{"id":2754,"date":"2025-11-26T12:00:15","date_gmt":"2025-11-26T13:00:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/hamanship.com\/?p=2754"},"modified":"2025-12-01T15:33:04","modified_gmt":"2025-12-01T15:33:04","slug":"edgewater-first-to-table-with-tip-credit-boost-to-buttress-suburbs-restaurant-scene","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/hamanship.com\/index.php\/2025\/11\/26\/edgewater-first-to-table-with-tip-credit-boost-to-buttress-suburbs-restaurant-scene\/","title":{"rendered":"Edgewater first to table with tip credit boost to buttress suburb\u2019s restaurant scene"},"content":{"rendered":"
Edgewater took a big step Tuesday toward decoupling increases in the city’s minimum wage from the lower wage collected by tipped workers, which would make it the first city in Colorado to take advantage of a new state law<\/a>.<\/p>\n That law allows municipal governments that set their own minimum wages to create a bigger pay gap among restaurant positions — typically front of the house vs. back of the house \u2014 than the difference set by the state.<\/p>\n The vote by the Edgewater City Council on Tuesday was unanimous, and a second, and final, vote will be needed Dec. 16, before the ordinance takes effect Jan. 1.<\/p>\n By Colorado law, the minimum wage for tipped workers is pegged at $3.02 less than the standard minimum wage — meaning that when the standard minimum rises, so does minimum pay for servers and other tipped positions, even if those workers make more money with tips.<\/p>\n The restaurant industry has long complained that this requirement — put in place by state lawmakers<\/a> nearly 20 years ago \u2014 burdens eateries with greater overhead at a time when dining establishments have been struggling to regroup in the wake of draconian shutdowns and restrictions placed on their operations during the pandemic.<\/p>\n For restaurants in Edgewater, Denver and Boulder — cities that have set their own minimum wages above the state threshold, currently $14.81 per hour \u2014 the mandatory linkage of the two classes of pay creates an upward ratchet effect that burdens businesses with extra labor costs.<\/p>\n In June, Gov. Jared Polis signed into law a measure that would allow cities in Colorado to increase the gap<\/a> between the tipped minimum wage and the standard minimum wage — a difference known as the “tip credit.” Boulder County also sets its own minimum wage.<\/p>\n