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The Lowdown On Cleaning Food-Service Floors The author provides some insider floor cleaning tips
that you can quickly pick up. By Maurice Dixon Floor cleaning and, in particular, floor
cleaning in food-serving establishments, is an ongoing challenge to every store
manager and maintenance crew. Clean, sanitary and safe floors are important not
only for health reasons, but for customer comfort-and legal reasons. Two separate areas need to be addressed: the
"back of the house," that is, food preparation/kitchen, and the
"front of the house," food-serving areas, lobbies, entrances, and
restroom floors. In the back of the house, clean floors are important for
different reasons than are the public areas where the customers are the
inspectors. In order to keep the kitchen floor clean, sanitary and safe, it
usually requires different procedures, products and schedules than the other
areas. It is especially important from a sanitary and safety standpoint to keep
these floors clean. Studies done by a large supplier of food service
establishments report that slip/fall accidents are the largest contributor to
the cost of workmen's compensation in the food service industry. These costs do
not take into account the hidden costs of lost time, paper work, hiring and
training new people, and lost good will of employees and customers-let alone
the serious injury to the employee and the disruption to their personal life. Many of the floors in food establishments are quarry
tile (6-inch square) especially in the kitchen and sometimes extending into the
counter area and out into the front of the house. Many fast food establishments
have quarry tile throughout the food serving area as well as the front of the house.
Most restroom floors are quarry tile or ceramic tile; occasionally a resilient
tile or a seamless floor is used in a restroom. Quarry tile and ceramic tile floors are "grouted
floors," and the grouting creates additional cleaning challenges. The causes of slippery floors can be numerous, each of
which can be corrected. Let's take a look at some of the causes. 1. The tile itself becomes worn and smooth. 2. Multiple layers of soil are allowed to remain in the
grout and to build up on the floor itself. 3. Inadequate cleaning procedures. 4. Misuse of cleaning products or the use of the wrong
cleaning products and tools. 5. Inadequate cleaning frequency (scheduled or
unscheduled). 6. Untrained personnel. Assail those slippery back of house floors Let's talk about solutions to various causes of
slipperiness underfoot. 1. Worn,
slippery floors. Cover them with matting, but to clean the floor the
matting must be removed (it needs to be picked up beforehand and replaced
afterward). An anti-slip material can be applied to the floor in strips that
are glued to the floor. However, most of these are hard to clean and to keep
clean; they are also subject to wear and replacement. The tile itself can be etched to some degree with
mechanical or chemical action. In most cases, this procedure is done by an
outside contractor. The etching procedure opens the pores of the floor and, if
not done properly, can cause damage to the floor and actually hold more soil
and become harder to clean than it was before the procedure was completed. Food service suppliers offer mats and anti-slip
materials, as well as chemical and mechanical methods of helping reduce the
slipperiness of these floors. 2. Soil removal. This soil consists of fats, protein, fatty acids and other soils,
including good old mother earth tracked in from the outside. Grout is an issue
here. We see soils build up in the grouting and are subject to tracking
throughout the entire facility. When grouted floors are mopped, the grouting
acts as a wiper blade on the mop head and, in fact, squeegees the soil from the
mop head and deposits it into the grouting. The use of the proper cleaning
detergent, manufactured to emulsify, hold in suspension and properly remove
these multiple soils, is a must. All purpose cleaners won't work, bleach won't
work, vinegar won't work - only a degreaser manufactured for this use, and
properly measured into the cleaning bucket or machine, will work. 3. Inadequate cleaning procedures. Misuse of cleaning products and/or using the wrong
cleaning products or tools is common. In many cases these floors are cleaned
manually using a deck scrub brush and a floor squeegee. The cleaning solution
is applied to the floor with a mop; someone is assigned to scrub the floor
using a 12- to 14-inch deck scrub brush. Either the same person or a second
person is assigned to hose down the floor and use a squeegee to push it into
the floor drain. This procedure varies in frequency from daily to once or
twice a week (come on, folks, this is the 21st century!). In between these scrubbings, the floor is wet/damp
mopped. This mopping procedure simply spreads the soil around - it deposits
some of it into the grouting, and most of it back into the mop bucket to be
reapplied to the floor. If this mopping procedure is used, the mop bucket water
should be changed every few minutes and the mop itself rinsed out in clean
water every time the mop water is changed. A double bucket mop technique could also be
considered. The first bucket contains water and cleaning solution, the second
bucket is used to rinse out the mop, so as not to deposit the soil from the
floor into the cleaning solution bucket. Mop buckets must be cleaned after each
use and the mop head thoroughly rinsed out and hung up to dry, in order to keep
these tools clean and well appearing. 4. Misuse of cleaning products. It's a fact! No matter how good your
cleaning solution is, no matter how good your mop is, no matter how good your
mopping procedure is, and no matter how good your mopper is, or has been
trained, you cannot mop a floor clean. The only way to keep floors clean is to
scrub them with a machine, pick up the soil with a vacuum and pour it down the
drain. Suggested machines for this use are the following: A single disc floor
machine with a penetrating brush that will clean into the grouting, and a wet
pickup vacuum for containing solution. Or use a combination machine, one
that's a floor machine and a wet vac all in one, which has two tanks - one for
the cleaning solution and one to recover the soiled water. The size of the area, how open or congested it is, and
how much storage the machine has, will dictate the size and type of the
combination machine. In addition to this equipment, a scrub brush, a squeegee
and a damp mop are also needed. The scrub brush can be used for scrubbing into
corners and other hard-to-reach areas. Then use a lightweight 12- to 16-inch
window squeegee to bring the soil solution out where your vacuum can pick it
up. Use the damp mop for touch-up. In other words, contain the soil - don't
just spread it around. Two other basic, but important points: sweep away the
heavy soil before scrubbing; and always use wet floor signs when the floor is
wet. 5. Inadequate cleaning frequencies (scheduled or unscheduled). When you mop a floor and spread the soil around you'll have to
clean the floor more often than if you scrub and remove the soil. Most food establishments clean their floors after
closing for the day and do some touch-ups throughout the day. Others clean (mop
2-3-4 times a day, due to corporate policy and inadequate cleaning each time).
Whatever frequency you feel is needed, when you scrub the floor, contain the
soil and pour it down the drain. The floor-cleaning task will be easier,
quicker, and will result in a much cleaner and safer floor. 6. Untrained personnel. A way of life in most food establishments is the high
turnover in help. Unfortunately, many times the highest rate of turnover is in
the very important area of floor cleaning personnel. There are several ways to
help train and continue to train personnel for this task. There are videos
(bilingual), wall charts, printed materials, step-by-step training procedures
and hands-on training that can help train on an ongoing basis. Suppliers of sanitary products can offer a training service as a
value-added service along with the supplies needed to complete the job. Front of house Now let's discuss the front of the house and some thoughts regarding
floor care there. First, by properly cleaning the back of the house it will reduce
tracking of grease and soil into the customer area. If the front of the house
is quarry tile or some other "hard floor," in part or total, the same
machine scrubbing procedures as used in the kitchen should be employed. If the
floor is carpeted, then a proper carpet care program should be implemented. There are two kinds of soil in carpeting - loose soil and sticky soil.
You need to remove both in order to keep the carpet appearance at a high level
for customer inspection and to help extend the life of the carpet. Loose soil and litter can be removed with a small
manual carpet sweeper for a quick touch-up (cosmetic cleaning). Heavy traffic
areas should be vacuumed more than once a day based on traffic volume. The use
of lightweight, one-motor or two-motor upright vacuums or backpacks should be
the method for removing loose soil. Spots and stains should be removed daily
and, if possible, spills should be absorbed with the use of white towels as
soon as they happen. Sticky soil requires the use of a cleaning solution
and some agitation. Bonnet buffing or tip cleaning is an interim technique and
is a little bit like mopping a hard floor. It is quick but most of the soil
remains in the carpet. So the best method of accomplishing good carpet cleaning
is with the use of a carpet extractor. Extracting a carpet is similar to the
use of a combination scrubbing machine on hard floor. It removes and contains
the soil, allowing you to pour it down the drain. This task can be done by an
in-house staff or an outside cleaning service. Carpet extraction should be
scheduled frequently. Carpets go from clean to dingy to dirty very fast and
should not be allowed to even reach the dingy point before they are extracted. Restrooms are first-impression areas in any facility,
and that certainly is true in a food establishment. Restroom floors of quarry
or ceramic tile with grouting are no easier to clean than the floors in a
kitchen. The soil is different, but the ease of cleaning is the same. One
other problem of improper cleaning in restrooms is odor. Restroom floors,
whether or not they contain grouting, should be machine scrubbed and vacuumed
on a frequent basis. You cannot expect to have clean and sanitary restroom
floors using only a mop. In addition to these cleaning procedures, the use of
track-off mats to help keep floors clean should be considered in the
entryways, between the kitchen and the cash register, and any other high
traffic areas where trackage from one surface to another is evident. One other idea that will help keep floors clean and
free of litter is the proper use of waste receptacles, in other words, the
proper placement (where the litter gathers), size and design. These
"litter awareness devices" invite the cast of litter in restrooms,
entryways and outside. Do a little research and you will be able to install the
proper number, size and placement of these containers. To recap, for clean, healthy, safe floors in food
establishments take a survey. ·
Inspect the floor - is it
worn or smooth? Does it require some mechanical or chemical treatment? ·
Review the cleaning
techniques, frequencies, materials and equipment being used. ·
Set up an ongoing training
program using videos, wall charts, written material and hands-on training that
will help new personnel become effective and efficient quickly. For the owners and managers of food serving
establishments that are truly interested in clean and safe floors, there are
any number of resources available to call upon for help. Janitorial, paper and food service vendors keep a
large inventory of products and equipment that will address all of the issues
noted in this article. Ask them for their recommendations, and most of all,
ask them to demonstrate their products. Reprinted with permission from Maintenance Supplies Magazine, March 2000 |
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