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One Fair Wage launches food-safety training program to compete with ServSafe

The program will use profits for causes supporting workers’ wages and benefits

Holly Petre, Assistant Digital Editor

January 18, 2023

2 Min Read

One Fair Wage — an organization fighting to raise the minimum age and end the tip credit —announced that it launched a food-safety training program, Just.Safe.Food, designed to compete with the National Restaurant Association’s ServSafe.

The announcement came one day after a New York Times article prominently featuring One Fair Wage claimed that the National Restaurant Association uses ServSafe, which costs $15 and is a mandatory program used to educate workers on proper food handling practices, to fund lobbying efforts against minimum wage increases.

Just.Safe.Food costs $10, and One Fair Wage says the money will go toward advocacy organizations that support raising the minimum wage and giving workers benefits.

The New York Times piece includes the unsubstantiated claim that restaurant employees are on the hook for the ServSafe payment. It also states that the profits of ServSafe have reached $25 million since 2010, more than the NRA has spent on lobbying during the same period, according to the IRS.

As part of its announcement, One Fair Wage is also urging elected officials to pass legislation to raise the minimum wage and phase out subminimum wages for workers; create laws repealing mandatory worker contributions to ServSafe; and investigate whether the National Restaurant Association violated its tax status in the misuse of funds.

This has been One Fair Wage’s mission since its inception: to end the subminimum wage, eliminate the tip credit, and raise the minimum wage.

“Restaurants like Applebee’s and Olive Garden make millions of dollars by paying restaurant workers a federal subminimum wage of just $2.13 an hour,” said One Fair Wage president Saru Jayaraman in a statement. “The fact that they fund lobbying efforts to kill laws raising wages by charging workers for food safety training is beyond outrageous.”

One Fair Wage is also calling on lawmakers to stop taking donations from the National Restaurant Association.

About the Author

Holly Petre

Assistant Digital Editor

Holly Petre is a digital editor for Nation’s Restaurant News as well as the host of NRN’s podcast, Extra Serving, and producer for Informa Restaurant and Food Group’s other three podcasts, One On One by Food Management, Off the Shelf with SN and In the Kitchen with Bret Thorn. Holly holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts with a concentration in Sculpture, fibers and Material Studies and Ceramics from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. A native New Yorker, Holly enjoys her place on staff as the resident pop-culture expert and millennial with a sassy attitude and great sense of style.

Holly Petre’s work on Nation’s Restaurant News and Restaurant Hospitality often covers marketing and trends, either aimed-at or examined-through the millennial mindset. Holly is responsible for introducing TikTok and Twitch to NRN and RH readers as well as explaining terms like “Karen” to staff and readers alike. She also spends her time on staff trying not to make every headline a pun.

Holly Petre hasn’t spoken at any events or on panels, but she is readily available with a killer shoe wardrobe and several witty quips.

 

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