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Stay Between
the Sheets
ChrisCrossings · April 24, 2002
Q: I have a
question about Carnival's housekeeping practices. In early December, as
my husband and I were finishing a cruise aboard Carnival Victory, we watched
the cabin steward come in and make the room ready for the next guests-clean
sheets and pillow cases, but same blankets and bedspread. Is that common?
-- Louise Yeakey
A: Not only is this common in the cruise industry, it's also the
standard operating procedure in the hotel business.
The American Hotel & Lodging Association suggests that properties clean
sheets and bedspreads at regular intervals-daily for sheets, and "whenever
they see fit" for bedspreads and comforters, according to Tia Gordon,
a spokeswoman for the association. "Whether that's once a month or once
every other week, that's up to the property to decide."
The Cruise Lines International Association, a trade group for the cruise
industry, doesn't have any such guidelines. And even if it did, they'd
be difficult to implement or enforce. Maritime law (which is confusing
and counterintuitive to someone like yours truly) doesn't really concern
itself with the minutia of linens in your cabin. But it probably should.
I asked Carnival to comment on its bedspread policy but it didn't respond
before my deadline, despite repeated requests. I think it's safe to say
that Carnival has a policy for cleaning the sheets and bedspreads that's
in line with the rest of the industry, and I don't think I'm going out
on a limb by guessing that's what the cruise line would tell me.
Experienced travelers know that there's a better-than-average chance they
aren't the first people to use their bedspreads after it came out of the
laundry. So the first thing they do when they check in is to roll the
bedspread up and throw it on to the floor. That's extremely inconsiderate
to the next person who will use the room. Better to fold the bedspread
and put it away in a closet.
My advice is to never use a bedspread, even if it looks unsoiled. There's
no implied guarantee that the bedcovering is clean. Just fold it up and
pretend it doesn't exist. Same thing for blankets and comforters.
Next time you take a cruise, stay between the sheets.
Christopher
Elliott's column appears on weekly on Ticked.com. All e-mailed questions
to ChrisCrossings become property of Ticked.com and may be edited, condensed
or republished at the site's discretion. You may reach Elliott at chris@ticked.com.
Or visit his home page at http://www.elliott.org.
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