MattRawrXd 3 месяца назад +1

    Wages are generally lower because they are guaranteed. However, when you have a split pay structure (base + commission OR wage + tips) you tend to do better overall, albeit with some uncertainty and inconsistency.

  • @bernadettepersall9284
    @bernadettepersall9284 3 месяца назад +4

    Server 100% nake minimum wage and more . Work way to hard and would not do it for a flat rate. On a double run 31,000 steps and 95 flights of stairs carrying heavy trays. Bust our ass and make great money in tips. Any server who agrees with question 5 works at wrong place or sucks at their job!!! A yes vote will destroy the lives of your favorite bartender's and serves you love. We will not be there anymore. This should not be a ballot question and was not put on by restaurant employees of Massachusetts!!! Activists from another state!!!!!

    • @mattcoorey2580
      @mattcoorey2580 3 месяца назад

      That’s fine if a restaurant can’t pay its workers enough to where they’re willing to stay who cares.

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

  • @jrho8033
    @jrho8033 3 месяца назад +3

    Yes, it'll take adjustment, but a good restaurant owner will make this work. A Bad restaurant owner won't.

    • @deech18
      @deech18 3 месяца назад

      No, rich restaurants will thrive. Ma and Pa shops will all go out of business. Get ready for a world of only starbucks, fast food and super expensive high end restaurants

  • @jak762
    @jak762 3 месяца назад +1

    So if this law passes, customers will still be asked to tip?

  • @willisapril
    @willisapril 3 месяца назад

    Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

  • @DJRayBoston
    @DJRayBoston 3 месяца назад +3

    I just asked my friend who has been a server for over a decade, he works for Cheesecake Factory, they are all voting NO!
    I've learned all about the industry from him, I completely understand how it works and why they don't want it. I'll be voting NO!

    • @confidentwreck
      @confidentwreck 3 месяца назад +1

      I have bad news: servers don’t understand the ramifications of this bill any more or less just because they are servers.

    • @Gladiator376
      @Gladiator376 3 месяца назад

      I’m voting NO!

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

  • @Chan12282
    @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +4

    Bartenders and servers work just as hard as everyone else in respectable industries…tipping culture and no tip shaming allows them to make upwards of $30,$40,$50 an hour. It’s unnecessary.

    • @tomgeraci9886
      @tomgeraci9886 3 месяца назад +6

      they wouldn’t stop receiving tips if they got a minimum wage tho. In California, where tipped workers are paid 16/hour, many customers still tip

  • @NMAMxRE
    @NMAMxRE 3 месяца назад +1

    Wow @10:52, business owner guy thinks that people the customer does not interact with don't deserve to be rewarded "if you hustle, and smile and discuss the food and the options and your tip gets shared" Just wow, what a dope, those are the people that make the food appear, make the dishes clean, etc.. Just hearing that is a Yes vote. Feels like these business owners don''t want the financial responsibility and want to keep it on the consumer. And intuitively do I trust restaurant owners to honestly level the playing field, not sure I do, it would seem a head start in the race, a higher minimum wage should be the starting line, personally this won't make me justify tipping less, as I have not tipped more since I have unconsciously been in a "co-op" business relationship with restaurants by being 'responsible' for getting employees to minimum wage?! Finally comparing the U.S to other countries, primarily Europe, is apples to oranges: Guaranteed health care, paid sick leave, paid time off, access to affordable child care, university education, pension systems...not the same social structure.

  • @StarlahMutiny
    @StarlahMutiny 3 месяца назад +13

    Tipping in general should be abolished ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @Chan12282
      @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +3

      It just shouldn’t be required or frowned upon not to tip. Every other industry is required to pay their employees minimum wage, but restaurant owners are able to pay measly wages and rely on customer tips to pay their employees wages. It’s sick.

    • @StarlahMutiny
      @StarlahMutiny 3 месяца назад +3

      @skippyzk because someone's wages should not be based on what people 'decide' to leave. Just pay people straight so their livelihood isn't based on people's moods or attitudes.

    • @StarlahMutiny
      @StarlahMutiny 3 месяца назад +1

      @skippyzk get some more braincells.

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

  • @ChanceTheGardenerrr
    @ChanceTheGardenerrr 3 месяца назад +1

    ppl are so conflict averse that they are unwilling to take a personal hand in paying for service rendered to them. They just want a number on a receipt and to swipe it or push it or whatever and go on their way instead of being involved in a sort of casual contract with their server. It makes them uncomfortable.

  • @clintmatthews2714
    @clintmatthews2714 3 месяца назад +1

    after listening to the guy who says vote yes for the last 10 minutes.............I will vote NO!!

  • @dd3123
    @dd3123 3 месяца назад +2

    Chefs make crazy wages! $35+ an hour!! How is this fair for the servers who bust their butt and form relationships with their quests. They are accountable for a dish that comes out sub par. The frustrated quest takes it out on the servers.
    If this passes, the restaurants and hospitality workers will walk. They will not stand for making less on tipping to support their families! It will kill their income!
    Absolutely a NO VOTE! This bill smells bad.

  • @jeremywhite92
    @jeremywhite92 3 месяца назад +5

    Under current law, restaurant owners are required to make up the difference if tips don't lead to minimum wages. But the reality is that they don't - servers actually often make less than minimum wage per hour on a shift. And servers know that if they complain that they're not making minimum wage, they may well get fired. So this change would cause servers to actually get paid minimum wage -- which they currently often are not.

    • @Chan12282
      @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +1

      I think the reason many servers are against this question is because it may lead to a fade away of tip culture, which allows them to often make upwards of $40-$50 an hour. A yes would require restaurant owners to pay their servers minimum wage and not pressure customers to tip, but if you’re server is great then you can still tip them. So I think a yes is a win for both customers and servers, but not so much owners.

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

  • @12KevinPower
    @12KevinPower 3 месяца назад +3

    I wish that there was an option for "Neutral" on 5.

    • @zeppelin0110
      @zeppelin0110 3 месяца назад +10

      That's called not voting

  • @afnDavid
    @afnDavid 3 месяца назад +3

    My compensation is solely between myself and my employer! I dont want or need the goverment sticking thier nose in!

    • @rod8887
      @rod8887 3 месяца назад

      So no minimum wages for anyone ?

  • @Roxy62ct
    @Roxy62ct 3 месяца назад +1

    Once workers go Union or Minimum they no longer require tips. So tips will no longer be required.

  • @tommyflynnmusic
    @tommyflynnmusic 3 месяца назад +1

    When someone says misinformation, be very cautious

  • @EdTheFed77
    @EdTheFed77 3 месяца назад +1

    Every server I have asked in a restaurant has said vote NO. They fear they will make less money for a combination of reasons.

    • @confidentwreck
      @confidentwreck 3 месяца назад +2

      That doesn’t mean they’re right.
      “They found that tipped workers who made the same minimum wage as other employees had slightly higher overall earnings - roughly 10% to 20% - than their colleagues who worked in states with subminimum wages, even when accounting for larger differences in average wages across states.”

  • @tommyflynnmusic
    @tommyflynnmusic 3 месяца назад +1

    This is a BAD idea

  • @leonardomineo7641
    @leonardomineo7641 3 месяца назад +2

    The.actice needs to.mind his own.business vote no.on.5

  • @miked3723
    @miked3723 3 месяца назад +7

    As soon as he said its a legacy of slavery i knew to vote against him. If that is your leading argument then you obviously dont have much.

    • @Chan12282
      @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +6

      Yeah that was weird but his opinion is correct. Restaurants shouldn’t be allowed to pay measly wages and rely on customers to pay their servers wages.

    • @Chan12282
      @Chan12282 3 месяца назад +1

      @skippyzk yeah true. And we shouldn’t be made to pay extra on top of our bill to compensate their employees. Most other countries don’t do this.

    • @willisapril
      @willisapril 3 месяца назад

      Please vote No on question 5. I know you make think by voting yes you will help them but it will actually not. A yes and will pass making restaurants with no choice will have raise prices and with things currently so high many won't survive. With Bartenders/ Servers getting minumum wage you won't be required to tip where many people won't have to tip them causing them losses as thats where they make their real money as many work very hard for their tips. This did not work in Ohio and its terrible in California. The good bartenders and servers are also against this with some having tshirts made up saying VOTE NO ON QUESTION 5.

  • @cassecassss
    @cassecassss 3 месяца назад

    Are we not going to talk about how many people are going to lose their jobs if this gets put through? The amount of restaurants that have closed once this has gone through in those states. The amount of people who are just ignorant to ever working in the service industry just isn’t fair for them to have a say on such a large amount of livelihoods

  • @JonFrumTheFirst
    @JonFrumTheFirst 3 месяца назад

    And we can eat at home. Less employment, less taxes paid by businesses, less leases paid to landlords, more mortgages dumped on banks. What could go wrong?

  • @karimamin2
    @karimamin2 3 месяца назад +2

    Vote No. This ain't California

  • @Wonder-the
    @Wonder-the 3 месяца назад

    No on question 5 please

  • @SalemHarbor
    @SalemHarbor 3 месяца назад +1

    Slavery? It didn't matter what you said after that. You lost all credibility with such foolishness. I'd have no problem at all going to a wage-based system, but should it go through, I'll never tip again. It's one or the other.

  • @travisjxxx
    @travisjxxx 3 месяца назад

    Vote no

  • @dd3123
    @dd3123 3 месяца назад

    Chefs make crazy wages! $35+ an hour!! How is this fair for the servers who bust their butt and form relationships with their quests. They are accountable for a dish that comes out sub par. The frustrated quest takes it out on the servers.
    If this passes, the restaurants and hospitality workers will walk. They will not stand for making less on tipping to support their families! It will kill their income!
    Absolutely a NO VOTE! This bill smells bad.