Happy staff brew better beer. It's obvious when you think about it. A team that feels respected, valued, and heard shows up differently. They care more. They collaborate better. They solve problems faster. And yes—the beer, the taproom experience, and ...
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WIRTW #792: the 'CBC' edition

Happy staff brew better beer.

It's obvious when you think about it.

A team that feels respected, valued, and heard shows up differently. They care more. They collaborate better. They solve problems faster. And yes—the beer, the taproom experience, and the business all benefit.

Yet for an industry built on passion, craft, and community, too many breweries still struggle with workplace culture.

Long hours. Thin margins. High stress. High turnover.

It's easy to focus all your energy on recipes, distribution, and survival while overlooking the single most important ingredient in your brewery: your people.

And when that happens, the consequences show up fast—burnout, disengagement, toxic dynamics, and constant turnover.

Replacing an employee isn’t cheap. Depending on the role, it can cost up to 50% of that employee's annual salary to recruit, hire, and train someone new. In breweries—where production and taproom roles already see high turnover—that cost adds up quickly.

But here's the good news: building a great workplace culture doesn't require a massive budget or a full-time HR department.

It requires intention.

That’s exactly what I'll be talking about at the Craft Brewers Conference this April in Philly.

Happy Staff, Better Craft: Brewing a Better Workplace
📅 Wednesday, April 22
⏰ 10:15–11:15 AM
📍 Room 201-AB

In this session, we'll dig into the connection between employee engagement and brewery success—and why culture isn't just a feel-good concept, but a real business strategy.

We’ll talk about:
  • Why happy employees make better beer (and better customer experiences)
  • How better communication can prevent most workplace conflicts before they start
  • Simple, low-cost ways to recognize and reward your team
  • How to design brewing and taproom jobs people actually want to stay in
  • What leadership looks like when you lead like a worker instead of a boss

My goal isn't theory. It's practical tools.

The brewing industry is full of passionate people who love what they do. But passion alone isn't a workplace strategy. If breweries want to thrive long term, they have to invest in the people who make the beer, pour the pints, and represent the brand every day.

Great breweries don't just brew great beer.

They build great workplaces.

If you're heading to CBC this year, come join me. I'd love to see you there—and talk about how happier teams can help build stronger breweries.



Here's what I read this week that you should read, too.

A dollar saved, a tip credit destroyed

Sometimes a case turns on complex legal questions or convoluted fact patterns. Other times it turns on something far simpler—like a single dollar.
 
In Dugan v. Reservoir Restaurant Inc., a $1 deduction just cost a restaurant its entire tip credit. A federal court handed the plaintiffs (a class of servers) a summary judgment win because their employer deducted $1 per shift from their tips to cover items like silverware, pens, and similar supplies.

Here's the setup. The restaurant paid its servers the tipped minimum wage of $2.13 per hour, relying on the FLSA's tip credit to bridge the gap to the $7.25 federal minimum wage. But every shift, the restaurant also took $1 directly from the servers' tips to reimburse the business for operating supplies.

That's where things went sideways.

The FLSA allows employers to count certain "facilities" toward wages—think meals or lodging. But the law draws a bright line: employers cannot shift the ordinary costs of running the business onto employees.

Silverware? Pens? General restaurant supplies?

Those are the employer's costs.

The court had little trouble concluding that forcing servers to cover those expenses violated the FLSA's tip credit rules. And when an employer violates those rules, the consequence is severe: the tip credit disappears entirely.

That means the restaurant must now pay the servers the full minimum wage for every hour worked, not the tipped rate. Because the servers were paid only $2.13 per hour, the employer now owes $5.12 per hour in back wages—plus an equal amount in liquidated damages.

All because of a $1 deduction.

The lesson for employers of tipped workers is straightforward. If you want to take advantage of the tip credit, tipped employees must keep their tips—period, with very limited exceptions. Even small deductions tied to ordinary operating costs can blow up the entire arrangement.

Saving a dollar per shift feels awfully petty. It also isn't worth sacrificing the entire tip credit over.

There are no “quick favors” in wage-and-hour law

"Can you just help with this for a minute?"

That's how off-the-clock cases start.

Not with an intent to steal wages, but with an innocent call for help.

In Arnold v. Marriott, a hotel employee alleges that during busy holiday seasons he and others were directed to help with conference and event setups while not clocked in — including during lunch. Supervisors allegedly observed pre-shift work and didn't ensure it was recorded. On one occasion, when he asked whether he'd be paid for responding to work texts during lunch, he was told yes — but claims he wasn't. He also alleges he raised concerns with management and nothing changed.

That's the fact pattern.

The court didn't decide who's right. It decided whether the allegations were enough to move forward. They were.

Why? Because the complaint didn't just recite legal buzzwords. It alleged specific instances of pre-shift work, lunch-break interruptions, supervisory knowledge, and a failure to correct the problem. The unlawful withholding of wages doesn't require evil intent. It only requires that an employer failed to pay an employee for time it knew or should have known employee was working. If a supervisor directs or observes off-the-clock work and the company doesn't fix it, that's more than enough to keep a wage claim alive.

There's a lesson here for every employer with nonexempt staff.

Off-the-clock exposure rarely comes from a written policy or from an intent to "screw" the employees or steal from them. It comes from culture. From operational pressure. From managers who prioritize getting the job done over getting the time recorded.

Just because it's not "on the clock" doesn't mean it didn't happen. That needs to be more than a slogan. It needs to be consistently enforced during every work shift.

Train managers that there are no "quick favors" before a shift or during lunch. No "just take care of this." If they need the work done, the employee must be paid for their time.

Make timekeeping easy. Mobile punches. Clear reporting mechanisms for missed meals or extra time. Zero retaliation for reporting pay issues.

Audit high-risk departments — events, hospitality, production, anywhere deadlines rule the day.

And when an employee complains about unpaid time? Investigate it and, when necessary, fix it. Immediately. Pay it. Document it.

Off-the-clock claims are expensive not because of one missed punch — but because of what happens after management learns about it and does nothing.

That's where liability multiplies. And where employers get burned.

Litigation is a strategy, not a reflex

When an employee walks out the door holding your company's stuff hostage, you have two problems: (1) your property, and (2) the story you're creating for the inevitable lawsuit.

Rezene v. Haribo is a case study in how fast this can go sideways. The employee allegedly kept a company Mercedes, phone, laptop, and other items while severance talks dragged on. The employer's lawyers got involved to retrieve the property. After multiple written demands, they contacted police. Officers showed up at the employee's home. Cue the next act: claims for defamation, emotional distress, discrimination, and retalation.

Years of federal litigation followed. Haribo ultimately won. Some claims died on summary judgment. The rest died at trial. But that's not the point.

What started as a property-return dispute metastasized into 15 rounds of litigation. Depositions. Summary judgment briefing. A jury trial. And who knows how many hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.

Winning doesn't mean it was cheap. Or fast. Or worth it.

Employers, property recovery is not just an IT/HR chore. It's evidence management. Every email, every deadline, every adjective becomes a future exhibit.

So what’s the right playbook?

1) Separate the issues. Severance discussions are one lane. Property return is another. Put it in writing: return of company property is required regardless of whether we reach a severance agreement.

2) Make the demand letter boring. List the items. Confirm ownership. Set a firm deadline. Offer a neutral handoff option. Avoid loaded language. "Stolen" is a conclusion. "Company-owned equipment not returned after X written requests" is a fact.

3) Lock down data immediately. Disable access. Remote wipe if appropriate. Document what you did and when you did it.

4) Think carefully before calling the police. Sometimes it's warranted. But it's also gasoline. If you go that route, assume you'll be defending the decision to a jury.

5) Don't let frustration write your emails. Words like "hostage" and "blackmail" feel good in the moment and look terrible in a complaint.

6) A civil replevin or conversion action is a last resort. It may get your property back. It will not avoid litigation. If anything, it invites whatever claims the employee was already contemplating.

Every escalation decision should answer two questions: Is this necessary? And are we prepared to live with the litigation consequences?

Litigation should be a strategy, not a reflex. Act accordingly.

The EEOC can't repeal Bostock, but it's sure trying

The EEOC just voted 2–1 to hold that federal agencies may restrict bathrooms and other "intimate spaces" based on biological sex — and may exclude transgender employees from facilities consistent with their gender identity.

"Biology is not bigotry," says EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas.

Except according to the Supreme Court, it very much is.

In Bostock v. Clayton County, SCOTUS held that discrimination against transgender employees is discrimination "because of sex" under Title VII. That wasn't a narrow ruling about terminations. It was a statutory interpretation decision. The Court said that when an employer treats someone differently for being transgender, sex is necessarily part of the decision.

You don’t get to separate "biology" from the analysis. The Court already did the textual math.

Commissioner Kalpana Kotagal dissented, warning that the decision "rests on the false premise that transgender workers are not worthy of the agency's protection from discrimination and harassment and that protecting them threatens the rights of other workers."

The majority argues there's no binding precedent on bathrooms specifically, so it returned to the "ordinary meaning" of sex in 1964.

But once the Supreme Court interprets a statute, agencies don't get to rewind the clock and start over. You may disagree with Bostock. But it governs.

A few important guardrails:
• This applies only to federal agencies.
• It does NOT apply to private employers.
• It does NOT bind federal courts.
• It does NOT overrule Bostock.

What it does do is create tension with Supreme Court precedent — and invite litigation.

It also carries a very real human risk.

The practical impact of policies like this isn't abstract. It's harm to transgender workers — exclusion from basic workplace facilities, increased exposure to harassment, and the kind of stigmatization that courts have already recognized as unlawful. When access to a restroom becomes a legal battleground, the people caught in the middle are employees just trying to do their jobs.

Which raises the practical question: was this a widespread workplace problem that needed solving?

Most employers have managed restroom access pragmatically for years, balancing inclusion and privacy without operational chaos. Employment law should address real harms — harassment, retaliation, unequal pay — not create new ones.

Employers should focus on minimizing liability by continuing to adopt policies that treat transgender employees consistent with their gender identity while protecting privacy for everyone. It's the legal thing to do. Just ask the Supreme Court.

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