Restaurants win relief as Colorado bill leaves wage hikes to local control

By John Frank | Axios Denver

The nasty fight at the Colorado Capitol over how much to pay tipped restaurant workers ended in a standoff this week.

The big picture: Gov. Jared Polis signed the Restaurant Relief Act into Colorado law on Tuesday, with backing from the Colorado Restaurant Association and other major industry organizations.

Why it matters: The result is a victory for the opposition, which mounted an aggressive campaign against the legislation, though it gives cash-pinched restaurant owners another chance to make their case at the local level.

Threat level: The state’s restaurant industry faces a crisis, with as many as 200 closing statewide last year — a majority of which operated in Denver — partially prompting the legislative proposal.

Catch up quick: The House bill pitted the restaurant industry against its own workers in a battle over whether to increase the amount deducted from the base pay of an employee who receives tips.

  • Restaurants considered the measure a potential lifesaver at a time when many have gone out of business.
  • But labor unions and left-leaning advocates opposed the potential reduction in workers’ pay, given the high cost of living in the Denver metro.

How it works: State lawmakers neutered the bill and punted the decision about adjusting the $3.02 tip credit to local governments like Denver and Boulder, where the minimum wage exceeds the state’s rate of $14.81.

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