Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Keeping it clean

Orlando hotels ramp up sanitation hoping to lure travelers during pandemic

- By Trevor Fraser Want to reach out? Email tfraser@orlandosen­tinel.com.

It begins with the doorknobs, one of the first touchpoint­s for most guests.

“The knobs, the handles, surfaces, fridge… We’re focusing on disinfecti­ng the things guests touch,” said Jorge Seda, a room attendant atWestgate Lakes Resort& Spa in Orlando.

An employee with Westgate for three years, Sedanowfol­lows a detailed checklist of places to disinfect in every room, part of the safety protocols the resort chain put into practice at their seven Orlando-area hotels. His concern with this new process is as much about his own protection as the customers’.

“We clean it all so that we don’t get contaminat­ed and [the guests] don’t get contaminat­ed,” he said.

Hotels have been one of the hardest-hit industries during the COVID-19 pandemic, in part because travelers are wary about staying in such communal spaces. In Central Florida, occupancy rates have rarely risen above 30%, adrastic decrease for an area that often sawmore than 90% capacity last year.

In response, sanitation has become one of the hallmarks of howhotels are presenting themselves to the public. Onwebsites and advertisem­ents, hotels and resorts reference a “commitment to clean,” with some publishing detailed descriptio­ns of their new sanitation protocols.

“Fortunatel­y or unfortunat­ely, however you want to see it … we hadbeen here before,” saidMark Waltrip, chief operating officer for Westgate Resorts, referring to a few years ago when Westgate

had an outbreak of norovirus at its LasVegas casino. “Whenthatha­ppened, wehadto bring in some medical experts on viral containmen­t, cleaning procedures and advanced protocols.”

Westgate carried over the lessons learned during that outbreak to the rules they adopted at its hotels the first week of March, Waltrip said. In April, they launchedWe­stgateCARE­S, a website with access to the resort chain’s training videos and procedural handbooks.

“The first thing our company did was to train us how to deal with the virus,” said housekeepe­r Ledy Zelaya. “How to wear masks, how to use gloves, howto keep our distance.”

The company also reduced the number of rooms each staff member needs to get to in a day “so that we can concentrat­e on more detail,” Zelaya said.

Giving staff more time is one of the recommenda­tions from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines to hotel owners and staff. Most of the protocols are things the public has gotten used to in the nine months since the pandemic came to theU.S.

Employees are required to wear masks and guests have to wear them in common, indoor areas such as the lobby or the game room. They wear gloves and are required to wash their hands before and after certain interactio­ns.

Front desk employees are shielded behind plastic barriers, and the lobby is marked with social distancing lines and handsaniti­zer stations.

Guests atWestgate Lakes notice the first difference at drivethru check-in, where they can use their cellphones to scan aQR code and enter their reservatio­ns. Guests place their driver’s license in a box that scans them into the system. They are then sent to park in designated spots and await their room keys and hotel informatio­n, brought out on a tray by a gloved and masked staff member.

On the check-in menu, guests have the option to order groceries to their rooms, cutting out another in-person interactio­n.

Every team member gets a temperatur­e screening every day. Guests are also required to be screened, using a facial scan, before entrance to places such as the on-site restaurant­s and game rooms.

General manager Brahim Ait Daoud said Westgate will limit occupancy to 50% when demand gets that high again.

Lobby restrooms are closed once every 24 hours for deep cleaning. Public surfaces, such as handrails, are cleaned at least every four hours. Outdoor seating around the pool is spaced out by six feet and treated with an ultra-low volume disinfecti­ng fogwhen anyone leaves.

Westgate offers group activities for all ages, but they limit attendance to keep recommende­d social distancing.

Gone are the days of housekeepe­rs remaking the bed and refreshing the towels while guests areout for theday. Housekeepi­ng only enters the rooms between reservatio­ns. During a stay, guests can request items such as fresh towels to be placed outside the door.

When guests check out, twoperson cleaning teams handle each suite. A visual checklist offers 10 points of contact to sanitize, fromthe key slot in the door to the thermostat and curtains.

Laundry is taken to an off-site facility where it is cleaned and disinfecte­d using traditiona­l washing and UV light treatments.

Waltrip said guests have tested positive and been quarantine­d. Guestswhop­resent symptoms are asked to seek medical attention.

Employees are sent home if they present any symptoms of the disease as specified by the CDC, according to Ait Daoud. Employees who test positive are must receive two negative tests before returning towork and are provided with additional sick time pay.

The additional procedures aren’t free. Westgate estimates they have spent more than $5 million on training and protective equipment for employees and guests.

In a webpage about travel risks, the CDC still recommends not traveling as the safest option. If someone is intent on doing so, the CDC recommends they check the posted safety procedures for any hotel they’re staying at, and consider calling ahead to make sure all employees aremasked.

An employee with Westgate since 2013, Zelaya noted it helps her to think of the procedures on a personal level.

“We have to think of cleaning our rooms like cleaning our house,” she said.

 ?? GERALD LEONG/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Housekeepe­r Jorge Seda sanitizes countertop­s atWestgate Lakes Resort & Spa on Monday.
GERALD LEONG/ORLANDO SENTINEL Housekeepe­r Jorge Seda sanitizes countertop­s atWestgate Lakes Resort & Spa on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States