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  4. Eleven Madison Park owner responds to investigation and says the restaurant has been forced to raise workers' pay — but not to its originally proposed 'living wage'

Eleven Madison Park owner responds to investigation and says the restaurant has been forced to raise workers' pay but not to its originally proposed 'living wage'

Hannah Towey,Kate Taylor   

Eleven Madison Park owner responds to investigation and says the restaurant has been forced to raise workers' pay — but not to its originally proposed 'living wage'
Retail2 min read
  • The celebrity chef Daniel Humm has responded to Insider's investigation into Eleven Madison Park.
  • He said his restaurant scrapped plans to pay $20 an hour because it didn't want to raise prices.

The celebrity chef Daniel Humm responded Monday to Insider's investigation into his acclaimed restaurant Eleven Madison Park, addressing a leaked op-ed draft that revealed management believed it was underpaying its staff.

Sources had told Insider's Kate Taylor that the restaurant hired a journalist to ghostwrite the piece, which it was said to have hoped to publish in The New York Times. Taylor reviewed the op-ed draft as part of a series looking into the Michelin-star restaurant's chaotic shift to veganism.

The op-ed draft said: "It is absurd and unjust that people working in the kitchens and dining rooms of some of the finest restaurants in the world can barely afford their own food and rent. We are going to ensure that everybody working at Eleven Madison Park will receive a living wage of at least twenty dollars per hour."

Eleven Madison Park continued to say in the draft that it would offset higher labor costs by raising the price of its tasting menu to $425, up from $335. Charging $335 was only possible, the op-ed draft said, because most kitchen workers were paid $15 an hour. Sources said the plans to increase worker pay were dropped, however, after the Times wrote a scathing review of the restaurant's new vegan menu.

After Humm was questioned about the report by the MSNBC correspondent Jacob Soboroff onstage Monday at the 2022 Aspen Ideas Festival, he said the op-ed draft was written as an "exercise" to test out the restaurant's proposed increase in staff wages and menu prices.

"This is not just a creative endeavor," he said. "It's also running a business in a very tough environment. And that is our livelihood. We didn't feel comfortable charging $480 for the meal to do this price increase, so we decided that we would move up there slower."

"We wanted to pay people, I believe, $20," he continued. "Today we're paying $17, $18."

While Humm described the pay bump as an improvement from the restaurant's original $15-an-hour wage, it still falls short of the $20 an hour proposed in the unpublished op-ed draft. Eleven Madison Park did, however, reverse its long-standing no-tipping rule in February, allowing staff members to accept gratuities.

"You cannot get people to do the work that is required at Eleven Madison Park if you don't have a great culture, and if you don't treat them well," Humm told Soboroff on Monday.

Current and former Eleven Madison Park employees previously told Insider that many quit the restaurant over the past year because of long hours, low pay, and food waste. Former employees described juggling roles and working more than 80 hours a week. A representative for Eleven Madison Park dismissed these complaints, saying that the staffers Insider spoke with were "agenda-driven" and that their critiques of the restaurant were "flat-out erroneous."

Read Insider's original investigation into the past year at Eleven Madison Park.

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