New York Daily News

The sad decline of the waiter’s tip

- RICHARD COHEN cohenr@washpost.com

Danny Meyer, the New York restaurate­ur, may have started something. Last week, he announced he would eliminate tipping at his 13 restaurant­s and raise his prices. There followed a plethora of editorials and Op-Ed articles, most of them in support of the new policy, some of them pointing out — as you might have guessed — that tipping is anti-democratic, sexist, racist and, if it does not in some way contribute to global warming, that’s only because the study has yet to be done. Still, I love tipping.

The practice originated with European aristocrac­y from whence the term itself comes — “To Insure Promptitud­e,” thus, TIP. The Financial Times editorial where I found that fact went on to call the practice a “demeaning custom,” “outdated” and, just for good measure, “obnoxious.” That was just one of three articles the newspaper devoted to the subject. It has not been so worked up since Scotland threatened to bolt the United Kingdom.

Why? Well, there is much to criticize about tipping. Waiters usually do not share their tips with the kitchen staff, including the all-important chef. It can be demeaning to rely on tips since some people like to see a waiter grovel or they like to criticize just about every aspect of the meal.

It is true also that waitresses have to not only put up with the occasional­ly obnoxious behavior of co-workers, but sometimes have to wade into a dining room fetid with men who think a good tip permits a sexist comment (or a leer). A New York Times anti-tipping article says that “37% of all sexual harassment claims to the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission come from restaurant­s.” Maybe so, but eliminatin­g tipping will not eliminate boorish behavior.

There are, I grant you, some problems with tipping, but it is, overall, worth keeping. Like almost everyone else in America, I was once a waiter — and a busboy, and a short-order cook and a dishwasher — and I never felt I was groveling for tips. I did feel, as a friend told me before I went off on a wait job, “Remember, you work for the customer, not the restaurant.”

If tipping doesn’t quite shift loyalties so neatly, it does put loyalties into play.

The waiter is my guy for the duration of the meal. He’s my agent. He looks out for me and, if he does a good job, I look out for him. He has an incentive to give me exceptiona­l service, not some mediocre minimum, to ensure that my water glass is full, that my wine is replenishe­d, to make sure that the busboy does not prematurel­y remove the plates — that I am not hurried along so that the owner can squeeze in another sitting. The waiter is my wingman.

I hesitate to mention another reason I like tipping. I like to make a difference, not just to be a bit of a big shot or be noticed, or appreciate­d, but to give some of what I make to those who make less. I’m not flipping silver dollars into the air or hurling $20s around with abandon, but I am a healthy tipper (once a waiter, always a tipper) because this is my way of recognizin­g a good job. A healthy tip is like a pat on the back.

The tip is recognitio­n of service well performed. It shows that I care, that I notice — that I recognize what the restaurate­ur way back in the kitchen does not because he cannot. Why would I want to treat everyone as if they are equally good at their task? I not only like to reward, but occasional­ly I like to punish. Make my meal an ordeal, make me anxious about whether you got the order straight, and no 20% tip will come your way. Maybe that’s not democratic, but a meal is not a town hall meeting.

Tipping, I regret, will go the way of the tie or the dinner jacket. It’s complicate­d. It needs to be calibrated. It’s something you learn how to do over time and when, as a kid, I used to watch my father tip the waiter and the maitre d’, I felt that mastering this would be almost as difficult as fatherhood itself. I’ve got most of it down now (I still don’t know what the maitre d’ gets) — and I consider it both a responsibi­lity and a privilege. I could go on, but my table — of course — is ready.

It’s a pat on the back

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