Amendment to the FLSA: The Tip Income Protection Act of 2018

[caption id="attachment_1355" align="alignleft" width="245"]

Andrea Kirshenbaum[/caption] Restaurants and hotels increasingly have found themselves over the last several years as defendants in lawsuits or the subject of investigation by the DOL’s Wage and Hour Division challenging their “tip pooling” practices. Hospitality industry employers typically collect a percentage of the tips received from staff who receive tips and redistribute, which often provides additional wages to staff who typically earn less in tips, like hosts or bellhops. On March 23, 2018, Congress got into the act via The Omnibus Spending Bill. Generally, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) governs minimum wage, overtime, child labor, and recordkeeping; however, in 2011 the DOL’s Wage and Hour Division issued regulations related to tip pooling for workers who were paid at least the federal minimum wage. Prior to that time, the FLSA permitted employers to pay less than minimum wage (now $2.13 per hour under federal law and $2.83 per hour under Pennsylvania law) and take a “tip credit” for employees who “customarily and regularly received tips,” so long as employers met certain requirements. The statute also permitted pooling of tips only with other employees who customarily and regularly received tips. In December 2017, the DOL issued a proposal to rescind portions of the 2011 regulations that restricted tip pooling for employees who earned at least the federal minimum wage, questioning whether the DOL acted outside of its authority in regulating the payment of wages beyond the minimum wage or overtime context. As part of the budget bill signed into law by President Donald Trump on March, 23, Congress entered the tip-pooling fray by including The Tip Income Protection Act of 2018 in the bill. This amended the FLSA to provide that “an employer may not keep tips received by its employees for any purposes, including allowing managers or supervisors to keep any portion of employees’ tips, regardless of whether or not the employer takes a tip credit.’’ An employer who violates this section is liable to employees “in the amount of the sum of any tip credit taken by the employer and all such tips unlawfully kept by the employer, and in an additional equal amount as liquidated damages.” This amendment is a significant departure from the remedies previously available under the FLSA, which permitted recovery of the difference between the minimum wage ($7.25 per hour) and the amount paid as the tip credit wage ($2.83 per hour in Pennsylvania), so $4.42 per hour. The act also provides that any person who violates the new FLSA subsection “shall be subject to a civil penalty” not to exceed $1,100 per violation, as determined by the Secretary of Labor. Of significant note, the act indicates certain of the 2011 revisions to the tip credit and tip pooling regulations “shall have no further force or effect until any further action taken by the Administrator of the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor.”