Ya, I clean up after myself and wipe the table with a napkin for crumbs and the drink ring. It's just how I roll.
All the time. I'll scrape up any crumbs left on my table, throw the trash in the garbage can, and put the tray nearly into place on the stack. I'm not going to make anyone else clean up my mess; I wasn't raised by wolves.
I wouldn't dream of leaving a dirty table, even at McD's. At least at a restaurant, waiting staff receive tips for table service. I don't think table service is included in a £3.50 meal.
Just wondering.. (nothing at yoiu Kelthaz but i just picked your post amongst others similar to you).
If you go to a "real" restaurant do you pick up your stuff too and carry it to the kitchen/counter/whereever?
Let's remember we're talking about counter service places here! The staff's primary purpose is to get that food to the counter. Often any cleanup in the dining area is the responsibility of the same crew member that takes your order. If that person is occupied by a steady stream of new customers the only thing to prevent the dining area from becoming a big mess is customers cleaning up their own trays and waste. Anybody that doesn't is just ruining it for the rest of us, because hiring someone to clean up behind you will drive the prices up. If you want that kind of service go to a full service restaurant and leave a tip!
It still diverts them from preparing orders and cleaning tasks (sweeping, mopping, drink bar wipe down and trash emptying) customers simply can't accomplish. Most places I patronize the managers are participating in order preparation and delivering in addition to supervising the preparation staff. If they weren't pitching in there, another employee would have to be scheduled, driving costs and thus prices up. Carrying your tray and wrappers to the "Thank You" trash can/tray collection rack is part of the deal for the lower OTC prices. It would take a significant amount of additional labor carrying all that to the trash can if every dine in customer left their trash on the table.Let's remember we're talking about counter service places here! The staff's primary purpose is to get that food to the counter. Often any cleanup in the dining area is the responsibility of the same crew member that takes your order. If that person is occupied by a steady stream of new customers the only thing to prevent the dining area from becoming a big mess is customers cleaning up their own trays and waste. Anybody that doesn't is just ruining it for the rest of us, because hiring someone to clean up behind you will drive the prices up. If you want that kind of service go to a full service restaurant and leave a tip!
Actually i haven't seen that. It's the job of the manager on duty to keep his place running and that includes a clean dining area. In all chains i've been to i have noticed staff cleaning the dining area even during rush hour of at times of full capacity.
Someone also has to empty the tray containers and put out empty ones and at these times they tend to take a look around to see if there are any unused trays on the tables and clean the table.
As has been said it is just part of the job.. they are multitask persons responsible for filling the tray with your order, keep everything in order and occasionally take care of the dining area.. that's just their job description. They aren't hiring a special cleaning service.
Me too. It's just courteous. I used to work in fast food and there are times when it is nearly impossible to get out into the dining room to just pick up the trays, never mind wiping tables down. If everone left their garbage on the tables the dining room would be a sty in no time. Our Burger King used to have a hostess in the dining room when I worked there but that position was phased out due to corporate clamping down on wage costs. During lunch hour all employees were busy churning out the food and ringing customers up. Cleanup came when it slowed down.I always clear the table, put trash in the receptacle provided and put the tray on the stack. I don't generally bother with wiping the table unless I've spilled something.
Let's remember we're talking about counter service places here! The staff's primary purpose is to get that food to the counter. Often any cleanup in the dining area is the responsibility of the same crew member that takes your order. If that person is occupied by a steady stream of new customers the only thing to prevent the dining area from becoming a big mess is customers cleaning up their own trays and waste. Anybody that doesn't is just ruining it for the rest of us, because hiring someone to clean up behind you will drive the prices up. If you want that kind of service go to a full service restaurant and leave a tip!
Let's remember we're talking about counter service places here! The staff's primary purpose is to get that food to the counter. Often any cleanup in the dining area is the responsibility of the same crew member that takes your order. If that person is occupied by a steady stream of new customers the only thing to prevent the dining area from becoming a big mess is customers cleaning up their own trays and waste. Anybody that doesn't is just ruining it for the rest of us, because hiring someone to clean up behind you will drive the prices up. If you want that kind of service go to a full service restaurant and leave a tip!
Actually i haven't seen that. It's the job of the manager on duty to keep his place running and that includes a clean dining area. In all chains i've been to i have noticed staff cleaning the dining area even during rush hour of at times of full capacity.
Someone also has to empty the tray containers and put out empty ones and at these times they tend to take a look around to see if there are any unused trays on the tables and clean the table.
As has been said it is just part of the job.. they are multitask persons responsible for filling the tray with your order, keep everything in order and occasionally take care of the dining area.. that's just their job description. They aren't hiring a special cleaning service.
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