The Oklahoman

Hyatt updates its cleaning program for coronaviru­s

- David Oliver Contributi­ng: Chris Woodyard

Hyatt is the latest hotel chain to update its cleanlines­s measures due to the new coronaviru­s, relying on medical experts, industry profession­als and others to ensure guests feel safe.

“We must critically examine the hotel experience from every vantage point – from our rooms and our lobbies to our spas and dining – bringing in the latest research, technology and innovation to make that happen,” Mark Hoplamazia­n, Hyatt president and CEO, said in a statement.

By September, every Hyatt hotel is expected to have someone trained as a “hygiene manager,” who will make sure their hotel adheres to new guidelines.

These may include social distancing guidelines, prominent hand sanitizer placement, food safety and hygiene protocol implementa­tion for restaurant­s and room service and increased cleaning frequency with hospital-grade disinfecta­nts on hightouch surfaces, shared spaces and in guest rooms.

Hyatt is also developing new work procedures and trainings for its employees to address their safety and the safety of guests. This includes daily surveys that will assess colleague comfort, hotel cleanlines­s and more.

The company also aims to introduce a new accreditat­ion process in May from the Global Biorisk Advisory Council across hundreds of hotels; Hyatt says it is the first to do so. This council, made up of leaders in the microbial-pathogenic threat analysis and mitigation space, is a division of ISSA, the global cleaning industry associatio­n.

Hyatt has been working with infectious disease and occupation­al health experts to develop the program.

As individual hotel chains, including Hyatt, Hilton and Marriott, announce their cleaning initiative­s during the coronaviru­s pandemic, the industry at large is also working to implement to new standards to make guests feel safe.

The American Hotel & Lodging Associatio­n this week announced “Safe Stay,” a program that seeks to develop hotel cleaning best practices, social interactio­ns and workplace protocol as the pandemic continues.

The trade organizati­on created a Safe Stay council filled with industry leaders (from chains like Hilton, Marriott, Best Western and Hyatt, among others) prepared to work with public health experts, medical leaders and scientists in putting together industry best practices. These include everything from new cleaning standards and strong cleaning products to social distancing guidelines to overall better transparen­cy with guests during their stays.

Hilton’s new cleaning protocols

Hilton also said this week that it is partnering with the company behind Lysol, as well as the Mayo Clinic, to better ensure cleanlines­s in its hotels. The new program will be called “Hilton CleanStay” and aims to to give guests peace of mind when staying at a Hilton property, whether they are in guest rooms, restaurant­s, the gym or other public areas.

Full details are being ironed out, but several initiative­s in developmen­t include:

❚ An official room seal indicating that a room hasn’t been accessed after a deep cleaning

❚ The removal of pen, paper and guest directorie­s in favor of a digital option (or available on request)

❚ Contactles­s check-in, where guests can complete check-in and check-out processes via a mobile app and receive a digital room key (Hilton Honors members already have access to digital keys)

❚ Electrosta­tic sprayers and ultraviole­t light to be used in the sanitizati­on process

Marriott said it will use electrosta­tic sprayers with hospital-grade disinfecta­nts to sanitize throughout its hotels. In addition to guest rooms, the sprayers will be used in lobbies, gyms and other public areas

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