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    Confessions of a Hotel Housekeeper

    "Instead of Vacuuming, I Picked Up Some Crumbs"

    Allison Rupp worked at Yellowstone National Park's historic Old Faithful Inn in 2004.

    Photo by stevendepolo, FlickrPhoto by stevendepolo, Flickr

    The best guests sleep in
    Three simple letters could inspire the "Hallelujah" chorus: DND, or do not disturb. One sign hanging on a doorknob, and the day's work was shortened by half an hour. Two signs? Pure heaven, but only if they remained there until my eight-hour shift ended-otherwise I'd have to circle back and clean the rooms. My daily list of 15 rooms (out of 325 in the hotel) consisted of DOs (due out) and Os (occupied), which in housekeeping lingo meant the guests were scheduled to check out or were staying another night. An occupied room was less labor-intensive (making the beds rather than changing the sheets saved me 20 minutes), but there was always the possibility the guest would stay in the room while you worked. One man watched me clean his entire room, from scrubbing the toilet to emptying the trash-and told me at the end that I was "building character." Condescension is not nearly as encouraging to a maid as a couple of dollars.

    As long as it looked clean
    I cut corners everywhere I could. Instead of vacuuming, I found that just picking up the larger crumbs from the carpet would do. Rather than scrub the tub with hot water, sometimes it was just a spray-and-wipe kind of day. After several weeks on the job, I discovered that the staff leader who inspected the rooms couldn't tell the difference between a clean sink and one that was simply dry, so I would often just run a rag over the wet spots. But I never skipped changing the sheets. I wouldn't sink that low, no matter how lazy I was feeling.

    A bacterial wonderland
    I was disgusted by the many guests I came in contact with through the things they left behind: the hairs on the pillow, the urine on the toilet seat, the half-eaten cookie, the stained sheets. One woman had soiled her sheets so thoroughly that we had to toss them in a biohazard bag-they could never be used again. Rooms where young kids stayed were the worst, with food ground into the carpet and piles of used diapers in the trash. That kind of demoralizing mess could take 45 minutes to clean up. Most maids wore rubber gloves when they worked, but mine were too big, so I discarded them. Unsurprisingly, I got the flu twice.

    Not for love-or money
    I didn't know maids received tips, so it took me weeks to realize that the coins left in rooms were an intentional gift. My tips were paltry: I almost never received more than $1, and at times guests left religious pamphlets. One day, however, I was shocked to find a crisp $100 bill lying on a table. Although the generous tip put a little spring in my step and compelled me to do a better job that day, it didn't change my work ethic for long. I apologize to you now if you ever stayed in one of my rooms. You deserved better. But if housekeepers were paid more than minimum wage-and the tips were a bit better-I might have cleaned your toilet rather than just flushed it.

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    3,200 comments

    • Shannon  •  1 year 7 months ago
      My family travels quite a bit and if the room is clean when we check into a room then we tip when we leave. If the room is disgusting then I let the frond desk know and I don't tip.
      If we stay multiple nights we put up the do not disturb sign and straighten up our own room, hang our towels, make our beds, and remove our own trash. I do not let my children destroy a hotel room just because it's not our house.
      And as for a maid finding hair on a pillow? I shed so much I'm surprised i'm not bald! I can't help shedding and have never thought to clean the pillow case so the maid wouldn't see that I'm losing my hair!
    • KarinaJ  •  1 year 7 months ago
      Just like you tip your waiter you tip a hotel housekeeper. Im sure this varies state to state city to city etc. But for the most part the pay is terrible considering the amount of work they have to do. My mom works in a Vegas hotel and they do have strict guidelines to follow when cleaning a room. They have to clean 18-22 rooms in an 8hr day! It takes an average of 30-45min to clean the rooms according to standards.
    • Minty Me  •  1 year 7 months ago
      Allison Rupp sounds like a real pig
    • Nancy  •  1 year 7 months ago
      Why should I think of leaving a better tip if when I walk in the room for the first time it's a biohazard and will not receive the rewards for my tip, the next guest will? I leave a tip for a job well done, not to encourage someone to just do their job.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  1 year 6 months ago
      This is really grossing me out.
    • Lockness  •  1 year 7 months ago
      This is not surprising to me at all. Thanks to the example received from my mother, I bring my own paper towels, rags and cleaners and scrub down the remote controls, bedrooms and bathrooms before I settle in.
    • Diane  •  1 year 7 months ago
      I have read articles like this before a long time ago. I always brnig a can of Lysol and spray down everything--bedding, remotes, phone, bathroom, etc.
    • Doll  •  1 year 7 months ago
      this is why I always travel with disinfecting wipes and my own pillowcases-I've even been known to keep an entire set of sheets in my car if traveling, just in case. I don't always tip, but most of the time, housekeeping staff generally like me when I stay somewhere cause I tend to leave the room cleaner than when I got there. The only thing they have to do is vacuum and change the sheets-I even take the trash out in most places. I worked as a maid for a residential service so I know cleaning is hard work, but my working conditions were not any better, the pay was no better, and we were not tipped at all-most days were at least 10 hour days but it was the job I had at the time and I was going to do my best regardless-guess it just depends on individual work ethic.
    • CaliGirl  •  1 year 6 months ago
      Hey Allison: Here'e your tip: "Change your work ethic" not just for the rest of the day but permanently. By the way, you should be glad you have a job. If you want to do better than be a maid, get an education. Although, even in the corporate world, you need to have a work ethic and not an entitlement issue.
    • Glashtyn  •  1 year 6 months ago
      I'm a housekeeper myself and can definitely sympathize. It sucks to clean a room thoroughly and then get just minimum wage and no thanks. People think that we don't clean because of posts like this, but we have standards that need to met too. I found an appropriate blog post by another housekeeper that I know and it's more detailed than this.
      http://glashtyn.dreamwidth.org/13151.html
      It will give you a better idea even than this of what we housekeepers think.
    • Jason  •  1 year 6 months ago
      Well Ms. Rupp I can tell you that it isn't what we do when someone is watching that really counts. It is what we do when we think no one is watching that tells what our true nature is. You my dear would do well never to apply for a job with my company. Here is the real prize. You have no idea who or what my company is. Just ask yourself the next time you don't get hired for a job; could that have been his company. I don't expect you to do your best. I demand it and I pay you better than anyone in the industry when you do it.
    • Yai  •  1 year 6 months ago
      I understand that housekeepers don't get paid well, but they are there to do a specific job and that means cleaning well. In hotels were I have stayed they housekeeper is rarely never the same, so that's why I never leave tips because I don't know who it goes to. Maybe if there was some kind of system or a note stating that a specific person is cleaning your room, like in cruises it would be different. But next time I stay in a hotel, I will ask who will be my housekeeper.
    • Caral from SoCal  •  1 year 6 months ago
      I'm not sure the author of this piece fully understands the light it casts her in. She comes off as immature, lazy, and a bad employee. People will leave crumbs, babies will mess diapers, and unfortunately occasionally one of my children has probably left a disgusting drip on the toilet. Get a pair of gloves that fits - the management must provide them by law - and go after it like you mean it. Grow a spine, girl, work hard and get out of there someday.
    • Gwen  •  1 year 6 months ago
      if they were paid more, or everyone tipped well, there would still be those that cleaned rooms like the article anyway. Don't like your job? Get an education/vocational training to get a better one. However, no matter how much a job fulfills you, one day a job is a job is a job. There are still days when the alarm clock rings that you dread to leave the bed.
    • whit h  •  1 year 6 months ago
      I wouldn't expect a maid to sanitize the room every night I stayed, just tidy up, but every guest deserves a sanitized room on arrival.That's just wrong.
    • Nothing to see here, keep ...  •  1 year 6 months ago
      Let's see;
      No shortage of workers
      Minimal skills required, not a large amount of training needed
      No education needed
      From a business stand point, not much incentive to increase the pay. It's supply and demand, the costs of hiring, training and keeping employees. With lower costs for hiring and training, ease of finding new people, and the need to keep costs lower to be competitive in the market place, that isn't going to encourage wage increases.

      Businesses are not there to employ people, they are their to turn a profit. That is reality. Doesn't matter if it's fair or not, that's the way things are. The harder it is to fill a position and the more costly it is to train and keep those people, the higher the wages.

      What is really sad is that this is so common, even the supervisors seem to know whats going on and basically encourage it.

      All that complaining, sorry but most of what you complain about is just part of the job. Things like soiled sheets, the labor costs and replacement of the sheets should be charged to the pig that left them, other then that, it's part of being a house keeper. Doesn't excuse those who could care less if they look like pigs, but you can't control that either.

      When I'm staying in a hotel, the most I might let them do is a quick cleaning, nothing fancy, I sure don't change my sheets at home every night. Having the bed made can be nice, fresh towels, but even then I might just ask for fresh towels. So it works both ways. I do expect a room to be very clean when I arrive, fresh bedding, bathroom cleaned up, but after I've been there for a day, it's not like I clean my house every day, no reason to need a home away from home to be much different.

      If you really want to make more money, work your tail off, give it your all. There can be opportunities to move up, supervisor, be noticed by management and possibly better opportunities. In my 30+ years in the work force I haven't always been where I am, I worked my way up, most job changes were steps up or better opportunities to move up. There were some where luck and connections got me into a better opportunity but in the last 15 years at the same company, I started towards the bottom and am close to the top, and I earned that by hard work and dedication.
    • Rude_Turk  •  1 year 6 months ago
      First off, bed bugs are not a "germ" and are not treatable by simple measures. Get the facts first before you start throwing around hot travel buzz words.

      Second, this is much akin to the food service industry. Being a poor customer?b better not eat that steak dinner, only heaven knows what they did to it in back.

      As illegal and as horrifying as this is to you, WAKE UP. People are disgusting, lazy f***s. On BOTH ends of this issue.
    • Jane doe  •  1 year 6 months ago
      this writer humanizes a job that most of the public doesn't think twice about. Jobs like housekeeping show how disgusting we as people really are. Until your'e smacked in the head by a dirty condom flying out of sheets your pulling off a bed, or come upon a toilet filled to the brim with last nights chicken wings and red wine, you can't really judge a person's psyche when it comes to a job that pays the bills! Support your housekeeper, learn their name and let the front desk know how good a job that person may have done for you, it may be the only nice thing that person gets to hear in the day.
    • mom2  •  1 year 7 months ago
      If everyone tipped better, maybe they wouldn't be tempted to do shabby work.
    • .SAM  •  1 year 6 months ago
      i like bedbugs they bleed me when i sleep and you never see them

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