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Quebec restaurants want power to set rules for tip sharing between servers and kitchen

Quebec restaurants want power to set rules for tip sharing between servers and kitchen

CBC
Saturday, August 20, 2022 05:26:47 PM UTC

Some Montreal restaurants are hoping to attract workers back to the kitchen with higher pay — in part using tips from the serving staff.

The Quebec Restaurant Association is asking the provincial government to give restaurants the power to force tip sharing at their establishment, so tips would be split between wait staff and those working in the kitchen.

Right now, under Quebec's Labour Standards Act, servers keep their tips. That can only change if the staff decides to implement a tip-sharing agreement.

"Our kitchen staff are paid $19 per hour, on average. When we look at the servers, when we include the tips they receive and declare, their hour rate is more like $35 an hour," said Martin Vézina, a spokesperson for the association.

"So we have a gap of about $15 an hour, and it's a big gap."

It's led to frustrations among kitchen staff, he said, who could work full-time hours and still not make as much as the servers who work part time.

He said the hope is that with the promise of making a cut of the tips, more people will be incentivized to work in the province's kitchens.

Some Montreal restaurants already have tip-sharing. Pablo Rojas, the co-owner of the Provisions restaurant in Outremont, said he's glad his restaurant staff decided to try it out.

"The idea was: the cooks were also serving people … and it was the right way to make all my guys have a better salary, instead of having such a big gap," he said.

At Provisions, tips in the restaurant are shared by the entirety of the wait staff, regardless of whether or not they're working, with a percentage of that total going to the kitchen. 

WATCH | Why this Montreal restaurant started sharing tips:

Rojas said restaurants need to find a way to move forward "without anyone being exploited, without being underpaid," especially after the pandemic. 

"If cooks are not happy and are not there to do their job, you could be the best waiter in the world — you won't be able to make a living," he said.

Not everyone is happy about the idea. In an open letter published earlier this week, the Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Québec (FTQ), a workers union in the province, said better conditions for cooks shouldn't come at the expense of wait staff.

Read full story on CBC
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