Cheap breakfast is interesting. Especially in the US, you can find breakfast for $5-10. If it is slow, I often tip $5. The staff are up early and took care of me. Percentage based tipping is stupid imo. Did the staff at the fancy steak house work five to ten times as hard to justify 5-10x compensation vs staff at the roadside dive?18% on top of the tax-in total = 20.34% on the food. Prices are up 50% from pre Covid so a 15% tip is already 50% more than before. Tip on a $10 breakfast = $1.50. On a $15 breakfast it's $2.25. At 18% on the tax in total it's $3.05.
Check my math but isn't that double the pre covid tip?
Also what have they done to the minimum wages. I'm not suggesting that wait staff are moving into Rosedale but they're seeing better days than a lot of factory workers.
Tips get shared so as more automation comes in they get shared with fewer people.
Then there are other add ons. Does Niagara Falls still have the Business Improvement tax? Totally untraceable, automatically added on and NOT compulsory although many of the vendors say it is.
I always put zero for those too. You also help fund their ad campaign of "We sent $$$ to children in need". While sort of true, you collected that money from others and none of it was yours. Does the CRA allow charitable tax receipt to business? If I want to donate, I will do it direct not through an intermediary.The current trend of indigo chapters stores wanting a donation so they can put books in an underfunded school ? So you’ll send them excess inventory you have already written down, take a credit for the charitable donation , and that helps me how? Sorry , creative tax strategy guy , not chipping in .
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The Pow Wow Room (?) was a frequent stop on Sunday evenings back then......doubling back from "the country easy atmosphere" at Orangeville Raceway in the afternoon with the old boy.About a hundred years ago I was a bus boy at Mohawk Raceway dining room.....
The Pow Wow Room (?) was a frequent stop on Sunday evenings back then......doubling back from "the country easy atmosphere" at Orangeville Raceway in the afternoon with the old boy.
I always put zero for those too. You also help fund their ad campaign of "We sent $$$ to children in need". While sort of true, you collected that money from others and none of it was yours. Does the CRA allow charitable tax receipt to business? If I want to donate, I will do it direct not through an intermediary.
Twas a Harley.Good to see that wasn't you on Barton yesterday. I wasn't sure about the math.
Twas a Harley.
I'm outta the game, officially, yesterday.
The Pow Wow Room (?) was a frequent stop on Sunday evenings back then......doubling back from "the country easy atmosphere" at Orangeville Raceway in the afternoon with the old boy.
So I have my own rule of $5 for under $100 bill, and $10 for anything over that. And that's only if the service was actually good. Otherwise, I tip zero.
I wonder how the low paying service jobs affect housing and taxes.I absolutely hate tipping culture generally (just pay your people properly and fold the cost into the item - Europe manages just fine), but the use of POS machines has pushed it completely out of control. Most egregious I've seen recently was at the Budweiser Stage, where the beer is already priced at a surreal $14-18 a can. If you're dumb enough to buy some, you're presented with a machine asking whether you want to tip 18, 20 or 25% on the total. At a counter. No wonder they are all so eager to get you in their line...
Starting next week, min wage and govt rebates (Trillium, Carbon tax) put a minimum wage earner at approx $37000 in Ontario.I wonder how the low paying service jobs affect housing and taxes.
A minimum wage job nets you about $30K a year which is close to the cost of a decent apartment. 100% of one's income is unrealistic for rent so enter taxpayer subsidized housing.
$50k in the GTA, $25/ hr according to most anti poverty advocates.What is a living wage and how would it impact the service industry?
Nope. Never.Should a taxpayer that can't afford to travel subsidize hotel stays for those that can afford to travel?
I think it’s time to rethink PSUs in the public service. A govt job shouldn’t entitle someone to compensation considerably higher than the private sector.How does that affect the number of civil servants making a decent living in the welfare sector?
I knew one, she’s a cop now. Your welfare abuser is right, they are taught to give not deny.A welfare abuser pointed out "Their job is to give away money. If they don't give away money they don't have a job do they."
I think it’s time to rethink PSUs in the public service. A govt job shouldn’t entitle someone to compensation considerably higher than the private sector.
The total cost to customer (or taxpayer) shouldn't change much in theory, just the route by which the serving staff get paid.I wonder how the low paying service jobs affect housing and taxes.
A minimum wage job nets you about $30K a year which is close to the cost of a decent apartment. 100% of one's income is unrealistic for rent so enter taxpayer subsidized housing.
What is a living wage and how would it impact the service industry?
I think what North Americans complain about when in Europe is “hustle” and friendliness. When my coffee or drink needs refilling, or condiments are needed, like it better when Betty is on top of that, less if I have to flag Sergio down.The total cost to customer (or taxpayer) shouldn't change much in theory, just the route by which the serving staff get paid.
The American assumption is that a withdrawable financial incentive is the best way to ensure good service. The European/Aussie approach is that they are being paid to do a job, so good (enough) service is a baseline expectation. I think a lot hinges around what the expectation of 'good service' actually is.
Americans want big smiles and chit chat, while Europeans want expertise. That's obviously a huge generalisation, and there are plenty of exceptions, but largely it illustrates the different expectations towards a dining experience. In North America, waitstaff are typically young and higher energy, and doing the job as either a stepping stone or as a side gig. In much of Europe, it's considered a decent job worthy of a career. You're expected to know about how to recommend a wine or explain a dish. In the same way you wouldn't tip any other professional (accountant? mechanic?), you don't tip waitstaff. But you also don't expect them to pretend to be thrilled to see you even if they're not, nor do you expect them to pretend to care about what your plans are for the rest of the day when they hand you the POS machine...
I know which one I prefer, but as the endless complaints from Americans (and Canadians, to be fair) about perceptions of poor service in Europe indicate, I'm not in the majority here...