Hospitality in South Carolina

South Carolina Hospitality Intel

Sunday, May 24, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on hospitality developments in South Carolina. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on south carolina hospitality headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

South Carolina Hospitality Headlines

1 story

1.1

SC diners scan QR codes for instant food inspection grades.

South Carolina has launched a system allowing diners to access restaurant inspection details by scanning QR codes with their smartphones.

Why It Matters

Hospitality operators should ensure QR codes are properly displayed and understand that guests now have immediate, transparent access to inspection results that may influence dining decisions.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

The tip-credit rule that quietly violates wage law.

Federal FLSA permits tip-credit on wages only for employees who customarily and regularly receive tips, and only for the time spent on tip-producing duties. Many states (and the federal "80/20" rule) limit how much side-work can be performed while paying tip-credit wage. Polishing silverware for an hour at the start of shift is the most common silent violation.

Why It Matters

Wage-and-hour collective actions in restaurants frequently win on the side-work issue and produce back-pay liability across all tipped staff in the lookback period.

2.2

Why your POS-vendor's PCI compliance is not your PCI compliance.

The merchant — the restaurant or hotel — remains responsible for PCI compliance regardless of the POS vendor's certifications. Vendor compliance covers the software; merchant responsibility covers network segmentation, employee access, and incident response. "We use a PCI-compliant POS" is not an audit response.

Why It Matters

Card-brand fines after a breach apply to the merchant, not the vendor. Self-assessment questionnaires are required annually and are reviewed by acquiring banks.

2.3

The temperature-log entry health inspectors look for first.

Inspectors typically scan refrigeration and hot-hold logs for entries before service shifts as the first compliance signal. A log with all entries at exactly the same time each day reads as fabricated; a log with realistic time variance and occasional out-of-range entries with documented corrective action reads as authentic.

Why It Matters

A fabricated-looking log is harder to defend than an honest one with corrective actions. Inspectors who spot the pattern escalate other findings.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 24, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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