Halifax advocacy group urges Nova Scotia to ban 'tip theft' - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Halifax advocacy group urges Nova Scotia to ban 'tip theft'

The Halifax Workers' Action Centre has launched a campaign to encourage legislation in Nova Scotia that would forbid employers in the service industry from pocketing tips meant for workers or using them to cover overhead costs.

Service industry workers rely heavily on tips, but the money doesn't always make it to their pockets

A sever wears a blue facemask and black uniform. She is serving a table of two people a glass of white wine and a beer.
Nova Scotia, Alberta, Nunavut, Saskatchewan and Yukon are the only provinces in Canada without laws preventing tip theft. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

Nova Scotia is the only province in Atlantic Canada without legislation that protects workers against so-called "tip theft," and a Halifax advocacy group for low-wage earnershas started a campaign to change this.

Tip theft is whenemployers take gratuities left by customers for service industry workers, and use them to increase profits, cover overhead costs or simply pocket them, according toLisa Cameron, executive director of the Halifax Workers' Action Centre.

Most workers in the service industry, suchasservers, bartenders andcooks, make minimum wage. Cameron said they rely heavily on tips to make a more decent income.

Along with an awareness campaign, the Halifax group launched a surveythat asks the public about tip theftand their tipping habits in general.

"I think it's sort of a no brainer, and it's a matter of just simple right and wrong," said Cameron. "The majority of folks who we've been surveying were not aware that tips were not the protected property of employees before seeing the campaign."

Lisa Cameron is executive director of the Halifax Workers' Action Centre.
Lisa Cameron is executive director of the Halifax Workers' Action Centre. (Submitted by Lisa Cameron)

She said most respondents reported they always, or almost always tip when prompted, under the assumption the money goes directly to the employee, not the employer.

"The thought of that money ending up in the boss's pocket is offensive both to the workersand to the customer," said Cameron.

Even the Restaurant Association of Nova Scotia, an industry group,condemns the practice. Executive director Natasha Chestnut said in an email toCBC Newsthe organizationrecently held a webinar on employers' rights relatedto tips.

Looking to P.E.I.

Most provinces in Canada have strict legislation against tip-theft. Prince Edward Island, for example, prohibits it altogether.

Section 17.1 of itsEmployment Standards Act says, "Tips and gratuities are the property of the employee to whom or for whom they are given." Section 17.2 states employers are not permitted to withhold tips intended for an employee, or use them as partial wages.

Cameron believes this is the type of standard that Nova Scotia should adopt, and describes P.E.I.'s laws as an "example of excellent legislation."

Courtney Morrison, who previously worked in the service industry for 10 years, has experienced tip theft.As a banquet server for a major hospitality group in Halifax, she said clients would pay a flat rate for the event, and then an additional 18 per cent would be addedas gratuity.

But according to Morrison, she never saw a dime of that 18 per cent.She was told the gratuities would go toward things like staff parties, something that was no help to her when she was trying to earn moneyto pay student tuition.

"So it's not really useful to me that you occasionally have a party for staff at a facility that you operate."

A 'manipulative business model'

As a bartender at a restaurant owned by the same company, Morrison said staff were expected to contribute money from their tip pool toward the business's debit and credit transaction fees.

This is an example, according toCameron, ofemployers taking tips to cover overhead costs.

"I just think it's a really manipulative business model," said Morrison.

A woman wears a red coat, a blue, white and red hat. She's also wearing glasses and a Nova Scotia tartan scarf.  Behind her are tables, chairs and restaurant patios.
Courtney Morrison worked in the hospitality industry for 10 years, where she experienced tip theft. (Daniel Jardine/CBC)

Often, she said, young people working at these types of placesdon't know their rights as employees.

"Sometimes it takes a while to realize that you're getting ripped off by your boss," she said.

With hopes of helping others going through similar situations, Morrison co-founded her ownadvocacy organization, Nova Scotia Hospitality Workers United. The group seeks to increase transparency and build community within the hospitality industry.

A spokesperson from Nova Scotia's Department of Labour told CBC that while itisaware of the concerns surrounding tip theft, there isno plan to address the practice throughthe province's Labour Standards Code.