Guernsey Press

TGI Fridays hit by first ever strike ballot over pay and tips

Unite accuses the American-owned company of giving some waiters’ card tips to kitchen staff in lieu of a pay rise.

Published

Workers at restaurant chain TGI Fridays are to be balloted for strikes in a dispute over wages and tips.

The Unite union said it will hold strike ballots at two branches every week from Friday, starting in Milton Keynes and Covent Garden in London.

Unite accused TGI Fridays of using unpaid trial shifts and of taking 40% of waiters’ card tips and redistributing them to kitchen staff in lieu of a pay rise.

Unite regional officer, Dave Turnbull, said: “Our members are bravely fighting back against a system that forces workers to live on low pay and without income security.

“They have decided to ballot for strike action in a wave of rolling strike ballots over the coming months because their employer has refused to address their concerns on tips and other issues.”

TGI Fridays was on a recent list of companies “named and shamed” by the Government for not paying the minimum wage.

The move follows an announcement that McDonald’s workers at six branches are to be balloted for further strikes over pay and working conditions.

Staff from restaurants in Cambridge and Crayford, London, walked out last year in the first strikes in the chain’s history in Britain.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.