The digital tip jar
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It doesn't frustrate me at all. I find watching Aqua becoming incandescent very entertaining.
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@taiwan_girl said in The digital tip jar:
@Mik said in The digital tip jar:
@taiwan_girl said in The digital tip jar:
I am running at windmills again. 555 Maybe at some point, i will change my profile picture.
Tipped work (some lucrative, lots not) has been a part of our economy for more than 150 years, and ending it could massively shift how Chicagoans pay for services, run businesses and earn a living.
On Wednesday, the City Council Committee on Workforce Development is expected to introduce and advance a proposal to phase out the minimum wage for tipped workers (currently $9.48 an hour) over five years.
Under the plan, businesses would be required to increase tipped workers' wages by 8% annually until they're paid the same minimum wage as other employees in the city ($15.80).
Of note: Workers could still accept additional tips.
Catch up fast: The proposed ordinance was recently revised in a deal hammered out between Mayor Brandon Johnson, alders and the Illinois Restaurant Association (IRA).Why would you want to punish tipped workers like that? My daughter averaged $25-30 an hour working in an upscale pizza restaurant 9 years ago. You really think anyone is going to do that job for regular minimum wage?
I dont think it is punishing the workers. Just pay them what they are worth. If that is USD$25/hr, then okay.
I just find it somewhat funny when restaurants say that if they have to pay their workers what they currently marke in tips, people would not come there any more. Are people that stupid that they think they are paying less because the tip is not on the menu price?????
If a pizza is USD$20 and I leave a $10 tip, my total is $30.
What is the difference between that and having the pizza cost $30 on the menu to begin with? Why would people be less willing to go to that restaurant when their price will be the same??
I believe that quality of food is a much bigger determination of tip amount than service in most peoples mind.
I think my subtle no-tip campaign is gaining steam!!! LOL
(Anyway, I appreciate you guys putting up with me on this, even though it frustrates most of you. )
So how much do you tip, big spender?
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@Doctor-Phibes said in The digital tip jar:
It doesn't frustrate me at all. I find watching Aqua becoming incandescent very entertaining.
Ever pay your rent only with tip money?
How 'bout all your food?
All your gas? -
Been reading thru the thread. No real input but I see it’s a red button subject. Here 15% is pretty standard in restaurants. I will tip always, usually rounding up to a round number, regardless of service. I see it just as a tax, and in this case justified for helping servers.
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Yeah, and the lower priced the restaurant, the higher percentage I tip. We had a $28 breakfast yesterday and I tipped $9. She was a good server and for the food quality we got it was a huge bargain. They 'depend on the kindness of strangers'.
It was a new First Watch, by the way. A favorite for years, but now we have a very modern one very close.
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@Mik said in The digital tip jar:
Yeah, and the lower priced the restaurant, the higher percentage I tip. We had a $28 breakfast yesterday and I tipped $9. She was a good server and for the food quality we got it was a huge bargain. They 'depend on the kindness of strangers'.
It was a new First Watch, by the way. A favorite for years, but now we have a very modern one very close.
First Watch is awesome. I do the same. For a $3.15 coffee I'll often tip 2 bucks. Maybe more if it's in the place in town and they're slammed.
You know what's funny about that? Somehow, magically, my order always seems to be ready ahead of some others' who ordered before me. I guess it's because the baristas there hate cash tips.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in The digital tip jar:
@Doctor-Phibes said in The digital tip jar:
It doesn't frustrate me at all. I find watching Aqua becoming incandescent very entertaining.
Ever pay your rent only with tip money?
How 'bout all your food?
All your gas?No, but I have danced with the devil by the pale moonlight.
And one time I shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die. Because the coffee SUCKED!
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@Doctor-Phibes said in The digital tip jar:
@Aqua-Letifer said in The digital tip jar:
@Doctor-Phibes said in The digital tip jar:
It doesn't frustrate me at all. I find watching Aqua becoming incandescent very entertaining.
Ever pay your rent only with tip money?
How 'bout all your food?
All your gas?No, but I have danced with the devil by the pale moonlight.
And one time I shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die. Because the coffee SUCKED!
I don't think it's a coincidence that the people here who have never had a job that relies on tips, and don't tip all that much themselves, would love to see tipping disappear because they "don't see the value in it."
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@Aqua-Letifer said in The digital tip jar:
I don't think it's a coincidence that the people here who have never had a job that relies on tips, and don't tip all that much themselves, would love to see tipping disappear because they "don't see the value in it."
I almost always tip about 20%, is that not much?
I accept that the US culture is based around significant tipping for low-paid workers. I do feel that your reaction of "How dare you!" whenever anybody dares to question this implies that you're rather emotionally invested in the whole thing.
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@Mik said in The digital tip jar:
If it ain't broke it don't need fixing. It may not be what other places do, but it's what we do.
It is what it is. The idea that it's broken is a bit extreme, but the idea that it couldn't conceivably be improved upon is probably bogus too.
It is OK to disagree with things and actually say it out loud. Aqua sounds a bit like certain English people who defend the British Royal Family when anybody dares criticise them, or more accurately the system they represent
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I'd disagree with that. It would be more like he is a WIndsor.
It might be improvable. Most things are. But things develop the way they do because there is benefit for those involved. Good servers earn good money for a taxing job, mostly through tips. I haven't seen any Americans on here saying we should change it, just folks from other places. I'd say the problem is not the system, but their unfamiliarity with it.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in The digital tip jar:
@Aqua-Letifer said in The digital tip jar:
I don't think it's a coincidence that the people here who have never had a job that relies on tips, and don't tip all that much themselves, would love to see tipping disappear because they "don't see the value in it."
I almost always tip about 20%, is that not much?
I accept that the US culture is based around significant tipping for low-paid workers. I do feel that your reaction of "How dare you!" whenever anybody dares to question this implies that you're rather emotionally invested in the whole thing.
I've no problem with people not liking the tipping system. I have a problem with someone with no personal experience with the industry and as Mik said unfamiliarity tell me how wrong I've been living my life all this time with the jobs I've had.
. I mean by all means, for as much as you complain about paying "extra" for what you perceive as nothing, there are plenty of alternatives at your disposal. McDonald's has screens now, you don't even have to talk to anyone. Maybe that's more your speed and if it is, you're more than welcome to go there. It's not like "British hospitality" is even a thing.
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Where did I complain about paying extra for something I perceive as nothing?
Where did I say you’ve been living wrong?
I never said any of that. I said I thought the base pay should be a little higher and maybe the reliance on tips a little lower.
And I have family members who’ve worked in the system plenty, as it happens. Obviously I haven’t. I grew up somewhere else.
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I’ve said before that I absolutely love to tip. It means I received good service and had an excellent time. It’s the tip creep that I have an issue with. That brew pub thing is a perfect example. If I’m sitting at a table, and a server comes up, gives me a menu, maybe recommends a particular sandwich and beer. Brings me my drink and food in a fairly prompt manner, then brings my bill, takes the payment, then great. That’s 20%. If the server goes beyond that, maybe suggests I avoid a certain beer or sandwich, engages in some light conversation, is checking up with me when the glass is 3/4 of the way empty to see if I would like another, they are getting more. If, on the other hand I sit at a table, scan a QR Code, make my selection, and then pay electronically from the device and then somebody walks out, drops the stuff off at the table and leaves? That’s most definitely a non-tip and should definitely be a minimum wage job. Hell, a McDonald’s employee does more. If you add on a 15% service charge on top of that? Not only no tip, but you’re not getting my business anymore.
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Yes, tip creep is definitely a thing and it’s pernicious
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@Aqua-Letifer said in The digital tip jar:
It's not like "British hospitality" is even a thing.
How dare you!
It's right up there with American self-deprecation.
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Doctor-Phibes said in The digital tip jar:
Where did I complain about paying extra for something I perceive as nothing?
Where did I say you’ve been living wrong?
I never said any of that. I said I thought the base pay should be a little higher and maybe the reliance on tips a little lower.
Well, bro, you said this above:
I hate the whole tipping thing.
It would be a lot easier if people just got paid decently, and we didn't have to worry about this shit.You then proceeded to complain about a $20 tip for a $200 moving charge.
I grew up in a tourist area. It ain't Yosemite, but what're you gonna do, people wanted to be there. My first jobs were tip-dependent. And 3 other times in my life, tip-based jobs saved my ass.
My issue is NOT that you don't like tipping, man. And sure, tip creep's a big freaking problem, in part because it devalues its usage everywhere else.
I worked for tips for about 10 years total. At one point, I had no bank account, and all my money was in a goddamn shoebox. My job saved my ass specifically because I worked for tips. Guaran-fucking-tee you if they had been tip-free jobs with higher earnings I'd have had a serious income drop, and I would have been absolutely fucked.
My issue is that you think you know better than that and find it funny I take these things seriously.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in The digital tip jar:
You then proceeded to complain about a $20 tip for a $200 moving charge.
I don't remember the exact conversation, but we paid a lot more than a $20 tip to our movers. More like 10-15 times that much.
And to be honest, I don't think that's reasonable. I'd have much rather had it baked into the price. Apart from anything else, there's the uncertainty of how much is reasonable.
And it's not that you take it seriously that I find funny, it's that you get so freaking mad with people who disagree with you.