The massive worker wage gap fueling America’s most decadent vacation spot
SAG HARBOR, New York—There’s something of a consensus in the Hamptons, one of America’s most gratuitously expensive places to summer, that it’s all about who you know. I hear this from the e-commerce-trader-turned-realtor in the powder blue suit jacket who passes estates from the hands of one billionaire to the other as a “hobby, really,” and I hear it from Raphael the Caribbean sign painter-slash-handyman who’s only here because some rich kids visited his island and took a shine to him and helped set him up in a place to live, practically for free. Out here, who you know dictates what benefit gala you’re invited to, which restaurants will serve you. Sometimes even congressmen don’t make the cut. It also dictates how and who and when you serve, in a 118-mile stretch where untold numbers migrate every year to labor as much as they possibly can and feed off the summer whims of the insanely rich and the regular-ass wealthy alike.
The seasonal workers out in the Hamptons, the engines behind the whole operation, tell me they’re saving the money they’re making out there. They’re using it to open a restaurant in their home country (to serve tourists), to pay off their loans (culinary school, naturally), to put themselves through business school and open their own hotel. If it isn’t their first summer, they tend to say it’s their last—unless they’re the kinds of bartenders who have a following among the old-money families in Sag Harbor, or get invited to serve at the lavish mansion parties by the sea, in which case they’ll probably come back to rake in a couple grand every night, every summer, forever.
On Sunday morning they start early, around 5 or 6 a.m.—even in Montauk, which thanks to the shrewd dealings of a handful of surf-enthusiast developers and Brooklyn nightclub promoters has shifted from a sleepy lobster-shack town to something like Far East Williamsburg. The hotel staff—Latino teenagers from the surrounding towns, a 28-year-old from the Bronx out for the summer with his cousin—walk down the sandy grid of beachfront properties in pairs dressed in khakis and matching polos. By 9 a.m. housekeeping carts are rolling down the wooden pool decks. Cooks, shirtless with towels tucked into their belts, get in an hour later to turn the fryolater on at the Sloppy Tuna; they’ll be at it for 12 or 14 hours, while on the other side of the kitchen door the restaurant’s deck fills up, buckles under the weight of bodies in salmon shorts bopping to house music, empties out again around 4 a.m.
Across the country, urban centers have shifted their focus to the experience economy.
“The money’s okay, but it’s really about the hours,” one of the cooks tells me. “You can work 75-hour weeks here.”
Most everyone out here works like that, but the character of those 75-hour weeks is largely dependent in the Hamptons—and in most places where the wealthy have clotted—on what level of service work you have access to. Across the country, urban centers have shifted their focus from manufacturing to experience economies; federal statistics repeatedly project service occupations as the largest and fastest growing sector of the U.S. economy. Now, jobs previously considered stepping stones or the purview of the washed-up and recently unemployed have become massive, hyper-professionalized positions, tweaked to accommodate the tastes of the upper class. Young professional waitresses are expected to memorize Times restaurant reviews; meanwhile the question of whether a $15-an-hour wage would bring fast food itself to its knees was debated over the course of years. All of which is to say: There’s a massive income gap in the service industry, one that’s spookily reminiscent of the hierarchies that created it in the first place.
Generally, the wealthier a zip code the more services it requires—nannies, bartenders, drivers, waiters, landscapers, and in the case of the Hamptons, apparently, little people firing off super soakers filled with Champagne. I wanted to see what the most extreme stratification of the service market might look like, in a place where during the summer the population increases five times over and even a spot in a trailer park might set you back half a mil. The growing number of jobs in hospitality and the deepening hierarchies within them—distinctions of class and race and nationality—happen everywhere. But in the Hamptons it’s all happening at its the most accelerated pace, with the most money, and over a period of only three months a year.
The workers I met came from the Dominican Republic, from New York City, from Miami, from the Czech Republic, from Ireland, and from the areas north of the Long Island highway that connects the Hamptons to Manhattan. The strata I observed among them follow familiar lines: If you speak English well and know your way around a good wine you’re likely to be raking in the good money; you’re paid as much for the comfort and cultural cohesion you provide as anything else—being white and looking good in eveningwear certainly helps, too. Back-of-the-house workers, the dishwashers and bussers—or the landscapers who chainsaw their way through the walls of greenery protecting the Hamptons’ compounds—can make less than minimum wage. And of course having the ability to travel here to make money is a privilege in itself. Over the last few years Latino immigrants setting up shop in the Hamptons full-time, cashing in on estate maintenance and the spring construction gold rush, have made enemies along with their wages.
Last December the town of East Hampton instated a rental registry law to combat “rising concerns” over share houses and overcrowded single-family homes. The first bust, in May, found nine adults and four children living in a tiny, dilapidated house on an unkempt lawn. Attempts to build affordable apartments to house the area’s year-round service class incites petitions and editorials nearly every year—including, in 2012, from a group incredibly called “Unoccupy Springs.”
The Hamptons shouldn’t become like other places, the thinking goes. Don’t pave over our quaint hamlets, our single-road small towns. Surely unrelated is that those clapboard storefronts on Main Street house a Tiffany’s and a Sotheby’s auction house. Or that when I visit Sag Harbor looking for a bartender, Paul Frankenbach, who rakes in as much as $40,000 between Memorial Day and Labor Day, I actually hear the word “riff-raff” uttered by a girl dressed in all white. Whatever that word means to kids these days, it showed up at her party last night and made things weird for her. Girl couldn’t have been a day over 12.
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