Solid Surface Bathtub Stain Incident Cleaning Response Logs for Housekeeping Supervisors
Housekeeping guide for bathtub stain incident logs, stain source, cleaner used, 2 response photos, dwell time, and escalation status.
Answer: Log stain source, approved cleaner, dwell time, 2 response photos, tub size, and escalation status before using abrasive methods on solid surface tubs.
Why stain response logs protect solid surface tubs
Housekeeping teams can damage a tub while trying to remove a stain quickly. A response log keeps cleaner choice, timing, photos, and escalation visible so maintenance can separate routine cleaning from repair authorization.
| Response field | Housekeeping reason |
|---|---|
| Stain source | Identifies dye, oil, soap, hard water, or unknown residue. |
| Approved cleaner | Prevents unauthorized chemicals or abrasive pads. |
| 2 response photos | Shows before and after condition for escalation. |
FAQ
What belongs in a stain response log?
Include stain source, cleaner, dwell time, before-after photos, room number, and escalation status.
Why avoid abrasive methods first?
Abrasive methods can change the finish and should be controlled by maintenance or repair guidance.
Who reviews repeated stains?
Housekeeping and engineering should review repeated stain types by room or tub batch.
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