A B.C. restaurant may become the first in Canada to ban tipping, which the owner calls a
"broken system." David Jones plans to pay his staff at Smoke and Water a living wage
instead of depending on tips, reported The Times Colonist. The restaurant is slated to
open in June at the Pacific Shores Resort & Spa in Parksville, on the east coast of Vancouver
Island. Instead of customers calculating a percentage of their bill for a gratuity, menu prices
have been increased by about 18 per cent to compensate the 48 staff members, said the
newspaper. That comes out to $20 to $24 per hour for servers and $16 to $18 per hour for
kitchen workers. Jones also plans to set aside a percentage of earnings for medical and dental
coverage, said Global News.
"I couldn't believe no one else in Canada is doing this,” Jones told The Globe and Mail. “What we
have right now is a broken system." If customers do leave tips at the barbecue and pizza restaurant,
they will be given back. If that's not possible, the money will be donated to charity, according to Global.
Tipping is mainly a North American system, where servers often earn below minimum wage
because they earn extra in gratuities. Restaurants in New York and California are beginning to
forgo tips and charging customers more for menu items in order to pay staff higher wages.
"I think we will see this gaining traction," Michael von Massow, an assistant professor of hospitality,
food, and tourism management at the University of Guelph, told CBC News.
He pointed out that removing tipping may make for a more enjoyable meal: "I think a restaurant that
doesn't require me to do that will be a more comfortable experience for me." Von Massow also says
the "no tipping" model can also bridge the gap between kitchen workers, who make three times less
than wait staff.
Source: Huff Post