My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
2018-01-09-minutes-solid-waste
>
Meetings
>
2018
>
01. January
>
2018-01-16 10:00 AM - Commissioners' Agenda
>
2018-01-09-minutes-solid-waste
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
5/12/2020 1:56:25 PM
Creation date
5/12/2020 1:55:21 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Meeting
Date
1/16/2018
Meeting title
Commissioners' Agenda
Location
Commissioners' Auditorium
Address
205 West 5th Room 109 - Ellensburg
Meeting type
Regular
Meeting document type
Supporting documentation
Supplemental fields
Alpha Order
a
Item
Approve Minutes
Order
1
Placement
Consent Agenda
Row ID
41806
Type
Minutes
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
29
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Cleaning Toilets and Urinals Part 2: <br />Now that the disinfectant has had ample contact time, you can continue cleaning the toilets and urinals. <br />1. Clean the inside of the toilet with the bowl mop paying close attention to the underside of the <br />flush rim. This prevents the accumulation of bacteria that can spread disease and create <br />unpleasant odors. <br />2. Flush toilet to rinse the bowl. Use the clean water to rinse your bowl mop. <br />3. Flush toilet again. <br />4. Wipe down the exterior surfaces of the fixture with a clean cloth. <br />5. Damp wipe all the flush handles and all other chrome. Allow the disinfectant to air dry. <br />6. Use an acid bowl cleaner to de -scale the flush rim once a week. Remove water by back-flushing <br />with a bowl mop. Saturate the mop with the cleaner and wet all surfaces thoroughly. Rinse by <br />flushing. Only use the acid bowl cleaner on the interior of the bowl and NEVER on the seat. Acid <br />residue could cause harm to skin. <br />7. For urinals, use a bowl mop and wash the pre -sprayed disinfectant from the top to the bottom. <br />8. Replace the urinal screen. <br />Showers <br />1. When cleaning showers, first remove all gross soils. <br />2. Apply a tub and shower disinfectant to the walls and floors of a tiled shower stall. Be sure to read <br />the label for dilution recommendations. Thoroughly wet all surfaces including the door tracks, <br />doors, walls, soap dish, faucets and showerhead. <br />3. Allow approximately ten minutes of contact time. Wipe with a nonabrasive scrub pad or sponge. <br />4. Rinse thoroughly. <br />5. Always use a nonacid disinfectant on fixtures. Acid disinfectants are highly corrosive. Follow <br />manufacturer's recommendations for fiberglass showers. <br />6. Dry all surfaces carefully to prevent slips and falls. <br />Final Spot Cleaning <br />Do final spot cleaning on the places that are most often touched in a restroom. Spray disinfectant on the <br />handles of urinals, toilet seats, doors and towel dispensers as a final precaution to reduce cross - <br />contamination. <br />Wet Mopping <br />1. Pay attention to places where soap dispensers drip on the floors. Clean any build-up before <br />mopping. <br />2. Wet mop the floor with a disinfectant solution starting from the farthest corner of the room <br />working toward the exit door. Go along the baseboards first to keep them from getting splashed. <br />3. Apply the solution from the mop bucket moderately with special attention given to toilet areas, <br />urinals and sinks. <br />Kittitas Valley Event Center Cleaning Action Plan 2017 9 1 P a g e <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.