What kind of favor? Seriously I don't get this tipping at a counter thing that has come into vogue. Also LSA's are not making Fast Food restaurant wages. They actually have a career.That really is a personal judgement. Many passengers leave the quarters for small purchases. For larger purchases ($20+) a dollar + quarters, or a few dollars, depending on the complexity of the order. Occasionally someone will tip based on a percentage, but not often.
Do keep in mind, if you're drinking and keep getting the same order and you're tipping you well, I will remember your order and have it ready by the time you get to the counter, if I see you coming again.
All that being said, there are a lot of folks who leave nothing. It doesn't really bother me, but it goes without saying that if you take up five minutes to place your $50 order and build a huge line behind you because you're taking your time and you leave me nothing? Don't expect me to do you a favor when you come up again!
I mean things like...You insist you want club soda or tonic water, when all I have to sell is Perrier. Or maybe bloody Mary mix. Is it suppose to be sold? No. Is it suppose to be given away without liquor? No. Could I do either of those things? Well...What kind of favor? Seriously I don't get this tipping at a counter thing that has come into vogue. Also LSA's are not making Fast Food restaurant wages. They actually have a career.That really is a personal judgement. Many passengers leave the quarters for small purchases. For larger purchases ($20+) a dollar + quarters, or a few dollars, depending on the complexity of the order. Occasionally someone will tip based on a percentage, but not often.
Do keep in mind, if you're drinking and keep getting the same order and you're tipping you well, I will remember your order and have it ready by the time you get to the counter, if I see you coming again.
All that being said, there are a lot of folks who leave nothing. It doesn't really bother me, but it goes without saying that if you take up five minutes to place your $50 order and build a huge line behind you because you're taking your time and you leave me nothing? Don't expect me to do you a favor when you come up again!
Thankfully it doesn't happen often, but when it does, oh boy... And it's usually someone who comes up by themselves and gets frustrated when there's 3 trays of food/drink to carry three coaches back with no help.I can honestly say I've never taken 5 minutes to place my order or spent $50 at the cafe. Not even remotely close on either account. Do people really do that?
I think the most I spend on an Am-Cafe is on the Cascades, which have rather decent sandwiches...get two of those plus two drinks and you're looking at perhaps $20. But the attendant simply takes the pre-packaged sandwiches and the drink out of the fridge....not really a tip-worthy exercise, IMO. Sorry...guess I'm a cheapskate.
So I should give up my table and only spot to sit, and not sit for my one thirty minute break in a ten hour day? And I'm talkin' about a group of people, usually drinkers, where I would have to give up the whole table, not just one side. And remember I'm talking about working on the corridor and referring to trains where it's non-stop busy. If it's something like 67/66/151/190, I will tell commuters to sit, because I don't mind standing for an hour or whatever, because I've been sitting for a bunch of the trip anyway.Yup.... All about the attitude. Be friendly and professional and you'll always get a $1. Once I tipped $5 because he was super friendly, offered me a refill on coffee, and whenever he didn't have a line he wiped the tables in the cafe. He was on the crescent a few years ago but he said it wasn't his normal route.
Only at Amtrak would an employee be "doing a favor" to let a customer sit at a table.
That's surprising. The total number of Amtrak servers must be a tiny, tiny blip in terms of the total number of overall American workers. I mean, if they put down "waiter" as their occupation, then I guess that'd be true. But if they put down "train crew" or something like that, what would even signal the IRS that something is out of place? Furthermore, if someone's W-2 indicates they are earning well over the federal minimum wage in salary, why would the IRS expect a certain % of income to come from tips?I believe that the IRS expects a certain portion of an Amtrak server's income to be from tips and red-flags the return if the figure is under the expected sum. Stiffing on the tip can cause problems for the server.
(Of course, this comment is based on extensive interviews with on-board personnel in the 1990s. Things may have changed since then.)
This is true depending on what LSA job you are coded as/working. LSA Cafe/Club, we don't follow this rule. LSA Diner, they do. I believe they are suppose to get taxed based upon the sales in the dining car, and what the IRS expects they should make in tips.I believe that the IRS expects a certain portion of an Amtrak server's income to be from tips and red-flags the return if the figure is under the expected sum. Stiffing on the tip can cause problems for the server.
(Of course, this comment is based on extensive interviews with on-board personnel in the 1990s. Things may have changed since then.)
It's alright, I shouldn't have taken offense. I just thought it was directed at me, and I found it a bit insulting, since I consider myself to be one of the "better" and more accommodating LSAs out there. And I do agree with you about crew taking up multiple tables, and I don't like it very much either. Zone 2 conductors out of DC (WAS-NYP) are not suppose to be allowed to sit in the Cafe, unless they sit with the LSA. That can be a PITA some times, but I suppose it's a step in the right direction.Triley... I apologize, that comment was not directed at you personally. Amtrak should have all of that thought out.... It's the system that is at fault. I know that Amtrak allows you to reserve a table, and expects you to take your break at that table.
It just looks so sloppy to have LSA's and other crew members taking up tables in the lounge and diner. Especially the diner.
And you are one of the few that wipes the tables that's for sure!
$1-ish per alcoholic drink. If my change is close to a buck, maybe that.
$1 plus change per order for coffee/soda, unless it's just a single drink and the change is close to a buck.
$1 for each load of ice i come and fetch (if you give me 3-4 cups)
Multi-day long distance trip, I'll tip $5 on the first visit if I'm expecting to visit frequently, and then roughly the above schedule if I'm remembered.
Giving me the WHOLE can of tonic/bloody mix will bump this up a bit. It pains me to NO end that these aren't sold on their own, and rarely given beyond what will fill your cup.
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