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by indoortree 2398 days ago
It's not "stealing tips" and it's literally written explicitly into the laws around minimum wage in federal law in the US.

The federal minimum wage is set to $7.25 per hour, with a very clear exemption for tipped workers, that the employer contribution only needs to be $2.13 per hour as long as the tips bring the total wage up over minimum on a weekly basis. If the employee gets lower tips, the employer is required to pay additional wages to bring their total wages up to the guaranteed minimum. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tipped_wage

The problem isn't that DoorDash is doing some new, nefarious thing. They're doing exactly the same thing a restaurant does when they pay a server somewhere between $2.13 and $7.25 per hour depending on how customers tip. The problem is that apparently most people don't understand how tipping and wages for tipped employees have worked for traditional restaurants for decades.

1 comments

But that isn’t what the tipping industry does. You are paid a certain hourly wage, and if the tip income is below a certain amount the employer has to increase the wage to compensate. They cannot however reduce your hourly pay rate after you have done the work. Because that is tip theft, simply reclassifying your income after the fact doesn’t magically make it not theft.

Because if that were allowed an employer could hire you at $20/hour (for example), and then decide at the end of your day to change your pay rate to $10/hour and that would be ok - because by your definition that isn’t wage theft.