I found this article depressing because it reveals how much a 
blackjack dealer makes in a year.

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Wynn alters rules on tips 

Plan for sharing gratuities upsets casino's dealers 

By HOWARD STUTZ
GAMING WIRE 

Steve Wynn
The Wynn Las Vegas chief told table game workers personally, 
official says

 
A restructuring of how Wynn Las Vegas manages its casino soon will 
leave many dealers there a little lighter in the wallet.

Starting Sept. 1, table game supervisors will share in the tips 
earned by dealers, a move gaming industry insiders said is unheard 
of along the Strip.

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"This amounts to money out of my pocket to pay other employees," 
said one dealer, a 14-year veteran who has worked at the $2.7 
billion Wynn Las Vegas since it opened in April 2005. 

"It will cause a lot of disgruntled dealers. You're taking frontline 
people and making them unhappy." 

The change will cause him to lose at least $30,000 a year in tip 
earnings, he said.

Wynn Resorts Ltd. Chairman Steve Wynn and other executives told 
table game employees of the pending changes Monday night.

Wynn had been in China working on preparations for next month's 
opening of the $1 billion Wynn Macau. But he thought the issue was 
important enough to make a 15-hour flight to Las Vegas to tell his 
workers personally, Wynn Las Vegas President Andrew Pascal said 
Tuesday.

A widening disparity between the wages earned by dealers and casino 
floor supervisors caused the Strip casino to alter the structure of 
its table games division, Pascal said.

Starting next week, pit bosses and floor supervisors will be known 
as "casino service team leaders." Their responsibilities will cover 
the operations of specific table games, including game protection 
and customer service. The new plan will be phased in over several 
weeks.

Gaming Control Board sources said Tuesday they were unaware of any 
changes in policy at Wynn Las Vegas. 

A source said the casino had applied to change some of its table 
game internal controls but did not advise gaming regulators about 
what modifications were being requested.

The most controversial part of the restructuring is a change in 
compensation. 

Pascal said that Wynn Las Vegas dealers are the highest- paid 
dealers in the city, averaging about $100,000 per year in salary and 
tip earnings. But the employees supervising dealers average about 
$60,000 a year in salary, Pascal said.

"Because of our property, that disparity has gotten wider," Pascal 
said, citing Wynn's emphasis on high-end play as one reason its 
dealers' tokes are larger than most Strip properties. "There was no 
incentive in the division to advance and grow.

"Everybody wanted to become dealers," he added.

Dealers who split tips by shifts now will share those tokes with 
team leaders and supervisors, who also will receive a boost in base 
salary.

The result, Pascal said, will be dealers earning an average of 
$90,000 annually while supervisors will be paid $95,000.

"We're still going to have the highest-paid dealers on the Strip," 
Pascal said. "What it does is rebalances the structure of our table 
games division and gives a person an incentive to take on more 
responsibility."

But dealers said sharing tokes with supervisors is unfair. 

Writing anonymously on the dealers Internet forum, 
CasinoDealers.net, several Wynn employees said they were 
disappointed that their paychecks could be reduced by an estimated 
10 percent to 20 percent.

Some said they were upset by the short notice before the changes 
take effect; others said they will apply for different positions to 
avoid a pay cut.

"We will continue to go to work, smile, and do our jobs to the best 
of our ability. We have no choice," one Wynn dealer wrote.

"The image of 'Steve Wynn' convinced us we were safe, but the image 
was just a mirage. I think I will be applying for a 'team leader' 
position to minimize the financial damage that lies ahead."

Another dealer wrote that Wynn Las Vegas mismanaged its staff and is 
forcing line employees to share in the burden.

"They say that it is because they think it's only 'right' for 
supervisors to make more than dealers because this is how things are 
in other industries," the dealer wrote. "Well, dealers making more 
than supervisors is how it has always been in this industry and this 
didn't become the 'right' thing to do until Wynn failed miserably to 
make their employees happy."

MGM Mirage spokesman Alan Feldman said examples exist throughout the 
gaming industry of entry-level managers earning far less than the 
line workers they oversee. Bartenders and cocktail waitresses 
sometimes earn more than the assistant beverage manager.

"The management positions are on a completely different career path 
than the line employees," Feldman said.

Harrah's Entertainment spokesman David Strow said that historically 
at Harrah's-owned properties, including the upscale Caesars Palace, 
supervisors do not share in the tip pool with dealers.

Wynn Las Vegas will start incentive programs for dealers to earn 
annual cash bonuses to supplement their lost income, Pascal said. 

Dealers on the Web site said most of the heat from the change will 
be felt by table game supervisors, who are receiving a large bump in 
pay.

"I don't agree with the way this was handled, but this was the 
cheapest way for management to make the floor happy without it 
costing the company money," wrote a Wynn dealer. "Steve Wynn 
emphasized that he expects near perfection from the floor staff for 
this big pay raise."

Wynn Las Vegas operates 140 table games, including baccarat. Pascal 
said about 820 table game positions at the casino will be affected 
in the restructuring.

The casino's poker room and slot machine area will not be affected 
by the changes.

Pascal said the property has operated for several months without a 
vice president of casino operations, the executive responsible for 
the table game division. 

Several other middle management table game positions have been 
restructured too. A casino manager and two assistant casino managers 
will supervise each shift.

Former pit bosses and floor supervisors will assume new job duties. 
Pascal also hopes some dealers will want to move up to the team 
leader positions.

He said the concept allows dealers to have an incentive to increase 
their responsibility while increasing their wages.






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