Click here for more information: Lead Poisoning Prevention Week
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Keeping hands clean through improved hand hygiene is one of the most important steps we can take to avoid getting sick and spreading germs to others. Many diseases and conditions are spread by not washing hands with soap and clean, running water. If clean, running water is not accessible, as is common in many parts of the world, use soap and available water. If soap and water are unavailable, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol to clean hands.
Washing hands with soap and water is the best way to reduce the number of germs on them. If soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol. Alcohol-based hand sanitizers can quickly reduce the number of germs on hands in some situations, but sanitizers do not eliminate all types of germs.
Hand sanitizers are not as effective when hands are visibly dirty.
How do you use hand sanitizers?
Content Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
CDC Handwshing
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The Global Harmonization System (GHS) has established updated changes to the Hazard Communication Standard (HCS). The U.S. Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) is requiring all employees, in any place of work, who handle hazardous chemicals to be trained on the new GHS system by December 1st, 2013. The update is intended to increase worker comprehension of vital information and workplace safety.
These updates were created to help create a global standard for the following items:
1. Pictograms, labels, and signal words used in labels
2. Hazard and precautionary statements
3. Classifications for health and physical hazards, as well as classifications of mixtures
4. Expands the safety data sheets (SDS), formerly known as material safety data sheets (MSDS) to a specific 16-section format
To learn about the new GHS system the ISSA is offering a low-cost training course. It is called “Hazard Communication 2012 SDS, Pictograms, and Label Elements.” Visit issa.com/ghsonline to register for this online course and prepare for this change with less disruption to your business. The class complies with the December 1st training deadline.
Follow this link to register: ISSA Training
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Hiring a reputable commercial cleaning company, like QualityOne Commercial Cleaning, Inc., is the right step for keeping your business at the top. That’s because a clean office is essential to your business, not only for keeping your building looking professional, but for keeping your employees healthy and productive.
Often employees feel the need to show up for work, even when they are really too sick to be there. It’s called presenteeism and various studies have shown that it costs US employers from $150 billion to $280 billion a year. This is due to an increase of worker illness, from sick employees spreading infection, and can cause a loss of productivity when employees come to work at less than 100 percent of their ability. Wikipedia
In a recent study conducted at the University of Arizona, people had been given different drops on their hands at the beginning of the day, including fake cold, flu, and stomach flu viruses and plain water. It was found that, in just four hours, over half of all commonly touched office surfaces were infected with viruses. By the end of the day, although cold and flu viruses, with a shorter survival time, had mostly vanished, 70 percent of the surfaces were infected with the fake stomach flu viruses.University of Arizona link Accordingly, in 2009 it was reported, from data collected by the IWPR, that as many as 7 million employees were infected by the H1N1 virus from co-workers coming to work sick. IWPR
We can easily see, from studies like this, why it is so important to keep your office clean. QualityOne is IICRC certified and our techs are specially trained for proper cleaning. We are also the only member of the ISSA in Story County. So, make your call to QualityOne Commercial Cleaning, Inc. today and let us help keep you at your best. We won’t only improve your health, but your business as well!
K. Carter
QualityOne Commercial Cleaning, Inc.
319 sondrol Ave
Ames, IA 50010
(515) 232-7272
Photo taken from Microsoft Office Free Clipart:
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/images/
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The following article appeared on the Janitorial Subcontracting Network BlogSpot. You can view the original page by clicking on this link: Reality Exposed. This is good information to know when considering a cleaning company!
Janitorial Subcontracting For Beginners – Reality Exposed!
The commercial cleaning business has had several decades of misleading stories in a variety of business opportunity magazines. “Get rich quick,” “no experience necessary,” “no start up money needed except purchasing a broom and a mop and a vacuum cleaner,” and “easy money” scream the headlines. This is followed by a glowing testimonial from someone who became rich in the cleaning business.
The fact is that in the 1980s there were only 19,000 commercial cleaning companies in the United States, but by 2011 that number had grown to 127,000 companies. Entering onto the scene are cleaning service owners who have discovered that it’s not as easy as they thought but that it is better business to tell other people that the cleaning business is easy, resulting in a flood of more disinformation confusing thousands of hard working, honest people in search of the American dream.
Add to the mix a few hundred commercial cleaning franchise companies who are not really in the cleaning business at all but are in the business of selling cleaning franchises. Some franchise companies promise untold riches in commercial cleaning and for as little as $500 you can have your own piece of a recession proof, essential service in an industry that grows and grows forever into infinity, a never ending fountain of cash.
At some point, however, reality rears its ugly head and thousands of honest people discover that there are no quick riches, competition is fierce and the money is not easy. By then, it is often too late, and thousands of cleaning service owners find themselves needing to clean for whatever money is available. So entering the world of janitorial subcontracting appears to be a lifeline to survival.
This world of janitorial subcontracting is a cloudy one of more empty promises, but this time these promises are made to the folks who are the end users – the facility and property managers whose job it is to keep their buildings clean. They are sold a story about quality service, the ease of just one invoice, highly trained specialists, the finest equipment and all for less money than their previous service provider no matter what the price was.
I knew a veteran of the janitorial subcontracting game on a national level and his sales pitch to national facility managers was very simply “whatever you are paying, I can do it for 10% less”. It didn’t matter what they were paying he was going to provide “top notch” service (…wink, wink, nudge, nudge) for 10% LESS. He was highly successful, but I don’t think he ever sold a service contract for more than the previous cleaning company no matter how dreadful the service or how low the price. He could do it cheaper.
He was successful because no matter what the price was, he made 25% off the top and threw the entire cleaning program to a subcontractor for 75%. Due to the reality of the marketplace for small independent cleaning services, there was a never ending supply of subcontractors for whom that 75% provided an illusion that they owned their own cleaning business. They are business owners, entrepreneurs, captains of their own fate – or so they believe.
I entered the cleaning industry as a young engineering student and immediately understood that there was some basic math involved. Area (square feet of space) divided by production rate (how long it takes to perform a given task) equals time (hours of labor). I had been in the cleaning industry for many years before I stumbled into the world of janitorial subcontracting, and I didn’t like it at all. Quality service delivery was not a management science that could be measured, quality was merely a slogan. A nebulous, feel-good, absolutely empty word, devoid of any meaningful content. This was not the same cleaning business I knew at all.
One problem contributing to the situation was the number of facilities of the client companies – these end users had hundreds and even thousands of locations that needed to be cleaned, and they didn’t want to deal with hundreds or thousands of cleaning services. The control of the cleaning could no longer be trusted to the local branch or store manager as they once were. The discounts available by having one company “clean” all their locations were so large that they had to pay attention. Many firms know the abuses that go on and try to limit them by specifying self-performing service contracts only, no subcontracting allowed, but many others don’t know the game or turn a blind eye, exposing themselves to the liability and hoping they don’t get caught.
The stage has been set, resulting in national clients with thousands of locations being “serviced” by “cleaning management” companies who make a set percentage off the top of ANY amount negotiated with their clients, who in turn subcontract out the actual cleaning work to thousands of small local cleaning operators desperate to clean anything at all.
But the plot thickens further with enterprising subcontractors figuring that they want their piece of the pie, so THEY subcontract THEIR locations to yet another subcontractor BELOW them, take their cut off the top off the fee they receive and avoid taxes and insurance, recruiting, hiring and training. I have seen arrangements like this going three, four and five subcontractors deep. At the bottom are undocumented immigrants, payment schemes with Visa/MasterCard gift cards to avoid I-9 reporting and phony Workers Compensation and Liability Insurance certificates doctored up to look like the real thing. (My favorite ones were those where the insurance company names are made up).
Honest maintenance management companies simply pass up national prospects who require self-performing cleaning services, do not hide the fact that all work is performed by subcontractors and then work as best they can with check and balance systems to maintain quality levels. I worked for companies such as this and subcontractors can do pretty well with these companies so that service levels to the end users can be high.
So why does the guy who started and runs the Janitorial Subcontracting Network on LinkedIn, the first and only free and open market for subcontractors and contract holders to connect, blow the whistle?
For several reasons, the first being what LinkedIn has become, a single platform where 800,000 buyers of cleaning services are all in one place. I am seeing very astute national facility managers join the Network and they are quietly watching what we are doing in here.
Second, the Janitorial Subcontracting Network has become a lifeline to survival for hundreds of local cleaning service owners while at the same time honest maintenance management companies have a resource to staff buildings in remote locations with reliable subcontractors.
Third, I have been in the position of having to find subcontractors from very long distances myself, and I would have given anything to be able to find reliable subcontractors through a resource like this (we now have numerous national companies who rely heavily on this Network to find subcontractors).
Fourth, subcontracting in the US is going to grow as Washington DC’s healthcare scheme takes effect while at the same time several commercial cleaning franchise companies use subcontractors where they have areas to staff that they have not sold unit franchises in yet but have sold services to large multi-location clients. Additionally, the courts and other government agencies are chipping away at some of their businesses due to unscrupulous operators and abuses.
Fifth, I am carefully considering the direction to take the group with a few elder statesmen of the cleaning industry whose judgment I have learned to trust. I want the Network free and open but I want the abuses to be curbed without policing anything (beyond having spammers in the group taken out back and beaten senseless).
Maybe loosely banding together and having a presence at PRSM (the Professional Retail Store Maintenance Association) or ISSA (Worldwide Cleaning Industry Association who, by the way, have been VERY supportive of the Janitorial Subcontracting Network). This Network is approaching the number of cleaning companies who are members of BSCAI (Building Service Contractors Association International) and at present growth rates we will surpass their number before the end of the summer (….. shhhh, they haven’t figured out we are here yet).
I have begun to reach out to chemical and equipment manufacturers and distributors, possibly securing group discounts for the members along with their valuable training programs. I have always found manufacturers and distribution companies to be highly valuable partners.
Anyone left who I have not infuriated with this post? So having set the stage and exposing the reality, let’s cover the basics as promised.
1. If you are a cleaning service owner who works subcontracted accounts, they are not yours, you did not sell them and you will NOT build a healthy company unless you keep your subcontracts to 25% of your total company revenue. The profit margins are just not enough to build a healthy business with. You will have to sell your own accounts and in the interest of full disclosure, this is what I do for a living so I can show you how to get your own accounts.
Be prepared if you are subcontracting to have ALL of your insurance coverage, pay all your employment taxes and utilize E-Verify. If you are approached by anyone who does NOT require you fill out a substantial package of agreements and documents, you are going to be ripped off by whoever has approached you.
Never accept a subcontract from any company who does not hold a contract with the end user’s building. Your chances of being ripped off are VERY high. A subcontract from another subcontractor is pretty close to worthless and is offered to you in violation of either agreements with end users or at minimum best industry practices.
2. If you are a contract holder, a cleaning/maintenance management firm, a franchise company using subcontractors to bridge unit franchise sales then PAY YOUR SUBCONTRACTORS ON TIME and no funny business if the contract is lost. I will elaborate on this point in a moment.
To small subcontractors, cash flow is king. Even if you have a skinny deal, many times frequent payment terms will give you quality service and a fiercely loyal group of subcontractors. One of the firms I was with paid subcontractors weekly and their buildings got top priority with as close to zero service defects as one can ever hope. One of the best companies I ever encountered paid subcontractors on a DAILY basis – not only do they have a waiting list of subcontractors wanting to work with them, their quality levels are incredibly high.
Insist your subcontractors are following labor laws and are not subcontracting out the work you have assigned them. This is not easy, I know, but are you willing to risk your company’s reputation, expose your clients to liability issues and lose a 1,000 building account because one subcontractor is playing games? Having a zero tolerance policy against sub-assignments and then a few spot checks for compliance will pay off in the marketplace.
Hoping this is a wakeup call for you, as the internet has enabled news to travel faster than ever, so a good reputation can be built over a shorter time than before OR a bad reputation can be made in a few hours. Don’t believe me, check the Janitorial Subcontracting Network discussion on a very large service provider who got one little post from one little subcontractor on a board called ripoffreport.com. Because of how search engines find things on the internet, it’s possible for your company to be found FIRST on a board like ripoffreport BEFORE your own company website.
Finally, if you give work away and no one can ever make a dime at it, prepare to have problems. That whole strategy about making it up in volume has a very definite dollar floor. Gasoline, minimum wage rates, taxes, insurance ALL have minimum dollar amounts and front line cleaners have lives that don’t include working a 45 minute shift.
3. Facility/Property Managers – there is no Santa Claus, and you have calculator sitting on your desk. Simply do the math. How can you tell when a sales person is lying…you KNOW the punch line. How much have you really saved when an ICE raid hits the evening news at one of your locations and then all night long that raid gets coverage as a teaser followed by “more news at 11″?
The facility management department of a very large company with several thousand locations purchased bidding and estimating software so they could reverse engineer the dollar amounts of the proposals they received. It substantially slimmed down the number of vendors they dealt with and at the same time improved the quality levels of their cleaning.
CONCLUSION: Janitorial Subcontracting is here to stay and will expand in the US. The abuses need to be curtailed and knowing all about the game is the first step toward that end. Despite four attempts to monetize the only free and open network, the Janitorial Subcontracting Group on LinkedIn will REMAIN FREE AND OPEN until I get my Elvis Presley tickets (EVERYONE gets tickets to see Elvis one day). The Janitorial Subcontracting Network is going live this week on Google Hangouts so get yourself a Google Plus account and come let’s meet live to discuss.
June 19, 2013
Happy Juneteenth!
Ed Selkow