Route 40

Route 40

South Jersey News & Information

Episodes

  1. 15/12/2017

    Talking Tipping, Minimum Wages, Hospitality Fees and Atlantic City

    Amid regulatory changes and a plan to hike the minimum wage, could the Atlantic City restaurant experience be about to change? And how might the restaurant of the future be organized? Last month, we sat down with a local restaurant owner and two servers with decades of experience here and elsewhere, to talk about tipping practices and how best to reward talented staff, both in the kitchen and the restaurant. Scroll down for the recorded audio of the conversation, or find it by subscribing to Route 40 on your favorite podcast platform. The planned minimum-wage increase means that a lot of business owners are going to have to rethink how they do payroll, said Michael Brennan, chef and co-owner of Cardinal Bistro in Ventnor. “Hopefully it breathes inspiration,” he said on the podcast. “Let’s develop a system that abides by all the rules, all the laws and still treats everybody equally and fairly… that’s what needs to happen in this industry and this area.” Hospitality business owners in the Atlantic City area are broadly worried by the talk of a minimum wage increase: more than a few casino executives were discussing the issue on the sidelines of a recent Chamber of Commerce event in Atlantic City. Brennan noted, however, that while he can understand the concerns from the owners’ point of view, if people in the Atlantic City area are making more money, they will also have more to spend on going out to bars and restaurants. Meanwhile, front of house, some employees are troubled by plans by President Trump’s administration to allow pooling of tips. The new rules would allow employers to collect tips themselves and choose how to distribute them, potentially keeping some for the restaurant owners. These issues are particularly important in and around Atlantic City, where almost a third of all jobs are in the leisure and hospitality sector. Photo by Rachel Voorhees, reproduced under Creative Commons license via Flickr. Waiters have long been fighting against dilution of the tip pool, with many restaurants already splitting tips with busboys, hosts and other staff, said Michael Fagan, a long-time Atlantic City-area waiter who runs the video series Waiter Nation. Changing the tipping system to pay front of house and kitchen staff more equally would affect the quality of service, said Fagan, arguing that the best waiters will work where they can make the best tips. “Talent will go where there’s most reward,” he said. If a $15 minimum wage comes in and there are no tips, Fagan joked that he would go and work at a dollar store. “If you pay everybody the same, you’re saying everybody has the same qualifications,” he said. Cardinal Bistro’s Brennan said he doesn’t agree with paying everyone in the restaurant the same wage. “Every server has a value of return customers,” he said, noting that guests will go back to a restaurant because the service was good. Unlike with kitchen work, it is hard to train someone to have the personality or ‘x’ factor that makes them a great waiter, Brennan said. Christian Correa, another waiter with years of experience in the area and out of state, said the problem with tipping is that it’s no longer about service. “I would love to see it not exist because you’re essentially asking everyone who goes out to dinner to now also pay the salaries of all the servers,” he said. “And it’s become a norm and I don’t think it’s a healthy norm.” Correa’s view was echoed by people who contacted Route 40 on social media to talk about tipping. Several said they would like to see a minimum wage and for tipping to return to being an acknowledgement of great service. Brennan said that restaurant owners are facing many challenges including record-high food costs and a seemingly endless list of business and administrative costs. It would be difficult to raise wages across the restaurant, although he would like to be able to pay more. Correa said that when he worked for an Australian restaurant company in California, he was paid a higher hourly wage of $11, and the restaurant’s prices were not higher because of that. There should be more discussion about how restaurants could be run without tipping, Correa said. “I’m intrigued about the idea of saying, let’s say waiters don’t get tips anymore…What does a restaurant look like?” There was a lot of talk on our podcast about the kind of restaurants that might be able to migrate to a ‘hospitality included’ system, where guests pay higher prices or a fixed rate that’s added to their bill so that the restaurant owner can better pay and distribute wages to both front- and back-of-house employees. This could help better-reward kitchen staff, said Brennan. Wage data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (details below) suggest that currently service staff in and around Atlantic City are better-compensated than peers outside of the area, while there is less of a difference between chef wages in the AC area and across the United States. The three podcast participants agreed that the current system needs to change, but there were diverse views on how the restaurant of the future, in the Atlantic City area, should look. Listen to the podcast, recorded last month at Cardinal Bistro, here: https://rtforty.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/tipping_updated.mp3   New Jersey’s Minimum Wage And Tipping Backstory New Jersey Gov.-elect Phil Murphy has pledged to raise the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour. Beyond saying that he would phase in such a wage hike over several years, Murphy has not given many details. It is not clear whether a provision that allows a lower rate ($2.13 an hour) to be paid to servers would continue. An effort by state Democrats last year that would have raised the minimum wage to $15 by 2024 was vetoed by Gov. Christie, and a follow-up attempt to place the issue on the November ballot as a public question also failed. Under the current legislation, the minimum wage in the state is set to rise to $8.60 next year from $8.44 this year. Tipped employees, however, only receive that rate if – for some reason – they get no tips, in which case the employer is responsible for paying them up to the minimum wage for the hours they worked in a given week (everyone we spoke with seemed fuzzy about how this works in practice.) At the same time as the minimum-wage hike is troubling employers in Atlantic City’s hospitality industry, President Trump’s administration has proposed rules that would allow employers to pool tips and redistribute them as they see fit. The rules could go into effect in January, after a comment period this month (that link is to a great feature story on the topic at Eater). Waiters are concerned because many major restaurant owners were sued for withholding tips from servers in the years before legislation to end tip-pooling was introduced in 2011. It is not clear whether more restaurants might migrate to a hospitality-included system if higher wages are forced onto business owners. Hospitality-included became a buzz word when restaurant owner Danny Meyer decided to end tipping at some of his restaurants in favor of a higher prices. Other restaurants – and this is common outside of the United States – have experimented with adding a fixed rate for service to each guest’s check. You can read more about Meyer’s experiment here. When we talked with readers about our plans for this podcast, one got in touch with a link to this Mother Jones article on the history of tipping in the United States. Did you know there was once a ban on tipping? In the early part of the last century, tipping was frowned upon because it enabled restaurant owners “to save money by hiring newly freed slaves to work for tips alone.” The article also has more details on the history of the $2.13 “tipped minimum wage.” New Jersey is one of 18 states with that system – other states use either a higher tipped minimum wage, or guarantee the full state minimum wage. And for more on Atlantic City-area wages, check out this table of average hourly dollar rates based on 2016 Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers: OccupationAtlantic City area hourly average wageUnited States hourly average wage Total, all occupations$22.50$23.86 Registered nurses$36.91$34.70 Accountants and auditors$36.39$36.89 Gaming supervisors$29.29$24.43 Construction laborers$25.47$18.22 Cooks, restaurant$15.44$12.23 Security guards$14.53$14.29 Bartenders$14.23$12.30 Receptionists and information clerks$14.17$14.00 Retail salespersons$11.97$13.07 Maids and housekeeping cleaners$11.86$11.46 Cashiers$10.73$10.43 Cooks, fast food$10.16$9.89 The post Talking Tipping, Minimum Wages, Hospitality Fees and Atlantic City appeared first on Route 40.

    53 min
  2. 30/10/2017

    Podcast: Voting Block Bungalow Park

    https://rtforty.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/VotingBlock_BungalowPark_podcast.mp3 Route 40 gathered together a group of residents from Atlantic City’s Bungalow Park neighborhood at the Back Bay Ale House on Tuesday, Oct. 17 to talk about the New Jersey gubernatorial race and the issues their community would like to see addressed by the next governor. The conversation was recorded as part of the collaborative reporting project Voting Block. The dinner-table discussion covered topics from the state takeover of Atlantic City, to the use of eminent domain for redevelopment on the Northside, the casino industry and how last year’s election affected civil discussion on politics in the view of the neighbors. You can read more about the event here. Bungalow Park participants: Dot Hogan, Tru Hall, Darcee Heffner, Elaine Candy Jones, Stephen Cottrell, Frank Becktel, Sheila Hull-Freeman, Mary Ann Hardiman and Tony Vraim. There was also a brief cameo appearance by Tom Forkin (a Bungalow Park resident running as an independent for Atlantic City Council). Other participants: Geoff Rosenberger and Libby Wills of the 1st Ward also participated, along with Carol Ruffo of the Chelsea Neighborhood Association. Voting Block NJ is a collaboration between The Record, NJ Spotlight, WHYY, WNYC, Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting, the Center for Cooperative Media and New America Media. To read all the stories in this series, visit VotingBlockNJ.com. The post Podcast: Voting Block Bungalow Park appeared first on Route 40.

    1h 15m
  3. 25/10/2017

    Voting Block Pleasantville: We’re Looking For A Leader

    New Jersey needs a leader in its next governor, someone who can help influence national politics and change rhetoric around major issues facing the state, agreed a group of Atlantic County residents. The small group, who met at a home in Pleasantville earlier this month to share a meal and talk about their hopes for next month’s election, also found the current candidates to be lacking in leadership characteristics. Why is that? Both generations represented in the room were quick to point the finger at “pay to play,” which they said favors candidates produced by a political machine, rather than those chosen for their personalities or leadership skills. This is a problem because it leads to gubernatorial candidates that struggle to take New Jersey’s issues to the national stage, the dinner guests said. “I want the state of New Jersey to become more vocal..from a gubernatorial standpoint,” said Belinda Manning, a retiree who lives in Pleasantville and is active in various Atlantic City community organizations. This discussion was organized and recorded as part of Voting Block, a collaborative reporting series looking at the issues that New Jersey communities want to see addressed by the next governor (you can find more from around New Jersey at VotingBlockNJ.com.) You can also listen to an edited audio version of the discussion as a podcast here and via your favorite podcast app: https://rtforty.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/VotingBlock_Pleasantville.mp3 Current gubernatorial candidates Kim Guadagno (Repbulican) and Phil Murphy (Democrat) seem to be doing little to shake much of the voting population from apathy, even though next month’s election is the first opportunity in 12 years to choose a governor without an incumbent in the race. Voter apathy is a consequence of a political system that values candidates’ ability to raise funds above other characteristics, the guests said. David Bowman and Belinda Manning “New Jersey doesn’t really put a lot of currency on popularity in politics,” said Mike Nees, a Stockton University graduate now living in Atlantic City. “So much of our political fortunes are determined by the pay-to-play machinery that churns out winners and losers,” Nees said. “You have to satisfy very specific party bosses in very specific regions to ascend and that means to be as bland, policy-wise, as possible.” The Pleasantville Voting Block attendees agreed that they would all vote next month, even though none were particularly enthusiastic about the candidates. Fighting apathy, however, was important to the group and it was one of the issues that they put on a list for the next governor to address. Watch a video of the discussion, filmed by Media Mobilizing Project, here: “We have a generation right now that is more caught up on just the moment,” said Marques Johnson, who had recently returned to Atlantic County after a period living in New York. “This is a generation that doesn’t feel heard and … this disengagement is what’s costing our communities,” he added. Manning, however, said that she thinks her generation is also apathetic. “I don’t think it’s just the younger generation,” she said. “I think people have become so disengaged in the political structure and their ability to make any change in that structure.” Here are some of the other issues that the group said they want the next New Jersey governor to put on his agenda: 1. Jobs Atlantic County has made headlines for its high rate of foreclosures, after the financial crisis was followed by Superstorm Sandy and a wave of casino closures. The county’s population has been shrinking as residents have left in search of jobs. Dione Carroll said she wants the next governor to know that residents want jobs. “We are not lacking for the drive to work,” she said. Carroll said she wants the future governor to help revive the fortunes of Atlantic City as a resort town – just not one dependent on casinos. 2. Legalizing Marijuana The group discussed the knock-on effects of excluding individuals with marijuana charges from housing and other services, creating an underclass that struggles to find and hold jobs. “It’s important that our local government understands how this is affecting communities and they need to not be afraid to push an agenda that’s going to help us in the right way,” said Johnson. Several attendees were in favor of following Colorado’s lead in legalizing marijuana. “We legalized gambling, I don’t see we couldn’t be a resort for other things that Colorado has seen amazing returns on,” said Carroll. 3. Education The group broadly agreed that there should be a fresh look at how the education system is funded. “Our most valuable asset is our young people,” said Travis Love, who was born and raised in Atlantic City but now lives in Newark. Love said that when schools are devalued, young people will consequently feel devalued. “It’s time that we look at how we fund education in our state,” he said. Cities such as Pleasantville and Atlantic City have seen a decrease in school funding as local property taxes have been eroded by foreclosures in the area. “There has to be a better way to fund our public school systems,” said David Bowman. “I’d like to see the next governor put more emphasis on our public school systems and fund it from a broader base than property taxes.” 4. Immigration Atlantic County’s casino and tourism industry has drawn immigrants for decades. Manning said she would like the next governor to know how diverse the community is. “Most of my community is latinos, some are undocumented,” she said. “They need to feel safe, they need to be able to work, they need to be able to get valid drivers licenses, so that they can work (and) so that they can get insurance on the cars that they sometimes have to drive without licenses and without insurance because they are fearful.” Manning said she would like these members of her community to be able to participate as full citizens. 5. Activism Is Here To Stay The younger members of the group said they also want the next governor to know that the electorate will be holding him or her accountable for their actions. “They should know that we are no longer just going to be bystanders,” said Johnson. “We are going to be engaged, actively involved in making sure that we hold ourselves accountable for holding them accountable.” Nees added that the next governor should be aware that movements such as Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter were not just a one off. “That’s the kind of power that we’re supposed to have in a democracy,” he said. “We can vote you out on this.” 6. We Need Rhetoric Change Outgoing Gov. Chris Christie frequently had public employees in his sights and, as a consequence, public service has become anathema in New Jersey. Public-funded work has become “toxic,” said Nees. Manning said that the next governor will have to address this. “Whether you’re talking about teachers or any other unionized public part of the workforce – don’t dehumanize them, which is what has happened in the past,” she said. “I would like to see a governor start to mend some of those fences and just give them a break and just stop bashing and causing divisions,” she said. “I want the rhetoric to change.” This story is part of the Voting Block series and was produced in collaboration with The Record, NJ Spotlight, WHYY, WNYC, Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting, the Center for Cooperative Media and New America Media. To read all the stories in this series, visit VotingBlockNJ.com.   The post Voting Block Pleasantville: We’re Looking For A Leader appeared first on Route 40.

    51 min
  4. 27/01/2017 · VIDEO

    What’s a ‘Bad Batch’ of Heroin?

    This week the Atlantic City Police Department faced a dilemma that’s becoming sadly too familiar: The city of 39,000 saw six deaths from drug overdoses in the span of seven days. On Wednesday, officers responded to six overdose calls between the hours of 4:00 pm and 10:00 pm alone. Two of those overdoses were fatal. The other four people were saved, temporarily at least, by first responders who administered the opioid antagonist Narcan, which blocks opioid receptors and stops the effects on someone overdosing on heroin or heroin-related drugs like OxyContin or hydrocodone. The ACPD took the sensible step of making a public safety announcement that a “potentially bad batch” of heroin was circulating in the Atlantic City area. For the uninitiated, heroin–at least the heroin sold in New Jersey, New York and Philadelphia–is sold in little baggies marked with stamps (“ISIS” or “Lil Boosie”), that serve as a kind of brand marketing. Like any consumer good, people using heroin care about its quality. In a buyers’ market like this one, heroin is not always heroin. Sometimes it’s fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid that’s 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine (per the NIDA). Sometimes it’s carfentanyl, which can be many thousands of times stronger even than that. The stamp is so dealers who’ve gone out of their way to offer a superior product can let customers know about it. Two of the fatal overdoses had come from heroin sold under the same brand name, so when the ACPD put out its warning, it included the name of the “bad” heroin and a photo of a baggie, with the stamp clearly visible. Problem is: for someone in the depths of a heroin addiction, a drug that’s killing people left and right might sound like just the medicine to get you through the next 24 to 36 hours. We point this out not to criticize the ACPD, but to give a sense of what they’re up against. Do seasoned drug abusers really march off in the direction of an evil drug that’s killing their compatriots, precisely because it’s killing their compatriots? Some people think they do. “When will the press and other news outlets, police departments, etc. realize that by posting a picture of the current stamp on the bag that’s killing everyone only sends the addicts out in force to search for that specifically marked bag?” That question was asked by Danielle Rivera, a Mays Landing resident, in response to the news coverage. In an interview, Rivera said she was not an opioid user herself but was surrounded by the epidemic, in the form of friends and loved ones who were abusing or in recovery. She said she knew personally one person who had overdosed and died from the package the ACPD warned about. “The general consensus seems to be, among those that are in recovery, is that it’s just a lose-lose situation,” she said about the decision to post the drug’s brand name, “because an addict is chasing a high.” “It’s not that they don’t care. It’s just that they’re just not thinking clearly, at that time. They just want to get high and they need to get high.” “These overdoses seem to come in waves, and they are able to track it to one stamped bag. “It is a problem, but putting it in the media is a lose-lose situation. I don’t think it’s helping the addicts themselves. “Without proper help, you’ll get high with whatever you can get high with. If that’s all your dealer has, you’re going to take it.” Mike McGaffney, the house manager at a sober-living home in Pleasantville who is in recovery himself, said abusers he knew would seek out brands that were leading to overdoses. “One thing I really don’t like is when they put out these press releases and they identify the bags,” he said. For one thing, some users might get a false sense of security–if they’re not using the “bad” brand, they’ll be ok. “The people that were using would actually seek out the stamps because it meant it was more powerful, because it gave you a better high. Because most of the people who are using at that stage of the game are just using to maintain. They’re not getting high anymore. They’re just keeping from getting sick.” We asked Sgt. Kevin Fair, of the ACPD, if the safety warning might be an advertisement to some. “Obviously, we do see overdoses in the city, but to see six in a six-hour period is alarming, which is why we put out that information.” He said the hope was that an addict would be deterred. “We’re hoping that they can move on, or go find somebody else, or whatever they need to do, or not use that particular brand or stamp. “All heroin is bad, but with the alarming rate of the number of overdoses in that period of time, we felt that we should do our due diligence for the community.” Loading… The post What’s a ‘Bad Batch’ of Heroin? appeared first on Route 40.

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South Jersey News & Information