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Tip sharing faces another union battle
Gaming employee group takes
steps to push issue to Legislature
Jan. 05, 2008
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
By ED VOGEL
REVIEW-JOURNAL CAPITAL BUREAU
CARSON CITY -- Casino workers who earn tips
could not be ordered by their bosses to
share their tips under a petition filed
Friday by International Union of Gaming
Employees.
The organization wants the Legislature in
2009 to enact a law blocking casinos such as
Wynn Las Vegas and other businesses from
setting up tip-sharing arrangements where
supervisors receive gratuities earned by
dealers or other employees.
Even if the petition has enough signatures
to quality, the Legislature is not expected
to approve a law barring the practice. If
the Legislature rejects it, then voters in
2010 would decide whether to change the law
themselves.
The gaming employee union, headed by Las
Vegas dealer Tony Badillo, also was
involved in the unsuccessful move by
Assemblyman Bob Beers, R-Henderson, in 2007
to pass legislation to stop Wynn Las Vegas
from requiring dealers to share tips with
supervisors.
The Assembly passed Beers' bill 32-10 with
all 27 Democrats voting yes. But the
Republican-controlled Senate never held a
hearing on the bill.
During hearings, Wynn executives said their
casino decided in 2006 that dealers should
share tips with their supervisors because of
the widening disparity between income
collected by dealers and casino floor
executives.
Supporters of the tip measure said pit
bosses often do not make as much as the
dealers they supervise, but they voluntarily
decided to become supervisors, rather than
remain dealers.
Dealers typically earn little more than the
minimum wage, but the bulk of their income
comes from tips.
Under the Prevent Employers From Sharing
Tips petition, only employees who
directly receive tips would be entitled to
receive these gratuities.
These employees could decide among
themselves whether nontip-earning employees
should share those tips.
The gaming employee organization needs to
collect 58,628 valid signatures on
its petitions before Nov. 11, or the
proposal will not be forwarded to the
Legislature for consideration in 2008.
If the union collects significant
signatures, then the Legislature must act on
the petition within 40 days or it will be
placed on the election ballot in 2010. Once
approved by voters, a tip sharing law could
not be changed by the Legislature for at
least three years.
Contact reporter Ed Vogel at
evogel@reviewjournal.com
or (775) 687-3901.
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