I disagree. A meal in a restaurant is a product. The product costs money to make, so most of these fees should be in the price.No, I hate Walmart and I’d walk.
Point was, things cost money. And things that folks say are “fair” cost money. If you want them you end up paying. Doesn’t matter if it’s in the cost of the product, or the cost of surcharges to provide the mandated payouts to staff.
I generally agree with your sentiments. I’m ok with reasonable (not a politically convenient number) wage increase, and I also recognize that people can go work elsewhere, or get the skills and behavior patterns to be able to.
A 15% tip for a sit down restaurant used to be usual and customary, and was baked into the cake but was left open so you could leave a lot more if the service was excellent. It was supposed to be an incentive for the staff to perform.
This is why supermarkets are required by law in most states to show the price per unit on the the good on the shelf - so you can compare different sizes and brands. Its why new cars have Mulroney stickers that show all the adders including freight.
I can't wait till some state mandates that every service charge is listed on the menu by item, by order item. So my $10 cheeseburger will now have to list that it will have added a $0.30 kitchen fee, a $2 tip and a $0.45 credit card service fee. The restaurateurs are going to scream murder, but they can't be trusted when left to themselves.
The credit card fee is a joke. It costs them way more to handle cash, especially when their staff tends to lift it.
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