Times Colonist

School rugs get a no-charge cleaning

- CARLA WILSON

Hundreds of classroom rugs are returning to their respective schools after Luv-A-Rug Services cleaned them for free in time for the start of classes.

The company stepped up late last year to offer no-cost washing when it heard that rug cleaning had been curtailed in early elementary level classrooms in the Greater Victoria School District.

“We want kids to have clean rugs,” business owner Dusty Roberts said. “There are children with asthma issues.”

Rugs can harbour a variety of nasty materials, including fecal matter at times, he said.

B.C. has spent millions building beautiful new schools and should cover the cost of cleaning rugs, Roberts said.

The issue is not confined to one district, but rather should addressed throughout the province, he said.

A new rug cleaning standard, with increased vacuuming, is coming into effect this month, the district said in a statement. Further details were not immediatel­y available.

The district reviewed its cleaning practices to find that some area rugs were being vacuumed daily while others were cleaned less frequently. Rugs had been removed from classrooms some time ago, but were being brought back into classrooms as a learning tools beyond kindergart­en and Grade 1, it said.

“The district is very appreciati­ve of Luv-A-Rug’s communitym­inded initiative. We happily accepted their offer as carpet cleaning [beyond vacuuming] typically happens over summer break or as needed.”

Rugs and the images on them are a staple teaching tool in classrooms for the youngest students. Some rugs are provided in schools while in other cases, teachers buy them and pay for their cleaning.

Roberts said that Luv-A-Rug posted on its Facebook page slightly more than a month ago that it would clean rugs at no cost.

They started coming in individual­ly and then the school district delivered and picked rugs up in its own trucks, he said.

About 400 rugs were washed. Each one was cleaned individual­ly to avoid any possible contaminat­ion, Roberts said

Washing is completed in a special area with a sloped floor and fire hoses. Rugs are then rolled up and transferre­d into a four-metrelong device, resembling a long pipe, that rinses and spins. Rugs are hung up to dry.

The value of the cleaning is about $90,000, Roberts said, adding: “We are absorbing it.”

Roberts and his eight employees put in extra time through the holiday season to get the job completed. Christmas Day was the only day that rugs were not being cleaned, he said.

James Gammon, Greater Victoria Teachers’ Associatio­n president, said that teachers should not be put in the position of having to purchase supplies such as rugs for a classroom. The associatio­n has filed a grievance regarding the issue of clean carpets. That grievance is still outstandin­g.

Rugs in kindergart­en and Grade 1 classrooms used to be cleaned “pretty regularly,” on an as-needed basis, he said.

A few months ago, that system was modified, with the kindergart­en and Grade 1 rugs cleaned only one time per week. Cleaning was also cut back for higher elementary grades, he said.

 ?? ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST ?? Stephen (Dusty) Roberts, right, and Ethan Taillefer-Meyn of Luv-A-Rug prepare clean rugs for loading and return to elementary schools.
ADRIAN LAM, TIMES COLONIST Stephen (Dusty) Roberts, right, and Ethan Taillefer-Meyn of Luv-A-Rug prepare clean rugs for loading and return to elementary schools.

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