Federal Stats
on Dealers Criticized
Nevada gaming dealers make
less money than any other dealers in the country,
according to newly released federal statistics.
But state employment experts say the numbers are
misleading, claiming that casino dealers don't fully
report their incomes because they underreport their
tips.
Wage data from the Labor Department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics indicates Nevada's overall annual
average wage ranks 29th of the 50 states and the
District of Columbia, Virgin Islands, Guam and Puerto
Rico.
Nevada's average wage is $34,060 compared with
the national average of $37,020. The semiannual
report of wages, taken in May 2004, was released
Thursday.
The numbers show that dealers make an annual average
wage of $13,410.
That wage doesn't accurately reflect what Nevada
dealers probably make, said Jim Shabi, an economist
with the Nevada Department of Employment, Training
and Rehabilitation. Shabi said DETR is the agency
that compiles the wage survey information for the
BLS.
"You can be sure tips are never going to be
100 percent accurately reported," Shabi said.
"The mix of jobs in the state is clearly one
that is skewed toward the lower end."
Shabi noted that the survey is a detailed one that
strives to get the most accurate data and includes
the reporting of tips, but that tipped occupations
are difficult to gauge.
"It's a comprehensive survey, but tip income
is one of those areas that is difficult to survey,"
he said. "It's one of those areas where Nevada
is unique because such a large percentage of jobs
are tipped."
Arte Nathan, chief human resources officer for
Wynn Resorts, said one possible reason for the misrepresentation
is the varying ways companies handle their dealers'
tips.
"Most dealers today, they pool their tips,"
Nathan said. "So some companies put them on
the paycheck, some do not. Some of them when they
pool they give them the cash every day. Unless they're
on the paycheck the dealers aren't going to report
them because they don't want to get taxed."
Nathan suggested that the way the questions are
asked could determine the accuracy of workers' answers.
"There are dealers in town that are making
in excess of $60,000 to $70,000 in tips," he
said. "If they are just asking base wages they've
got the correct answer. Unless you ask the question,
'What is your total compensation including tips?'
you aren't going to get anything more than what
you've got. That could hold true for a lot of tipped
classifications."
Yvette Monet, an MGM Mirage spokeswoman, agreed
with Nathan's assessment.
"This number in no way reflects what dealers
in Las Vegas are making," Monet said.
Minnesota had the highest average wage for dealers
at $26,050.
Other Nevada hospitality positions ranked fairly
high on the BLS survey. The wages of Nevada's skin
care specialists ranked first with an average of
$47,240 per year; Nevada's maids and housekeepers
ranked 4th, with an average wage of $21,370; hotel
and resort desk clerks ranked 4th with an annual
wage of $24,120; gaming managers ranked 4th with
an annual wage of $73,750; restaurant cooks ranked
5th in annual wages at $24,100; chefs ranked 8th
with annual wages at $39,430 and waiters and waitresses
ranked 16th with $16,280 in annual wages.
The data shows that the District of Columbia has
the highest wage earners in the nation with a median
wage of $45,040, but Shabi said that area has higher
unemployment.
Nevada currently has an unemployment rate of 4.2
percent.
"Wages aren't the whole picture," Shabi
said. "You always want higher paying jobs.
Every economic development department in the country,
whether they're the Nevada Development Authority,
they're looking to get clean, high-tech, high education
jobs. The problem is everyone is trying to get the
same jobs. Nevada has done a passable job of diversification
of jobs. We're still dominated by gaming."
He noted that the state's wages have risen steadily
since 1989, at a rate of about 3.5 percent per year,
at or better than the rate of inflation, which means
Nevada workers' wages haven't lost ground to inflation.
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