‘I’ve been talking to someone at the federal department of labor’: Server quits job because manager withholds tips. Then she gets a call from a blocked number
TikToker Maia Dobbs (@maiadobbs) has previously spoken out against an employer she alleges stole tips from its workers, stating that the business gave hourly rates to its staff yet would still ask customers for gratuities, which the company then doled out as they saw fit.
She's posted an update about the scenario in a new TikTok that's garnered over 375,000 likes.
"I recently rage quit my waitressing job for stealing my tips, and in trying to report them, I may have uncovered a bigger problem," Dobbs begins.
Dobbs explains that after several failed attempts at reaching the Connecticut Department of Labor, she received a strange call from a blocked number.
@maiadobbs #ctdol #restaurantlife #connecticut #dumplings #wagetheft ♬ original sound - Maia Dobbs
"I received a phone call from a blocked number saying that they were the Connecticut Department of Labor and that they were gonna send me a check for my stolen wages, but they needed to verify my address," Dobbs says. "They said they also wanted to let me know that it's totally legal for employers to keep employees' tips because it's considered property of the employer."
Dobbs says she thought to herself, "That sounds funny. This whole thing sounds really funny," before adding, "I've been talking to someone at the Federal Department of Labor ... and she said, 'That doesn't sound right at all. I don't know that that was actually the Connecticut Department of Labor that called you and said all that stuff.'"
After speaking with the federal employee, Dobbs decided to notify the police that she had received the strange call.
"So, naturally, I was disturbed, and I went to the police because I'm like, 'somebody's pretending to be the Department of Labor and getting personal information about me, but they also had personal information about me.'"
Dobbs says the police officer she spoke to attempted to contact the Connecticut Department of Labor and also failed to "get through to anybody" but assured her he would keep trying.
She continued to say she received a call the next day, "and it showed up in my Caller ID as the Connecticut Department of Labor." The person on the phone told her again that it's "totally legal" for an employer to withhold tips as long as their employees make minimum wage.
"And I just felt like that wasn't right, so I said, 'What law says that?' And then they said, 'Well, there is no law. What are you talking about?' And I'm like, 'Well then, why is that true?' Then they told me that it was according to Public Act 19-4," she recounts.
Dobbs then presents a physical copy of Public Act 19-4 and says, "I've read this a few times, and I cannot find where it says that an employer can keep our tips. And I'm not a lawyer; I'm a waitress, so maybe there's a chance that I didn't understand the legal jargon, but I did read this other law."
The "other law" she refers to is the Fair Labor Standards Act from the U.S. Department of Labor. She also has a physical copy of this law and begins to read from one of the sheets of paper in her hand.
"[It's] a Federal law, which supersedes Connecticut Law, and according to title 29 in subtitle b, chapter 5, sub-chapter a, part 531, subpart d, c, section 3: any employer may not keep tips received by its employees for any purpose including allowing managers and supervisors to keep any portion of an employee's tips regardless of whether the employee takes a tip credit under section 3m2a."
Dobbs then holds the pages up to the camera to show viewers the law she's referring to.
"It says it right here; this one right here," she says. "Even if I misunderstood Public Act number 19-4, or can't read it properly, or I'm missing something, even if that's true, the Fair Labor Standards Act is a Federal law and supersedes state law."
She says she called the U.S. Department of Labor to confirm this and concludes her video by asserting, "something's going on with the Connecticut Department of Labor."
Commenters also thought there was something fishy about Dobbs' purported phone calls with the Connecticut Department of Labor.
"Definitely speak to attorney- I see Connecticut allows a tip credit but that isn't keeping tips and documentation is required," one viewer wrote.
"Get a lawyer. Talk to your fellow servers. Get them together and get that money," a second advised.
Another thought Connecticut's Attorney General (as of this writing, William Tong) should be made aware of this situation: "Contact your states attorney general with the information that you have. Hopefully also, including whoever you spoke with at the department of labor."
One viewer even said they had a similar experience with a previous employer.
"My employer did this in IL back in 2013 and they were audited and I got a check in the mail like 6 years later," they wrote.
According to the United States Department of Labor, businesses cannot withhold tips from employees, even if they come from tip pools, and there are clear distinctions between tipped and non-tipped workers. Different states have different minimum wages for tipped workers, but there are general laws that protect these tip amounts, and businesses that employ workers who receive gratuities must keep punctilious records, even with tip pools, as to the particular tip amounts accrued by each employee.
The Daily Dot contacted Dobbs via TikTok comment and the Connecticut Department of Labor via press email for further information.
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The post ‘I’ve been talking to someone at the federal department of labor’: Server quits job because manager withholds tips. Then she gets a call from a blocked number appeared first on The Daily Dot.
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