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Battle
looms for tip sharing
Wynn Las Vegas part of
lawsuit defending policy
By
ARNOLD M. KNIGHTLY
REVIEW-JOURNAL
Feb. 12, 2008
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
Wynn Las Vegas and a few
nonprofit corporations representing businesses that
depend on tipped employees are seeking to stop an
attempt to roll back the resort's new tip policy.
The resort and the nonprofit groups filed a lawsuit
Thursday in Carson City District Court to block a
petition authored by critics of the resort's new
tip-pooling policy.
"There is a fear on Wynn's part that if it gets to
the voters, it will pass," International Union
of Gaming Employees director Al Maurice
said. "There are too many tip earners in the state."
The petition seeks to create a ballot initiative
that would add language to an existing state labor
law. The initiative would prohibit employers "from
requiring the employee to share tips with certain
other employees." It also would, according to its
authors, define which employees would be eligible to
participate in tip sharing.
The petition was filed in late January by the PEST
Committee, which is backed by the nonprofit union.
Approximately 58,000 signatures are needed by Nov.
11 for the initiative to be considered by the
Legislature in 2009. If enough signatures are
collected, the petition would either be enacted into
law by the 2009 Legislature or put to voters.
However, Carson City attorney Bob Crowell, who is
representing Wynn and the nonprofits, said the
petition itself faces several legal problems,
including violating a state law that requires
petitions to deal with a single subject and some
enforcement issues.
In addition to Wynn Las Vegas, the plaintiffs are
the Nevada Restaurant Association, the Retail
Association of Nevada, the Nevada Motor Transport
Association, Nevada Manufacturers Association and
the Nevada Tavern Association.
International Union of Gaming Employees
Vice President Jack Lipsman said the union's
attorneys are going through the lawsuit to try to
come up with language for the initiative by the end
of the month.
Retail Association Chief Executive Officer and
President Mary Lau believes that even though the
initiative was apparently aimed at protecting casino
dealers, a law could affect other industries. For
instance, the proposed law could stop waitresses
from sharing tips with busboys or change how tip jar
proceeds are divided up at smaller restaurant
counters.
"There's a lot more questions than answers on this,"
Lau said. "It's like undoing employment law."
Attempts to reach Wynn Las Vegas for comment were
not successful.
Assemblyman Bob Beers, R-Henderson, said the groups
are fighting the petition because they believe if
the initiative comes before voters it would pass. He
helped author a bill during the 2007 Legislature
that would have banned Wynn's tip-sharing policy. It
was passed in the Assembly but died in a Senate
committee.
"I've been disappointed a lot by how the state gives
one type of justice to the average working people
and another type of justice to the powerful and
wealthy. This is an example of it," he said.
"It leaves the people of Nevada no other choice than
to use the initiative process," Maurice said. "We
need to bypass the Legislature because it is obvious
the Legislature is owned by the casinos."
The union, which operates more as an advocacy group
than a working union, has been exploring legal
avenues since Wynn Las Vegas added some managers to
the list of people who qualify for a share of the
lucrative tip pool at the casino.
Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at
aknightly@reviewjournal.com
or (702) 477-3893. |