Cleaning Up
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Recently, we spent $700 getting the parking lot swept on the weekend to remove all the debris. Within a few days it is beginning to look a mess mostly from cigarette butts, but people tend to just throw their garbage on the ground rather than take the time to put it in the trash can. We do pride ourselves with having a clean facility, at least inside, and many customers have commented favorably. The one area inside that tends to get messy though is the cafeteria. Again, people just leave their leftover garbage on the tables assuming someone else will clean up after them even though it is a short walk to the trash container. I have been tasked with essentially changing people's habits. (I'd hate to see some of their homes) What's running through my mind is some kind of a program or campaign that addresses cleanliness and common decency. Posters, rewards, speeches, even threats of doing butt patrol. Whatever. Any ideas? Have any of you done something similar?
Comments
We placed butt receptacles in our parking areas and advised ee's that if the butt problem continued that we would ban smoking from all property.
We have several kitchen areas in our facility and I avoid most of them like the plague. If the people who use those areas don't mind eating in a pig pen, then so be it. Our admin kitchen is very small and only a few people use it. I usually police it in the evenings (empty coffee pots, etc.) largely because I am the first one here in the morning and I don't want to face a mess!
Not sure what the solution is unless you just assign a different group each day to clean the tables up. When they get tired of cleaning the mess up, they may realize it only takes a few minutes to pick up after themselves.
Each day you must wipe off tables, rinse out the coffee pots, and clean the counters. On Fridays the microwave gets cleaned, and so does the fridge. If anyone leaves anything in the fridge on Friday without their name on it, the item, including the container, is to go into the trash. A few people have lost nice storage containers this way, but they don't usually forget a 2nd time. Finally, you must take home the used cloth towels, wash them, and bring them back on Monday. (I don't believe our hourly employees actually do this, but no one ever comments about it.)
This keeps the room clean and acceptable for others. If we had more employees and a larger break room, we would assign more people every week to keep it clean.
When it is your week to clean and someone is being a pig most employees will speak up and tell them to knock it off. We haven't had a problem with a dirty kitchen in several years. In fact, most employees will make a point not to leave a dirty dish in the sink for the duty employee to clean. Fortunately, we have a great bunch of employees who value each other and the company they work for.