Don’t Blame the Hotel Housekeeper for Dirty Sheets

 

 

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By Robert McGarvey

By now you have seen the Inside Edition episode – or at least heard about it – where  Candlewood Inn and Suites in Manhattan, La Quinta Inn and Suites near Central Park, and a Residence Inn all failed to change sheets between guest visits.

How did the show know? Simple.  It sprayed “I Slept Here” on the sheets – invisible to the naked eye, visible under ultra violet light.

All three hotels were profusely apologetic – but so what? Not changing sheets between guests is plain disgusting and if it is happening to sheets, it is happening to towels, glasses and who knows what else. And reportedly many hotels do not change comforters or duvets between guests, although some do.  

Note: Inside Edition batted .333. It checked into 9 hotels, 3 failed the sheet test. That is a terrifying stat.

Understand too: Inside Edition checked out of the room. Then later checked back in, under a different name, requesting that room. The sheets should have been changed, of course. They weren’t.

That is indeed gross.

But I urge you: do not blame the housekeepers.

I am quite sure housekeeping is negligent, really at most hotels below 5 diamond status.  But that failing is not on the housekeepers, anymore than the bartender is responsible for the swill the hotel bar pours as its house brands of booze and the slop that features in many hotel breakfast buffets is the fault of the property’s executive chef.

What is at work is a kind of ruthless cost cutting that, at many hotels, went into overdrive in the early days of the Great Recession, that is, 2008-2009 and the mindset still predominates at many properties.  I have talked with senior hotel execs – rungs above GMs – who have gloated about their cost cutting “successes.”

And now the guests are suffering the consequences.

Housekeeping has often been a high priority target of senior hotel managers. I have no idea why, just that it is. Maybe it’s because so few guests ever have direct interactions with housekeepers – who work silently, behind the scenes, with a kind of invisibility.

As management turned the screws, at many properties housekeepers have found the number of rooms they were assigned to clean per day jumping from 12 to 14  upwards to 15+, often approaching 20.

The math becomes impossible when it takes an estimated 30 minutes on average to clean a typical hotel room. Add minutes if the guest has checked out for tasks like sheet changing. Also add minutes if the guest is a slob and many are.

Here’s what union Unite Here said about housekeepers and their ramped up room quotas: “To meet this quota, she often skips breaks and works off the clock. It also is increasingly common for her to have luxury beds with heavier mattresses and linens, triple-sheeting, duvets, and extra pillows than in years past. Other add-ons, like coffee pots, spa robes and floor-to-ceiling mirrors, can make a housekeeper’s job of cleaning a room even more difficult and time-consuming.”

Unite Here added:  “With booming business and high room rates, housekeepers face increasing time pressure to maintain a quality guest experience. Many housekeepers report that their hotels are understaffed and that they must work at unsafe speeds, which increases their risk of injury.”

Unite Here also noted that most housekeepers are women, they have the highest injury rate among hotel employees, and here is why: “Each day, she may lift 100-pound mattresses, push heavy supply carts across miles of carpeted floors, climb to clean high surfaces, or drop to her hands and knees to scrub floors.”

For how much money? In most of the country, housekeepers earn near minimum wage especially when they are not unionized.

And often they are forced to deal with disgusting junk left behind by guests, including discarded syringes (increasingly common, apparently).  How would you like to pick needles off the floor? Especially when you are in an enormous time crunch?

What can we – guests – do?

If a room is not cleaned, complain – loudly – to the GM.  

Stress that the fault is not on the housekeeping staff but on the hotel management. Give people too much to do and some of it won’t get done.  

Email the hotel corporate manager – complain loudly, not about housekeeping, but about the corporate mandated cost cutting.

Want to know how you can insure that you get a clean room on check-in? Here are great tips from longtime GM Mike Matthews. Ask for a room that has recently been deep cleaned is his advice.  But read his column.  He also offers poignant insights into the plight of the hotel housekeeper and things are only worse nowadays.

So do this too: Leave the housekeeper a decent tip – at least $2/day, as much as $5 in a ritzy hotel or if you are messy (you know who you are). If the housekeeper does something special for you, tip accordingly.  

Say hello if you see a housekeeper in the hall. Show a little humanity.  
And whatever you do, if your sheets aren’t changed, don’t come down on the housekeeper. It really is not her fault.

Beware the Siren Call of Hotel WiFi

By Robert McGarvey

 

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What part of hotel WiFi is dangerous to your data don’t you understand?

I ask because, according to a new report from the Global Business Travel Association (GBTA), 64 to 69% of you say you would book a room directly with a hotel for free WiFi.

That stuns me.

I get why 35% of business travelers in that survey say they want more outlets in rooms – I certainly do and I find it mind boggling that it is 20 years now that I have had to rearrange hotel room furniture on check in just to find enough outlets. At least nowadays I don’t carry a powerbar with me, something I routinely packed in the 1990s. Hotels have made progress but not nearly enough

But color me also curious why 32% of business travelers want inroom chargers for phones and laptops – I suppose they have never heard of “juice jacking.”  Read about it and you will never again use those charging kiosks at airports (I never have, never will) and I doubt you will use such tools even in a hotel room.  The risks are too high.

Which brings us back to the siren call of free hotel WiFi.

You’ll recall that in the Odyssey, Odysseus had his crew tie him to the mast so that he could safely ignore the call of the Sirens – who enticed sailors into shipwrecks and drowning.  Odysseus steeled himself to sail right by.

Do likewise my friends, when it comes to hotel WiFi.

If you absorb nothing else from me, remember these two realities:  Never, ever use a credit card at a hotel restaurant, bar or gift shop is number one and that is because a month does not go by when there isn’t another reported hotel data breach and the real question is how many are ongoing but have yet to be discovered by the hoteliers?

It just is dangerous to use plastic at hotels – although, so far, reservation systems appear not to have been compromised.

Hotels have however had epidemic issues with compromise of their loyalty programs and also their restaurants, bars and gift shops.

If you must use the latter, pay with cash, or sign the purchases over to your room. You’ll probably be safe. Just don’t use a credit and definitely not a debit card because – these days – you have to assume there’s a good chance the system has already been breached.

Hotels just don’t put enough – or the right – emphasis on data security.

Which brings us back to the second lesson and that is the pervasive dangers of hotel WiFi. For at last a decade, information security experts have warned that public WiFi in general and hotel WiFi in particular are playgrounds for hackers.  Packet sniffing technologies make it easy – even for the technically unsophisticated – to scoop up posts on public WiFi networks.

Don’t think it doesn’t happen. It definitely does.

The cure? Do as I do and – whenever doing anything remotely sensitive in a hotel room (banking, for instance) – I create a hotspot with my cellphone and use it to power the connection. There’s a reason I am paying for 6GB of data on T-Mobile and the same amount on Project Fi and it’s not because I stream college football games on ESPN.

It’s because I prefer the safety in creating my own hotspot.

Should you never use inroom WiFi? Sure, use it to stream that ESPN game, to watch YouTube Ted Talks, to play blackjack – however you fill down time on the road.  Read newspapers online too. Just avoid sites where you sign in with a username and password – because you don’t want a hacker to grab those credentials and work mischief with them.

Another option: use a VPN when on hotel WiFi.  That will probably cost you a few shekels and it may slow your connections – VPNs usually do – but a VPN encrypts data and that probably will be enough to thwart hackers and data sniffers. This way, you get the free WiFi access but the VPN gives you a measure of protection.

Bottomline: assume hotel WiFi is hacked.  

Is it always? Of course not.  

But it’s porous enough of the time that the security savvy know to avoid it.

Do likewise.

Or at least take steps – such as VPN – to protect yourself.