Bill ending state’s tipped wage advances but prospects uncertain amid
pushback
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[April 05, 2024]
By COLE LONGCOR
Capitol News Illinois
Clongcor@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – An Illinois House committee advanced a measure that would
end the state’s subminimum wage for tipped workers amid bipartisan
opposition this week, but the bill’s sponsor said she’d seek further
compromise before presenting it for a vote.
Current Illinois law allows employers to pay their tipped workers 60
percent of the state’s minimum wage. That amounts to $8.40 hourly,
compared to the minimum wage of $14 per hour. If their wages plus tips
do not equal minimum wage, the employer must make up the difference.
However, advocates say, employers don’t always do that.
House Bill 5345, sponsored by Rep. Elizabeth “Lisa” Hernandez, D-Cicero,
would mandate that tipped workers are paid at least minimum wage, not
including tips. She said the bill will eliminate “subminimum wage, not
tips.”
Hernandez made her comments during a lengthy hearing Wednesday in a
packed committee room filled with advocates on both sides of the issue.
She ultimately promised to not bring the bill to a vote in the full
House without first negotiating amendments on it, but she also noted one
of those changes would better address inequity within the industry and
add punitive measures against “bad actors.”
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Proponents of the bill said that not all employers follow the law and
dependency on tips perpetuates inequalities. A 2014 report from the
Economic Policy Institute think tank found at that time 66 percent of
tipped workers were women and the poverty rate of tipped workers was
almost double that of nontipped workers.
“Depending on tips to make a basic living wage is a system that exposes
workers to poverty, to inequity and to harassment,” Rep. Will Guzzardi,
D-Chicago, said at the committee hearing Wednesday.
While the bill is intended to increase wages for tipped workers and
address inequities within the industry, much of the roughly two-hour
debate in the committee hearing focused on how the proposal will impact
businesses and employees.
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At a Capitol news conference earlier Wednesday, a coalition of tipped
workers and representatives of the state’s restaurant and retail trade
associations shared concerns about the proposal. They claimed the change
would drive up prices at restaurants specifically.
Illinois Restaurant Association President Sam Toia said increasing the
cost of labor will lead to owners reducing staff and increasing prices.
Toia said many businesses are still recovering from the recession
brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.
“A business that used to be a business of nickels and dimes is now a
business of pennies and nickels,” he said. “The proposal would only
increase that stress on operators.”
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Attendees fill the House Labor and Commerce Committee room Wednesday
for a hearing on a bill that would end the state’s subminimum wage
for tipped workers. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Campbell)
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Dominique Juarez, a server at Alexander’s Steakhouse in Peoria, said at
the news conference she opposes the elimination of tip credit and that
the bill “corners us into a no-win situation.”
She said that eliminating tip credit could lead to higher menu prices,
which would in turn impact her relationship with regular customers,
which she described as “the heart of what dining is all about.”
Currently, seven states — Alaska, California, Minnesota, Montana,
Nevada, Oregon and Washington, along with Washington D.C. — have laws in
place to guarantee tipped workers make minimum wage.
Chicago enacted similar legislation in October, which phases out the
city’s tip credit over five years, culminating with tipped employees
receiving minimum wage in 2028.
“Chicago's passed this,” Rob Karr, president of the Illinois Retail
Merchants Association, said Wednesday. “We should wait and see how it
plays out over the next five years before rushing into a similar
proposal statewide.”
While the measure passed on a 17-11 vote, one of the committee’s 19
Democrats, Rep. Jawaharial Williams of Chicago, voted against it. Rep.
Marty Moylan, D-Des Plaines, was recorded as not voting. Democrats, who
control the General Assembly, subbed out seven members on the Labor and
Commerce Committee before the vote.
Other Democrats spoke out against the measure at the Wednesday news
conference.
That included Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, who said the idea that
tipped employees don’t make minimum wage is false, and warned the
proposal would have adverse effects.
“This is more legislation chasing a solution to a problem that does not
exist,” he said. “Eliminating tip credit is going to hurt the very
people that this legislation purports to help.”
Tarver also said that while there may be some “bad actors” who aren’t
paying their employees minimum wage, the current law should be enforced
rather than eliminating the tip credit.
The One Fair Wage advocacy group, which has for years been pushing for
an end to the tipped wage, celebrated the committee vote as a “historic
step towards justice.”
“A direct legacy of slavery, the subminimum wage for decades has been
used as a tool to force service industry workers, particularly women and
people of color, to live in poverty,” Saru Jayaraman, president of One
Fair Wage, said in a news release.
Capitol News Illinois is
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It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
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