Bathroom Parade, how to manage it?
#1
Posted 11 December 2010 - 08:41 AM
Just had an up-teenth "discussion" with one such person who insisted that I,as a restaurant owner must provide anyone and everyone washroom facilities.
I maintained my "boilerplate" schtick by reminding the person that washrooms are only for customers. As usual the person was agitated and insisted I was "rude".
I guess I could lock the washrooms and have the keys behind the expresso machine, to be doled out to customers who need it, or I could go one step higher and put an apartment buuilding style "buzzer" lock on the door. I am reluctnat to do so, but one more incident and I will----immediately
What do other owners do?
#2
Posted 11 December 2010 - 09:01 AM
#3
Posted 11 December 2010 - 11:10 AM
Just curious as to how other restaurant owners handle the problem of people waltzing in and making a direct bee-line to the washrooms and then waslking out again?
Just had an up-teenth "discussion" with one such person who insisted that I,as a restaurant owner must provide anyone and everyone washroom facilities.
It depends on the jurisdiction - In Maryland, if you have a liquor license and serve alcohol for consumption on premise, your patron would be correct, you do have to provide public washrooms without restriction as a condition of your liquor license.
#4
Posted 11 December 2010 - 01:08 PM
What would your reaction be if someone came in, but asked first?
And is it really affecting your business? Because your suggested measures probably will.
They are delicious.
#5
Posted 11 December 2010 - 08:34 PM
Secondly, I have never refused anyone who asks me first if they can use my facilities.
I do get upset when people walk in, ignore my or my staff's greeting, eyes automatically seeking out the washroom sign. This can happen twice a day, or it can happen once a month.
It's not the bathroonm itself that bothers me, it's the attitude. Ignore me or my staff, become upset or downright arguementitive when I ask them what exactly it is they want, or when I state with a completly blank, neutral tone that "washrooms are for customers only".
Locking the washroom has become a tactic employed by many other restaurants in Vancouver, Stah-bucks has keys or buzzers, same with Mickey D's, and even the public library does this. Many nightclubs have installed blue lights in the washrooms, as this makes it imposible to see veins or arteries.....
This has been an issue in the past, and the health dept has appeared on various media explaining that restauants did have the right to refuse people who weren't customers the facilities.
The majority of Vancouverites are aware of this. Some will oder something, and while it is prepared, use the washrooms. Others say they will, and when finished, question my staff on pricing or ingredients of various items (ignoring the menu board...) then simply state that everything is too expensive and quickly walk out. And others, well they choose just to argue.
Thoughts?
#6
Posted 11 December 2010 - 08:50 PM
Thoughts?
I think you should forget about it. Two people each day is no big deal. If it were six smelly hobos per day with poor aim, then I would say you have a problem. Barring that, there's no way I would deny anyone access to a bathroom. If someone needs to go, they need to go. What's the alternative?
No reason not to try and sell them a pastry and coffee on their way out, however. In fact, guilt them into buying one -- "Hey, how about buying a pastry? They're really good, and it beats pay toilets."
If you say it with the right inflection and a sincere smile, that could be a couple new customers each day.
#7
Posted 11 December 2010 - 09:46 PM
Why would you run the risk of alienating potential customers by refusing service of a restroom...seems petty. Even if they don't buy something that one time, they might remember the cafe in the future and be inclined to return as a patron.
#8
Posted 12 December 2010 - 02:01 AM
Unless you're having a huge problem, is it worth it to make your toileting on a par with service stations?
#9
Posted 12 December 2010 - 06:33 AM
#10
Posted 12 December 2010 - 06:49 AM
Think of it this way: Imagine you are out and about in town one day. For whatever reason, you get caught short (maybe guys should be imagining they are female...less easy to pee behind a bush!). There are no public toilets about (pay or otherwise) and you'll never make it home, so you pop in to a nearby cafe or restaurant. Ok, so I personally would ask, but maybe you're too embarassed. Anyway, one of the staff comes up to you as you are on your way to the bathrooms and says "Sorry mate, customers only." You ask nicely, beg even, and apologise profusely for using their facilities. They still won't let you, and ask you to leave the restaurant.
Now, are you ever likely to think of that restaurant fondly in the future, let alone think about going there?! If a restaurant forced me to wet myself, I'd be pretty pissed (!) off with them!
#11
Posted 12 December 2010 - 07:57 AM
#12
Posted 12 December 2010 - 08:51 AM
If someone comes in and asks "could I please use your bathroom" -- well of course they can.
If someone comes in and rushes to the bathroom and doesn't give you a chance to do squat --- well, not much you can do.
I guess all the people working there have to have a type of "dude going into bathroom to shoot up" or "dude going into the bathroom because he doesn't want to go pee on someones doorstep" radar and go from there.
#13
Posted 12 December 2010 - 11:44 AM
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)
#14
Posted 12 December 2010 - 07:22 PM
Jenni, if you notice I stated that I never refused anyone who asked. I just have a problem with people who think it's a right or something to come in off the street, use the facilities, and go back out on the steet again.
That being said, I haven't had a problem with druggies for quite some time now.(and I'm knocking on wood as I type this...)
Meh, maybe I'm too sensitive.
But I have made up my mind that if I get one more person who specifically walks past my counter and ignores my or my staff's greetings and heads straight for the washrooms without saying a word, I'll put a lock on the door.
#15
Posted 12 December 2010 - 07:26 PM
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)
#16
Posted 12 December 2010 - 07:56 PM
But I have made up my mind that if I get one more person who specifically walks past my counter and ignores my or my staff's greetings and heads straight for the washrooms without saying a word, I'll put a lock on the door.
May as well put that lock on now then. Someone will eventually ignore your greeting. But perhaps it's because its a proverbial "emergency."
I'm still in the "cut the public some slack" camp.
As a consumer, I dislike locked restrooms. I dislike asking the clerk for the key. (I'm not in prison or elementary school -- I don't need permission to use a toilet.)
I dislike walking to the bathroom with a key that is usually connected to a length of PVC pipe. I wonder if anyone has washed and sanitized that PVC pipe* and key -- ever. I don't really know where to put the key while using the bathroom. I'm certainly not putting it in my pocket, that's for sure. There's never a key caddy. So usually it sits on the edge of the sink. Or on the hand towel dispenser.
And then, after washing my hands, I have to pick up the PVC pipe/key combo, which is likely contaminated with eColi, salmonella, and every other fecal germ imaginable, and walk it back to the counter without somehow contaminating my hands.
Point blank -- if a restaurant puts me through those kind of hoops just to urinate, I will find another restaurant.
* Or similar anti-theft device. But they're all identical. PVC pipe, brass bar, acrylic wand, doesn't matter. It's a germ magnet. On the whole, I'd prefer a retinal scan or similar means of entry that doesn't involve extra microbial transfer. The door handle is nasty enough. Why add an extra layer?
Edited by ScoopKW, 12 December 2010 - 08:09 PM.
#17
Posted 12 December 2010 - 08:32 PM
But I'm in the "cut the public some slack" camp. A coffee shop's WC in New Orleans spared me a public, humiliating, intestinal incident. The times on the road I've pulled into a McDonalds to use the facilities, not the counter are countless, and when driving across rural Michigan, priceless. It's just good restaurant karma.Without them I'd have been , er, up to my ass in trouble.
Don't get me started about Santa Monica, "The home of the homeless" where businesses have signs saying "No Washrooms." Not just at restaurants, but at businesses like Borders. I understand their issues with hobos in the Men's, but c'mon!
Margaret McArthur
"Take it easy, but take it."
Studs Terkel
1912-2008
A sensational tennis blog from freakyfrites
margaretmcarthur.com
#18
Posted 12 December 2010 - 10:05 PM
But I have made up my mind that if I get one more person who specifically walks past my counter and ignores my or my staff's greetings and heads straight for the washrooms without saying a word, I'll put a lock on the door.
May as well put that lock on now then. Someone will eventually ignore your greeting. But perhaps it's because its a proverbial "emergency."
I'm still in the "cut the public some slack" camp.
As a consumer, I dislike locked restrooms. I dislike asking the clerk for the key. (I'm not in prison or elementary school -- I don't need permission to use a toilet.)
I dislike walking to the bathroom with a key that is usually connected to a length of PVC pipe. I wonder if anyone has washed and sanitized that PVC pipe* and key -- ever. I don't really know where to put the key while using the bathroom. I'm certainly not putting it in my pocket, that's for sure. There's never a key caddy. So usually it sits on the edge of the sink. Or on the hand towel dispenser.
And then, after washing my hands, I have to pick up the PVC pipe/key combo, which is likely contaminated with eColi, salmonella, and every other fecal germ imaginable, and walk it back to the counter without somehow contaminating my hands.
Point blank -- if a restaurant puts me through those kind of hoops just to urinate, I will find another restaurant.
* Or similar anti-theft device. But they're all identical. PVC pipe, brass bar, acrylic wand, doesn't matter. It's a germ magnet. On the whole, I'd prefer a retinal scan or similar means of entry that doesn't involve extra microbial transfer. The door handle is nasty enough. Why add an extra layer?
I absolutely agree about those devices. The only time I'm okay with those is when the loo is clearly used as a merchandise storage location. (And those I find sort of repulsive, even if it's necessary.)
You might try being passive aggressive, and sticking a sign on the exiting side of the bathroom door - "Hi - hope everything was to your satisfaction. If you ran in without saying 'hello', we hope you stop to at least say 'goodbye'. We like to be social that way..."
#19
Posted 13 December 2010 - 08:23 AM
One stupidly simple suggestion, but do you have a sign up? Just something simple like "Bathrooms are for customers only". Put it in a prominent place, and that may actually put off some of those who don't ask, just because they'll be too embarassed to be stopped and caught. And if someone does ask, because they're really desparate and just have to, even though they can read the sign, you use discretion and let them use the bathroom or not, as you choose.
Or perhaps you need a sign that says "Non-customers: Please ask before just walking in and using our bathrooms - we'll be nice if you are!"
#20
Posted 13 December 2010 - 03:18 PM
And call me silly, but if I entered a cafe to use the restroom, I'd feel compelled to purchase something...a bottle of water, a pastry for later. Since when is it okay to use the facilities for free? I can't tell you how many espressos my better half slurped down in Italian coffee bars so I could use the facilities with a clear conscience.
Bouillie: eating in south Louisiana
#21
Posted 29 December 2010 - 11:23 AM
Edited by Kajikit, 29 December 2010 - 11:25 AM.
#22
Posted 29 December 2010 - 10:08 PM
So why not a hardware store or a supermarket when ya gotta?
It's the attitude: I'll go whereever I please, and if I'm in a good mood maybe I'll buy a coffee afterwards.
Maybe.
Problem is, I've had one too many customers say the same thing, then back out of it, or even worse, question me or my staff on the price of 18 different items, (intentionaly ignoring the prices beside each item) then walk out.
Fer gawds sake if you don't want to buy anything, then either ask me for permission first, or at least throw a loonie (CDN 1$ coin) in the tip jar on your way out.
Would you say that is fair?
#23
Posted 30 December 2010 - 02:57 AM
#24
Posted 30 December 2010 - 09:45 AM
As a customer I have no problem with keys behind the counter. This is a pretty common technique. I would just recommend giving the keys freely to anyone who asks. Simply needing to ask is going to deter a lot of non-customer users.
I agree, I'm fine with a key, too. One with a metal loop on it, so you can hang it from the doorknob, always seems like a good idea; I just use hand sanitizer after I hand it back. I confess to sometimes making a no-eye-contact bee-line for the loo, but this is because I'm feeling embarrassed/uncomfortable, and don't know where to look; it never occurred to me that it my be offensive, but I'll be thinking of this from now on.
One thing: Unless a dreadful emergency is pending, I only use the loo in places that I tend to normally frequent (e.g. I occasionally duck into City Bakery just to use their facilites, but I frequently go there for coffee/pastry). Normally I'd just use one in a department store or B&N.
Edited by Mjx, 30 December 2010 - 09:47 AM.
#25
Posted 30 December 2010 - 12:56 PM
#26
Posted 30 December 2010 - 03:02 PM
#27
Posted 14 January 2011 - 09:58 AM
#28
Posted 14 January 2011 - 01:14 PM
The only reason I ever go to McDonald's for is to use their restroom. For the most part, McDonald's restrooms are unreasonably clean for being a such a shithole establishment. Hell, one of the pieces of advice I give to people traveling to Europe for this first time is "McDonald's is your friend." Not for the food, but because they just tend to have clean, accessible, Western style restrooms.
YES!!!!!
That's exactly the attitude I was talking about. Use the facilities, don't spend a dime there, and take a cheap swipe at them as well (ie "such a sh*thole establishment). And then emphatically insist everyone else do the same as you
Yeah, I "did" Europe too, but that was back in the 80's and back the Fench wouldn't even think about opening a Mc D's. Pay toilets all over the place in Europe, and clean too.
#29
Posted 20 January 2011 - 02:14 PM
I probably wont make eye contact on the way in, because your staff look busy and I dont want to interrupt them.
If there were a grocery or hardware store, pay toilet or other option, I wouldnt be darkening the doors of a small coffee shop. But I would remember if I had need and were treated abruptly, in the absence of these other options.
But mostly, its a numbers thing. 2 an hour = a possible problem. 2 a day? how do you even notice?
How about black light as in Scotland?
#30
Posted 09 April 2012 - 04:38 PM









