Current:Home > FinanceMassachusetts high court rules voters can decide question to raise wages for tipped workers -WealthGrow Network
Massachusetts high court rules voters can decide question to raise wages for tipped workers
View
Date:2025-04-15 23:34:59
BOSTON (AP) — Massachusetts’ highest court has tossed out a challenge to a proposed ballot question that would raise the minimum wage businesses must pay to workers who rely on tips and permit tip pooling among both tipped and nontipped employees.
The Supreme Judicial Court ruled Thursday that the state attorney general had properly certified that the question should be eligible to go before voters in the November election.
The Massachusetts Restaurant Association and others have opposed the question, arguing in part that under the state constitution initiative petitions must contain only related or mutually dependent subjects. Opponents argued that increasing what employers must pay tipped workers while also allowing businesses to divide those tips between their full staff were too unrelated to include in a single question.
The court rejected the challenge finding that the question does in fact form a “unified statement of public policy on which the voters can fairly vote ‘yes’ or ‘no.’”
Under current state law, the minimum hourly wage for most workers is set at $15. A separate law permits employers to pay tipped employees an hourly wage of $6.75. The employer can then use any customer tips to cover the remaining $8.25 per hour owed to the employee to reach $15 dollars.
A separate part of the state law limits the distribution of customer tips to only “wait staff employees,” “service employees,” and “service bartenders” and prohibits the pooling and distribution of tips to other employees.
As a result, nontipped employees are paid at least the full statutory minimum wage by their employer but cannot share in any customer tips that tipped employees receive.
The ballot question would gradually raise the hourly wage that employers must pay tipped employees over the course of several years, starting Jan. 1, 2025 and ending on Jan. 1, 2029, when workers would have to be paid the full minimum wage.
“In sum, all employees would be guaranteed the full statutory minimum wage, and tipped employees are guaranteed that any tips they receive are always on top of the full statutory minimum wage. By permitting tip pooling among tipped and nontipped employees, the proposed law also allows employers to distribute tips among all employees,” the court wrote.
Opponents of the question have argued that eliminating the tipped wage would be especially harmful to small and independent Massachusetts restaurants.
veryGood! (75)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- NASCAR grants Kyle Larson waiver after racing Indy 500, missing start of Coca-Cola 600
- Review: 'Bad Boys' Will Smith, Martin Lawrence are still 'Ride or Die' in rousing new film
- Brittany Cartwright Details Horrible Insults Jax Taylor Called Her Before Breakup
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Lawsuits Targeting Plastic Pollution Pile Up as Frustrated Citizens and States Seek Accountability
- Hunter Biden’s ex-wife, other family members expected to take the stand in his federal gun trial
- Man sentenced to life without parole in ambush shooting of Baltimore police officer
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Novak Djokovic withdraws from French Open due to meniscus tear in his right knee
Ranking
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- New Orleans plans to spiff up as host of next year’s Super Bowl
- Caitlin Clark, WNBA rookies have chance to 'set this league on fire,' Billie Jean King says
- Stephen A. Smith fires back at Monica McNutt's blunt 'First Take' comments
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- In new Hulu show 'Clipped,' Donald Sterling's L.A. Clippers scandal gets a 2024 lens: Review
- Shania Twain makes herself laugh with onstage mixup: 'Really glad somebody captured this'
- Father of Alaska woman killed in murder-for-hire plot dies during memorial ride marking her death
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Cyprus president says a buffer zone splitting the island won’t become another migrant route
West Virginia newspaper, the Moundsville Daily Echo, halts operations after 133 years
American Idol Alum Mandisa's Cause of Death Revealed
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
Stewart has 33 points and 14 rebounds, Angel Reese ejected as the Liberty beat the Sky 88-75
Shania Twain makes herself laugh with onstage mixup: 'Really glad somebody captured this'
Goldfish unveils new Spicy Dill Pickle flavor: Here's when and where you can get it