Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Racism at it's Finest

A black woman walked into the hotel a few days ago and reluctantly comes up to me at the desk:

Woman:  I need a room with two doubles starting tonight for a week.
Me:  I'm sorry, we're sold out tonight, tomorrow and Thursday.
Woman:  Are you sure you looked correctly?  Check again.
(I quickly check again)
Me:  Yes ma'am, I'm sure.  Unfortunately we're sold out those night's.

Woman turns to my black coworker:
Woman:  Sir, can you please check for me to make sure he isn't lying to me?
(my jaw drops at this and my coworker does a double take to make sure he heard her correctly)
CW:  Sure, give me one second to look that up for you.
Woman:  Ok, I need a room tonight for a week with two doubles.
CW:  Sorry, we are sold out, just like my coworker told you.
Woman:  Ok I just had to be sure I wasn't being played.  Thanks for your help (directly to my coworker, not looking at me once).

Let me start off by saying that I've dealt with some minor cases of racism in my years in working in a hotel.  I'm an Orthodox Jew and I wear a kippah at work so I get people checking in and the entire time that I'm checking them in, they're staring at my head and not paying attention.  I'm fine with that.  They're usually from the Midwest or some small town in Europe that hasn't seen too many Jews come through their towns.  I've even gotten called things by people coming back into the hotel late at night after drinking for hours.  I can deal with that.  But to come into the hotel and act like that in the middle of the day in the middle of Manhattan is not so OK.  I don't know if it was because I'm white or Jewish, but being rude like that deserves a wake up call.  Welcome to New York.  It's 2011.  Get over it.

No Soap Radio

Two elephants were in a bathtub and one asked "can you pass the bar of soap?"  The other elephant replied "no, we donated it to Africa."

Sorry.  That was pretty awful.  I just needed something to lead into this story.

About three months ago, I learned that our hotel entered a program to help Clean The World.  The way the program works is when cleaning guest rooms everyday, the housekeepers swap out the "old" bars of soap that were used once or twice and replenish it with brand new ones.  While most people think this is a waste of perfectly good soap, it's actually not going to waste at all.

After collecting all the used soap, the housekeepers put them in a giant bin, and when filled, it get's shipped out to be sanitized and then distributed to "save the millions of lives lost each year to acute lower-respiratory infection and diarreal illness with the appropriate educational materials to sustain good personal hygiene practices."

I don't really have a story that this is leading into.  It's just a post to pass on the news that we're helping out.  It made me happy to learn about and it makes the guests happy, or at least content, when they hear what happens with the soap and shampoo after they're removed from the room.

If you're going to a hotel, feel free to ask an employee if their hotel participates in the Clean The World program.  It's a great cause and should definitely be looked into by everyone.

UPDATE:  The housekeeping manager saw this post and asked me to update this.  He just got an email this week with a tally of everything we've donated.  to date, we have donated just under 500 each of bars of soap and bottles of shampoo/conditioner.  Go team go!