Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
D.C. restaurants fight back: When workers oppose a higher minimum wage
D.C. restaurants fight back: When workers oppose a higher minimum wage
Jan 1, 2026 10:57 AM

Last June, Washington, D.C. residents voted to pass Initiative 77, a ballot measure that raised the minimum wage for all restaurant workers, including those making tips. Driven by Restaurant Opportunities Centers United (ROCUnited), the policy was meant to ensure that “that no one has to experience the financial es with being forced to live off tips.”

Yet many of the very workers who the law sought to rescue or protectdidn’t want it in the first place, and fought vociferously to have it repealed. Last Tuesday, after significant pushback,their wishes were granted.

“On an 8-to-5 vote — the first of two necessary votes — the D.C. Council approved legislation repealing Initiative 77,” writes Fenit Nirappil in the Washington Post. “Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) said she would sign the repeal legislation.” (All but one of the eight councilmembers are Democrats; the other is independent.)

Unlike many minimum wage proposals — which typically draw resistance from business owners due to fears of business closure — Initiative 77 offers an interesting case where theworkersjoined the fight. Worried about declines in tipping and cuts in staff, restaurant servers, in particular, saw through the claims of “economic justice” and noted the immediate damage it would cause themselves, as well as the long-term risks to the business and their fellow employees.

As Eric Boehm summarizes at Reason:

Though it was served up as a progressive plan to hike wages, Initiative 77 would have actuallycostmany workers money. The proposal abolished the so-called “tipped minimum wage” of $3.50 cents per hour, replacing it with a $15 minimum wage for all food service workers in the city. But workers that I (and other reporters) talked to before the vote told me that they often make far more than $15 a hour, thanks to tips. Even if they don’t, D.C. law required restaurant workers to make at least $12.50 an hour, with employers mandated to top-up employees’ pay if they earn less than that much in tips.

Given the choice, many workers said they’d rather not earn $15 per hour at the cost of losing their tips. More than 8,000 of mentsto the city council urging them to repeal the measure. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser, a Democrat, hasindicatedshe would sign the repeal.

Other workers, servers, and bartenders tell their stories here.

Despite the good intentions of the law’s backers, the workers themselves didn’t need saving, and were close enough to the customers and economic signals to understand that prices are not play things.Now, thanks to their efforts, the District’s restaurant industry can continue growing as industries typically do: not through artificial scheming, but through trial and error and risk-taking based on authentic price information tied to authentic, personal decisions and determinations about value.

“We’ve had this growth in terms of restaurants opening [in the District], neighborhoods growing and employment rising in munities. That will be able to continue,” says Kathy Hollinger, who heads the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington. “Workers will be able to continue earning the e that they were or have the ability to earn in an industry that provides upward mobility.”

Despite whatever qualms we may have with the “fairness” of this or that employer’s particular wage fixings, or even with the“marketwage,” to bluntly subvert and manipulate these signals is likely to lead to even more disadvantage and hardship overall.Market signals may not serve as holistic or wholly accurate determiners of human value and worth, but as it pertains to wealth creation in the economic order, they serve a central purpose in guiding our activity toward actual human needs.

With ROC United already achieving similar “One Fair Wage” laws in seven other states — including California, Oregon, Washington, Alaska, Nevada, Montana, andMinnesota— there are plenty of victims and casualties and there is much more work to be done.But the example of D.C.’s restaurant-worker resistance shows us that economic laws can only be ignored and subverted so far, and that it’s possible for both business owners to collaborate with their employees in the fight for true economic justice.

Image: Washington, D.C. Adams Morgan Neighborhood, 12019, CC0

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Rev. Sirico: Option for the Poor Not Neccessarily an Option for the State
On the popular Italian news portal Ilsussidiario.net, Rev. Robert A. Sirico is interviewed about the social and political views of Pope Francis. To a question about Francis’ rejection of liberation theology, even as many of his fellow Jesuits embraced it, the Acton Institute president and co-founder replied that “it was a very brave thing that Pope Francis did at that time in Argentina, and all the more difficult because he had to confront his brother Jesuits who were attempting to...
Religious Liberty is for Money-Makers Too
Increasingly, governments and private parties are arguing that there is only one appropriate view of the relationship between religion and money-making: Exercising religion is fundamentally patible with earning profits. This claim has been presented recently by state governments and private parties in litigation over pharmacy rights of conscience, and by state governments enacting conscience clauses with regard to recognizing same-sex marriages (non-profits are sometimes protected, but never profit-makers). The most prominent and developed form of the argument has been made...
Acton Institute Windows Phone App Released
Note: We’ve discovered an issue with different phone resolutions and app patibility. This includes the Lumia 920 and HTC 8X phone models. This error will be corrected soon and the post will be updated. Currently, the app works on phones with the same resolution as the Lumia 822 (from Verizon). We’ve launched a new app for phones that allows individuals using Windows Phones to access new content from Acton Institute. This app joins our current lineup of Apple and Android...
Audio/Video: Rev. Robert A. Sirico on Pope Francis
Something new and something a bit older today for our PowerBlog readers. First of all, Rev. Robert A. Sirico, President of the Acton Institute, joined host Mary Jones ofThe Mary Jones Showin Connecticutto discuss the Inaugural Mass of Pope Francis as well as how he is likely to handle some of the issues he will confront as he takes the helm at the Vatican. Listen to the full interview here: As for something a bit older: we also want to...
The Legacy of Racism and Surrogate Decision-Making
In 1989, Erol Ricketts, a researcher with the Rockefeller Foundation, found that between 1890 and 1950, blacks had higher marriage rates than whites, according to the U.S. Census. The report, titled “The Origin of Black Female-Headed Families,” published in the Spring/Summer issue of Focus(32-37), provides an overview that highlights an important question. Ricketts observes that between 1960 and 1985, female-headed families grew from 20.6 to 43.7 percent of all black pared to growth from 8.4 to 12 percent for white...
Monks vs. Morticians in a Fight Over Freedom
The morticians wanted the monks shut down—or even thrown in jail—for the crime the Benedictines mitting. Until 2005, the monks of St. Joseph Abbey in St. Benedict, Louisiana had relied on harvesting timber for e. But when Hurricane Katrina destroyed their pine forest they had to find new sources of revenue to fund the 124-year-old abbey. For over 100 years, the monks had been making simple, handcrafted, monastic caskets so they decided to try to sell them to the public....
Rough Work Must Be Done
Joseph Sunde’s fine post today on vocation examines the dynamic between work and toil, the former corresponding to God’s creational ordinance and the latter referring to the corruption of that ordinance in light of the Fall into sin. Read the whole thing. Joseph employs a distinction between “needs-based” work and something else, something privileged, a first-world kind of “fulfilling” work. The point DeKoster makes is right on target; we need to, in Bonhoeffer’s words, break through from the “it” of...
Women of Liberty: Clare Booth Luce
(March is Women’s History Month. Acton will be highlighting a number of women who have contributed significantly to the issue of liberty during this month.) Clare Booth Luce was a woman of the 20th century: a suffragette, well-educated, a career woman, intensely loyal to her country. She was known in the literary world as a playwright and journalist, but during World War II, she became very interested in politics and chose to run for a Congressional seat in Connecticut as...
Nuns, 60 Minutes, Go After Rep. Paul Ryan
Last week’s spike in gasoline prices hasn’t slowed Nuns on the Bus a whit. The nuns and Network, their parent organization, are squeezing every drop of mileage out of their new-found fame, which has more to do with supporting liberal causes than reflecting church principles of caring for the poor and limiting government’s role in the private sector. Over the weekend, the CBS program 60 Minutes had a sympathetic overview of the supposed Vatican crackdown of the sisters’ activities –...
Video: Rev. Sirico on Avoiding Economic Disaster
The Montreal Economic Institute produces a “Free Market Series” of videos interviewing experts such as Michael Fairbanks and Steve Forbes. This video highlights the Rev. Robert Sirico discussing the role of free markets in economics, and the false sense of utopia offered by other economic systems. “People are beginning to understand that we can’t create a utopia just by wishing it into existence, that we can’t abolish the right to private property, that if we do we create economic disaster.”...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved