New York state isn’t waiting for Congress to raise the federal minimum wage. Instead, lawmakers in Albany have crafted a deal that would raise the state’s minimum wage from $7.25 to $9 an hour. But not everybody will be getting a raise.
Under the current deal, approved by Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo but not yet signed into law, workers who rely on tips for a substantial portion of their income will maintain an existing significantly lower minimum wage.
New York’s tipped employees—defined [PDF] by the U.S. Labor Department as those workers who make more than $30 per month in tips—earn a base minimum wage of between $4.90 and $5.65 per hour, depending on which industry they work in. The federal minimum wage for tipped employees is $2.13 an hour, with tips expected to bring them up to at least $7.25.
“Restaurant workers are the largest group of full-time workers living in poverty and they are being completely left out of this increase,” said Saru Jayaraman, co-director of the restaurant workers coalition ROC United, in a statement. “We’re glad that New York state is taking action to improve conditions for low-wage workers by increasing the minimum wage, but excluding tipped workers from the proposed plan is a huge oversight and ignores the needs of millions of New York workers.”
On Wednesday, ROC United staged a “Twitter rally” in it encouraged sympathetic parties to tweet their support for a higher tipped minimum wage at various New York politicians.
The fate of workers who earn tips in New York could have national implications as the conversation around the minimum wage continues at the federal level.
ROC United has campaigned for a higher minimum wage for tipped workers on the federal level. Such an increase would affect millions of American workers. As of 2010, the Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that some 2.3 million Americans were employed as waiters and waitresses alone–and about 73% of tipped workers are women, according to a 2011 report [PDF] by the Economic Policy Institute.
As the Economic Policy Institute points out, “Many tipped workers are unaware that their tips and hourly wages must add up to at least the minimum wage. At the same time, employers are unlikely to ensure that their workers are paid appropriately—it is up to the employees to know and understand this law.”









