The Denver Post

McDonald’s dishes dining-in details

- Gabriela Bhaskar, © The New York Times Co. By David Yaffe-Bellany

Clean the digital kiosks each time a customer orders. Place “closed” signs on certain tables to promote social distancing. Scrub the bathrooms every half hour.

Those were among the instructio­ns in a 59page guide that McDonald’s recently distribute­d to franchisee­s outlining procedures for safely reopening the fast-food chain’s dining rooms across the country.

The guide — titled “The Dine-In Reopening

Playbook” — does not outline a strict timeline, giving franchisee­s some discretion to decide when to reopen, according to a copy reviewed by The New York Times.

Once a local government says that restaurant­s can admit dine-in guests, a McDonald’s official in that region will decide whether reopening can begin, it says. Then individual franchise owners will make a decision about whether to go through with reopening.

So far, fewer than 100 McDonald’s locations have opened dining rooms in the states where that is allowed. A McDonald’s spokesman, Jesse Lewin, said the company and its franchisee­s had been discussing reopening plans “for the last several weeks.” The company worked with epidemiolo­gists as well as state and local health officials to assemble the guidelines, he said.

In addition to the rules about kiosks and bathrooms, the guide calls for all “hightouch” areas to be disinfecte­d every 30 minutes and recommends putting signs on the floor to prevent customers from brushing past one another as they move around.

The details of the guide were reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal.

Unlike the small, independen­t restaurant­s that have been battered during the pandemic, McDonald’s was in a good position to weather the economic fallout. Its drive-thrus have stayed open, and they accounted for about two-thirds of the company’s revenue before the crisis.

But the company’s bottom line has taken a hit. After reporting a decline in sales last month, the company’s chief executive, Chris Kempczinsk­i, warned that “the exact trajectory of our recovery is highly uncertain.”

And workers and labor advocates have criticized the company for failing to provide sufficient protective equipment to employees working at the drive-thrus.

In the reopening guide, McDonald’s said it would require employees to have their temperatur­es taken before work, wear gloves and face masks and wash their hands every hour.

“For dine-in orders, the bag will be placed on a clean sanitized tray and delivered to the customer while maintainin­g social-distance requiremen­ts,” the guide says. “Do not forget napkins and straws!”

Virtually every restaurant owner in the United States — from Michelinst­ar chefs to fast-food executives — has wrestled with how to make dining rooms safe in the coronaviru­s era. Some owners are planning to install plexiglass barriers between booths, while others are turning to paper menus and disposable cutlery.

McDonald’s is not the only fast-food chain moving closer to reopening. Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal, the parent company of Burger King and Popeyes, said this week that it would begin reopening dining rooms with new safety precaution­s, including “beautiful tabletop signage” to indicate which tables are open.

The McDonald’s guide also includes a Q&A section on how to manage guests who refuse to comply with social-distancing guidelines. “Always approach a situation calmly and treat everyone with respect,” the guide says.

 ??  ?? People order food to-go from a McDonald’s in New York in April. The fast-food chain distribute­d a guide to franchise owners with instructio­ns like putting “closed” signs on tables to promote social distancing and cleaning bathrooms every half hour.
People order food to-go from a McDonald’s in New York in April. The fast-food chain distribute­d a guide to franchise owners with instructio­ns like putting “closed” signs on tables to promote social distancing and cleaning bathrooms every half hour.

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