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Home Cleaning and Disinfecting: 6 Overlooked Touchpoints

April 6, 2020 by Evan Morris

As a result of the rapid and unsettling spread of COVID-19, Corvus Janitorial Systems – a national franchisor of office and workplace cleaning services – will be making an effort to pivot towards providing tips and best practices on how to ensure a safe, clean and sanitized home office area. Because so many Americans are working from home, obeying shelter-in-place requirements, all while doing their best to make America run, we aim to repurpose office and workspace cleaning and disinfecting tips to use in home offices and general home cleaning purposes.

In this post, we highlight often overlooked but critical TOUCHPOINTS that families and home office workers should ensure become a part of their cleaning regimes. Corvus of Little Rock and Northwest Arkansas teammate Justin Simmering shared his own insights on keeping the home office clean in this short video.

1. Refrigerator Doors

Now that we are all quarantined at home, we’re eating our meals at home, snacking and generally putting our hands on the home refrigerator far more than ever before. And yet how often do we wipe down and disinfect the refrigerator door handle? Stationing disinfecting wipes or some other visual queue by the refrigerator door handle is a great and effective way to remind yourself and members of your family to disinfect and clean frequently handled doors and handles.

2. Dumpster Handles or Trash Cans

You’ve done a great job disinfecting and cleaning the indoor parts of your home and the high touchpoints, but when we step outside do we get complacent or find a false sense of security? Essential services like trash collection are still operating, and every time your trash collector picks up or handles your refuse, he or she might be leaving germs or worse behind. Make a habit of disinfecting and sanitizing the lids and handles of trash bins.

3. Car Door Handles and Steering Wheel

This is an often-overlooked touchpoint; however, it is a critical one to address during the coronavirus pandemic. Whether you are under state, county, or city-mandated shelter-in-place or stay-at-home orders, or simply practicing your own social distancing measures, individuals and families still need essential items that require a ride in the car. High traffic locations such as grocery stores and gas stations can potentially carry the virus. Because of this, it is imperative to clean and disinfect your car door handles as well as your steering wheel. Doing so can help prevent the virus from entering your household from outside sources and keep your family safe.

4. Remotes, Gadgets, Chargers, and Toys

With a majority of Americans staying home, devices are being used at a rate never seen before. From binge-watching Netflix to tuning into daily state and national briefings to video chatting with friends and coworkers on our cellphones, we are more attached to our electronics and toys than ever before. Due to this, keeping frequently touched items in our homes germ-free is more important than ever. Make it part of your daily cleaning routine to wipe down and disinfect any TV remotes, game console controllers, chargers, cellphones, children’s toys, and any other devices or objects that are being frequently handled in the home.

5. Light Switches, Keys Doorknobs, and Door Handles

These specific touchpoints are unavoidable in daily life at home. Therefore, they require cleaning and disinfecting on a consistent and frequent cadence. If you can, avoid directly touching these surfaces. Use a sleeve, a napkin, or another method to create a barrier between your skin and the touchpoint you are interacting with. Even if all direct skin contact can be avoided, you should still frequently clean and disinfect these touchpoints as a precautionary action.

6. Computers, Keyboards, and Mouse

With many people working from home, either for their job or for school, home desktops and laptops are critical to the continued productivity of our society during this prolonged period of shelter-in-place. With that said, make sure that you are routinely wiping down and disinfecting your keyboard, mouse, and computer screen.

Disinfecting and Cleaning Protocols

It is important to highlight the difference between general cleaning and disinfecting. During a general clean the intent is to remove dirt and dust. This step must be completed before disinfection because germs can lurk in grime and soiled areas. Once an area is clean, it can then be disinfected. Typically, disinfecting happens only in restrooms and dining areas, but with COVID-19, disinfection of all areas using EPA approved commercial-grade chemicals is a critical factor in helping to curb the spread of the virus in our communities. The EPA recently released List N: Disinfectants for Use Against SARS-CoV-2, which can be found here.

This is by no means an exhaustive list of all the critical touchpoints in your home. However, we believe it is a good starting point for individuals and families looking to ensure their homes are clean and safe during the novel coronavirus pandemic. For more information and resources relating to COVID-19, visit our coronavirus response page here.

This piece is meant simply to inform, not to provide any legal or medical advice.

Filed Under: Articles, Commercial Cleaning, COVID 19, Disinfecting Tagged With: Coronavirus, Little Rock, Northwest Arkansas

Are your household cleaning products working to fight coronavirus?

April 3, 2020 by MalekaVrana

By Katherine Rosenberg-Douglas
Chicago Tribune
Apr 02, 2020

click to read article on Chicago Tribune website

With Americans more focused than ever on keeping their homes safe amid the COVID-19 pandemic, a key to success is knowing the difference between cleaning and disinfecting.

The words aren’t synonymous, rather, they’re more akin to two steps in one process, such as sweeping your floor before mopping it, explained Justin Douglas, CEO of Corvus Janitorial Systems.

“That’s how I explain it when we train new employees,” Douglas said. “Or, I use the example of picking up the clothes off the floor of your kid’s room before you can do anything else. Cleaning and disinfecting aren’t interchangeable words.”

It’s easy to think there’s no wrong way to clean. And while it doesn’t take a microbiologist to do it correctly, a basic understanding of something referred to as “dwell time,” also sometimes called “contact time” or “kill time,” is necessary, Douglas and other experts say.

Luckily, information about contact time is available on every cleaning product mass-produced in the United States. To achieve the efficacy of claims such as “kills 99.9% of germs,” just one frequently overlooked step is crucial: Read the instructions, said Todd Clements, chief operating officer for UNX Industries, a chemical manufacturer that supplies nursing homes and hotels with cleaning products.

“All of us are guilty of not reading the backs of the labels,” Clements said.

“As far as I know, there’s no EPA-registered product with specific kill claims against COVID-19 because it’s so new, but it falls under human coronaviruses, so look for the contact time listed for those,” he said.

Clements and Travis FormyDuval, also with UNX, said people may be surprised to learn just how long many top cleaning products must sit — five or 10 minutes is not uncommon. But consumers should be reassured that if they allow a chemical to sit according to instructions, the claim on the front of a product bottle should be achieved. Each product is tested by the Environmental Protection Agency to ensure it does what it says and the instructions have been vetted for accuracy.

“We can’t even change the font on the label unless the EPA approves it,” Clements said.

Joe Rubino, a microbiologist and the director of research and development for Reckitt Benckiser, the parent company of the brand that makes Lysol products, said “sanitize” is another term people also often use incorrectly.

“Cleaning is basically removing dirt and soil. You’re going to remove some of the bacteria but not all of them,” he said. “Disinfecting is a very high level of germ kill, or greater than 99.99%, and you’d really need a few more 9s. Sanitization is another level, the somewhat lower level of 99.9%.”

FormyDuval, who teaches hotel housekeepers best practices, said people can wrongly assume if they use a product for any length of time, they’re going to achieve the efficacy advertised.

When teaching, FormyDuval said he talks about the elements needed to disinfect, which include time, agitation and heat. Agitation is how hard a person must scrub to remove soap stains or grime from surfaces.

“I tell them that just by changing up the routine a little, starting by spraying your chemicals in the bathroom, you can move on to the living portion of the room while you let it sit. When you come back to the shower, it takes less elbow grease, less physical activity to remove any scum, so you’re actually saving time,” FormyDuval said.

Using the same principle at home, he suggested residents spray a chemical in the kitchen, then spray a chemical in the bathroom, select separate towels for each space and head back to the kitchen, leaving each product to sit for the appropriate time. The different rags are so you don’t introduce bathroom germs into the kitchen, or vice versa. Likewise, in the bathroom, it’s best to start at the top and work your way down to the floor.

Erica Marie Hartmann, an assistant professor at Northwestern University, said not every surface needs to be disinfected every time, but it’s a good idea for frequently touched spaces, particularly if sharing a home with someone displaying COVID-19 symptoms.

“People who are symptomatic, if they’re touching things or coughing on things, those are the things that you want to disinfect more regularly, such as the nightstand, the door handle or whatever they’re commonly interacting with,” Hartmann said. “There are, depending on the surface, tens of billions of microbes.”

When they’re done using cleaning chemicals, people may be tempted to “wipe away” residue with a wet rag, which is unnecessary because the EPA has determined the chemical is safe to leave behind. But it also won’t prevent or undo disinfection, Rubino said.

“There are a lot of additives to cleaners that can be harmful to health, including endocrine disruptors,” said Dr. Susan Buchanan, a University of Illinois at Chicago environmental medicine specialist. “At this time when we’re trying to fight an outbreak, though, those concerns tend to take a back burner.”

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also has a list of recommended products to disinfect against COVID-19, as well as the necessary contact time for each product.

kdouglas@chicagotribune.com

Filed Under: Commercial Cleaning, Content Types, COVID 19, Disinfecting, Press, Tips & Trends Tagged With: Chicago, Coronavirus

How to Keep Your Home Clean During the Coronavirus Outbreak

March 30, 2020 by Evan Morris

By now, we’re all well aware of the CDC’s COVID-19 guidelines. We’re all washing our hands more frequently, avoiding gatherings of more than 10 people, and not touching our faces, especially when we’re out in public. Many of us are taking a step further by avoiding anyone other than the people we live with, having groceries delivered, and working from home. When we’re facing something this treacherous, you can’t be too careful.

But with updates and articles flying at us left and right at all hours of the day and night, information overload is nearly impossible to avoid. So, how do we know that we’re doing everything we need to, without having to scour the internet’s thousands of available resources? Let the experts at Corvus Janitorial clear things up for you right here.

Here are some important tips on how to keep your home clean during the coronavirus outbreak:

Sanitize shared surfaces each day

While the most common types of transmission are airborne (sneeze or cough) and through person-to-person contact (handshake, hug, or kiss), health experts have found evidence that the virus can also be transmitted through contact with a contaminated surface. This is where the avoid touching your face rule comes in.

On top of refraining from touching your face, you can also decrease the risk of contaminated surface transmission by sanitizing shared surfaces. Use a Clorox wipe or another disinfectant to wipe down doorknobs, sink handles and faucets, countertops, refrigerator handles, and desks. Any other shared surfaces, like toilet and shower handles and light switches, should be sanitized, too. If anyone in your home is sick, sanitizing becomes even more essential.

Clean your reusable bags and grocery boxes

Whether you’re still cautiously making grocery store runs, or you’re having food delivered, the virus may live on cardboard boxes and reusable bags for up to 24 hours, so it’s important to clean these, too. When you’re home from the grocery store, or you’ve carried in your purchases from your driveway drop-off, use a sanitizing solution or wipe to clean the inside of your grocery bag or the outside of the delivery box.

Once you’re done with the packaging, it couldn’t hurt to wipe down your purchases the same way. Many foods like cereal, granola bars, and coffee pods come in cardboard packaging that can hold on to the coronavirus germs. Depending on your preference, you can wipe the boxes down or open them up and transfer the foods to clean containers in your home and get rid of the packaging altogether. When you’re done, wash your hands and wipe down the surfaces they touched.

Analyze your cleaning style

If you can see that a surface is dirty, don’t just jump right to the disinfecting wipes or solutions. Clean these surfaces with soap and water first so your disinfecting efforts will be more effective. If you have them, wear disposable gloves while you clean and sanitize surfaces and objects that may be infected. If you don’t, continue to wash your hands frequently for at least 20 seconds at a time. And don’t forget about your clothes. If you’re cleaning shared surfaces, making grocery trips, caring for a sick individual, or going to work each day, it would be good to change and wash your clothes a bit more frequently than you normally would.

The best cleaning products for this particular outbreak are diluted household bleach solutions or ones that are alcohol-based and contain a minimum of 70% alcohol. If you’re wondering if your cleaning products are effective enough, the EPA has released a list of common disinfectants that meet their criteria for use against the novel coronavirus.

Your disinfectant may not be on their list yet, but the packaging may provide more information about its uses that will help you determine its effectiveness. While you’re checking labels, make sure your cleaning supplies aren’t expired so you know you’re getting the most out of your efforts.

About Corvus Janitorial Systems

Founded in 2004 to make people’s lives better, Corvus is a full-service commercial cleaning franchisor that offers cleaning services through reputable local Franchisees. Corvus has been guided by its mission to transform people and transform places by consistently delivering independence, security, and freedom to Franchisees who deliver high-quality cleaning to offices, educational buildings, medical buildings/offices, recreational centers, industrial parks, and other spaces. The company has 17 regional support offices across the United States with nearly 900 Franchisees. For more information regarding Corvus, visit www.corvusjanitorial.com or www.corvusjanitorial.com/franchise for franchise information.

Filed Under: Commercial Cleaning, COVID 19, Disinfecting, Guides, Tips & Trends Tagged With: Coronavirus

Make Lives Better – Corvus’ Mission and the “Why” Behind Our Business

March 27, 2020 by MalekaVrana

To our Community of Franchise Partners and Valued Customers,

Since our founding in 2004, our objective has always been to Make Lives Better. By providing customers clean, healthy, vibrant workplaces that foster safety and productivity, we believe Corvus can positively impact people’s lives. Equally significant is how our franchise program facilitates our objective to Make Lives Better through business ownership and the independence it provides. Never before has that founding objective – to Make Lives Better – been as salient and as crucial as it is in these uncertain and unsettling times.

The COVID-19 outbreak, which is taking the world by storm and surprise, has touched us all. Commercially and socially, our communities have each seen an impact. This virus has threatened our safety and health. Despite those headwinds, our community of Franchisee Partners has embraced their role of cleaning, disinfecting, and sanitizing workspaces. Cleanliness allows people some normality with the ability to get back to work, back to worship, or back to socializing with those they care about and love. You, the Franchisee Partners, and Valued Customers are living and breathing examples of our core value of genuinely Making Lives Better.

Starting this company nearly 16 years ago, we knew we had the potential to impact our stakeholders’ lives positively. Never would we have imagined a crisis of this proportion would so validate the positive impact inclination. To our customers and the communities we serve, thank you for your trust and partnership. To our employees, thank you for your dedication and efforts. Finally, to our Franchisees, thank you for Making Lives Better, and thank you for your grit, determination, and commitment to helping America overcome this challenging environment.

With respect,

Justin Douglas
Co-CEO
Founder

Filed Under: Community, Video / Webinar Tagged With: Coronavirus

Cleaning for Health, Clean for Safety…Cleaning Matters

March 20, 2020 by Evan Morris

First and foremost, these are unsettling and trying times, the likes of which no one has ever seen. At the moment, Corvus is a part of a bigger national team. Our thoughts and prayers are with our fellow Americans, and yet at the same time we have every confidence in all our collective ability to pull through this. We would never seek to be presumptuous; every business has to pursue the course of action that is best for their stakeholders, but some food for thought on why continuing to clean, sanitize, and disinfect, so we can all get back to work and win, we felt appropriate to share.

In the midst of all the chaos, it’s tempting to cancel everything, lock the doors and windows, and hide away. We know that things are confusing and uncertain and that social distancing is a necessity rather than a preference. Some business activities, however, shouldn’t be canceled. Your scheduled cleaning service is one of the items at the top of that list.

Here are a few reasons why you shouldn’t stop cleaning now:

Cleaning and disinfecting are best practice measures listed by the CDC

Because the virus can live on surfaces for wide range of hours to days, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggests regularly cleaning and disinfecting shared surfaces to prevent COVID-19 and other viral illnesses. The same way that we’re washing our hands more frequently and stocking up on hand sanitizers and soaps, the surfaces in our homes, businesses, and offices need the same level of care and attention. But a quick dusting and a wipe down are not enough.

Corvus Janitorial is geared up and ready to step up to the Coronavirus and the unique challenges it presents. We are responding with responsible practices, high-level disinfecting protocols, commercial-grade chemicals, and with our clients and their families at the forefront of our minds. We’re more than a cleaning service, we’re your friends, neighbors, and concerned community members. As this situation unfolds across the nation, our mission of making our clients’ lives better is more important than ever.

Cleaning and disinfecting can help stop the spread

We’re still in the early stages of the outbreak here in the United States, so there will be a lot to learn along the way. What we do already know is that cleaning and disinfecting can help us stop the spread. COVID-19 is highly contagious, so social distancing, avoiding contact with infected individuals, and canceling large gatherings are an excellent start, but we need to follow through, too.

Businesses still need to run smoothly, make money, and power through a confusing and difficult situation. If your office, school, medical facility, industrial space, or recreational facility is still operating in any capacity or has been over the last few weeks, it needs more than an open window. Each surface should be thoroughly cleaned and disinfected. We have the unique opportunity to do our part and help stop the spread; rise to the challenge.

Cleaning and disinfecting can be what keeps the people you love safe

Each risk we take and best practice we ignore presents the opportunity for disaster to strike. After exposure, it can take anywhere from 2 to 14 days for symptoms to appear. With an average incubation period of about five days, we already know that most people who contracted COVID-19 did so from someone that didn’t realize they had it yet. Now is not the time to wait and hope for the best, it’s time to take action.

According to the National Health Institute, “scientists found that severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was detectable in aerosols for up to three hours, up to four hours on copper, up to 24 hours on cardboard and up to two to three days on plastic and stainless steel”. A cough, a sneeze, or an infected surface may be enough to change someone’s entire life. This virus is highly contagious and spreading quickly. In these times, we are all thinking about our parents, grandparents, children, and immunocompromised employees and loved ones.

Professional cleaning and disinfecting can make all the difference. Call Corvus Janitorial today to see how we can help you. Our team is here for yours; it is our prerogative and social responsibility to continue servicing our existing customers, as well as any other business that is in need of our services. We are all in this together.

Filed Under: Articles, Commercial Cleaning, COVID 19 Tagged With: Coronavirus

Recommended Resources for COVID-19

March 16, 2020 by Evan Morris

Corvus Janitorial Systems recommends referencing the resources below to keep up-to-date on the latest coronavirus resources.

General Resources

Coronavirus: A guide for your facility
EPA – “List N: Disinfectants for Use Against SARS-CoV-2”
OSHA – “Guidance on Preparing Workplaces for COVID-19”
IRS – Coronavirus Tax Relief and Economic Impact Payments

Filed Under: Content Types, COVID 19, Guides

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