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U.S. DOL Announces Intent to Repeal Rule Restricting an Employer’s Use of Tips Where No Tip Credit is Taken

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All Employers

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July 20, 2017

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On July 20, 2017, the Wage and Hour Division (“WHD”) of the U.S. Department of Labor (“DOL”) announced its intention to repeal a 2011 rule stating that customer tips are always the property of an employee, regardless of whether or not the employer takes a tip credit, and that employers were prohibited from using tip pooling to subsidize the hourly wages of untipped employees. Further, a DOL spokesperson reportedly told Bloomberg BNA that DOL investigators are forbidden from enforcing the 2011 regulation ahead of the proposed rule.  Once the rule is rescinded, employers who do not apply a tip credit against a tipped employees’ wages will be able to keep or distribute gratuities in any way the employer sees fit.

Tenth Circuit: Employers Who Take Tip Credits May Keep Customer Gratuities

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All Employers with CO, KA, NM, OK, UT, and WY Employees

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July 3, 2017

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(888) 378-2456

In Marlow v. New Food Guy, the Tenth Circuit stated that employers of tipped employees may keep customer gratuities, as long as the employee is already paid the required minimum wage.  An employer’s retention of tips under this circumstance does not violate the tip credit provision of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”).