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18 Operational Must-Haves for Your 2024 Health Inspection Checklist

To protect consumers from unsafe conditions or foodborne illnesses, restaurants, convenience stores, and supermarkets regularly undergo health inspections to ensure local regulations are adhered to. But beyond code enforcement, it should be part of your business’s culture for health and safety maintenance to happen like clockwork. It simply makes good business sense to keep things clean, orderly, and safe. 

To achieve success and compliance with health regulations, your stores must be precise and consistent in their execution of key operations work every day. However, without clear guidelines and checklists, employees may not know the latest policies or when to complete time-sensitive tasks, making it easy for hazardous mistakes to occur. Customers expect a safe experience every time they visit and will go elsewhere if a store or restaurant misses the mark.

A comprehensive health inspection checklist provides consistency and assurance across multi-unit operations. But as your business scales, so do the complexities that come along with it and printed paper checklists just won’t cut it here. Digitizing your health inspection checklist provides a clear view of what work must be completed and how. 

 

Here are 18 must-haves to include on your 2024 health safety checklist (if they aren’t already on there)

  1. Facility is adhering to hygiene, cleaning, and disinfection requirements from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Department of Health (DOH) and maintain logs that document date, time, and scope of cleaning
     
  2. Disinfectant and related supplies that are effective against common viruses and bacteria are available to all employees and located near common objects (e.g., touchscreen kiosks, shopping carts) 
     
  3. All break rooms, bathrooms, and other common areas are disinfected frequently according to the set schedule, toilet cleaning register is signed off and up to date.
     
  4. All high-contact surfaces frequently including all payment portals, pens, and styluses are disinfected after each use 
     
  5. Signage placed throughout the facility reminding customers to be at least six feet apart, including when waiting in line 
     
  6. Signage placed at each public entrance of the facility to inform all employees and customers that they should: 
    • Avoid entering the facility if they have a cough or fever; 
    • maintain a minimum six-foot distance from one another; 
    • sneeze and cough into a cloth or tissue or, if not available, into one's elbow;
    • and not shake hands or engage in any unnecessary physical contact
       
  7. Facility has and is utilizing a company-approved thermometer to check body temperature
     
  8. All employees have undergone symptom checks before entering the workspace
     
  9. On-duty manager has checked the temperature of store employees twice (opening and closing of shift)
     
  10. On-duty manager is aware of the procedure to be followed in-case an employee is unwell and/or has a fever
     
  11. Hygiene stations have been provided and maintained with hand sanitizer, soap, and water, or effective disinfectant 
     
  12. Hygiene stations are available to all employees throughout the facility and the public at or near the entrance of the facility, at checkout counters, and anywhere else inside the store or immediately outside where people have direct interactions 
     
  13. The sharing of face coverings is prohibited and all employees have been notified of this policy 
     
  14. Appropriate procedures are in place for disposing of personal protective equipment and are being enforced 
     
  15. The use of small spaces (e.g., freezers) by more than one individual at a time has been prohibited and properly marked off
     
  16. Equipment is regularly cleaned and disinfected using effective disinfectants, including at least as often as employees change workstations
     
  17. Employees have been instructed not to share meals or utensils during breaks, not shake hands or engage in any unnecessary physical contact
     
  18. A communications plan has been developed for employees, vendors, and customers with instructions, training, signage, and a consistent means to provide information
     

Beyond just compiling your checklist, in the event of an inspection, having a history of what’s been done when and by whom is critical. Zenput’s operations execution platform empowers teams to digitally capture rich and actionable data, such as quality assurance photos, temperature readings, employee wellness checks, and more. This insight helps multi-unit operators easily maintain compliance and reduce the risk of citations, leaving more time to focus on what’s truly important: serving customers. 

For more tips on how to quickly turn new strategies and procedures into the right actions across all your locations, check out Zenput’s Guide to Agile Operations Execution.