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$17,000 a year on booties! Or go full blown with a dedicated shoe program?

Started by , Mar 19 2020 03:08 PM
9 Replies

Hello out there!! As we all ponder life past the Corona ordeal.....

 

We (my company) are at a crossroads.....

 

Continue the insanity with booties, or go full blown with a dedicated shoe program.

 

Please, I would like to hear everyone's opinion and experience with either path if you have come to this crossroad yourselves already.

 

Sincerely,

 

Plastic Ducky 

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Too many worries on the bootie things, maintenance, cleaning, etc. etc. 

 

Most of our clients that did a switch, did so to Shoes for Crews and have been happy.

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Hello out there!! As we all ponder life past the Corona ordeal.....

 

We (my company) are at a crossroads.....

 

Continue the insanity with booties, or go full blown with a dedicated shoe program.

 

Please, I would like to hear everyone's opinion and experience with either path if you have come to this crossroad yourselves already.

 

Sincerely,

 

Plastic Ducky 

Do you change them every year?  :eek_yello:

I guess it depends if you work in a wet environment, we supply boots to our employees and they are heavy duty and easy to clean.

We use Pollyboots and they are perfect for us, no problem cleaning them and they are safe. :thumbup:

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I have previous experience with captive shoe and Shoes for Crews using their boots, replacing yearly.

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How about a third option?  Doorway sanitizers at entrances to high risk areas.  

 

They have an upfront cost, but low maintenance and only the chemical cost after install.  Chemical is used in low dosages so not very costly.

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How about a third option?  Doorway sanitizers at entrances to high risk areas.  

 

They have an upfront cost, but low maintenance and only the chemical cost after install.  Chemical is used in low dosages so not very costly.

 

These will not eliminate the problem unless dedicated shoes or booties are used.  It does not eliminate existing debris or organic matter that could be brought in on employee footwear.

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These will not eliminate the problem unless dedicated shoes or booties are used.  It does not eliminate existing debris or organic matter that could be brought in on employee footwear.

 

So...all companies that have a "dedicated" footwear program do not allow their employees to wear the said footwear outside of controlled areas?  Hmmm..... :unsure:

 

I've never been at a facility where employee footwear was isolated only to controlled areas....but that may be me and my experiences.

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So...all companies that have a "dedicated" footwear program do not allow their employees to wear the said footwear outside of controlled areas?  Hmmm..... :unsure:

 

I've never been at a facility where employee footwear was isolated only to controlled areas....but that may be me and my experiences.

 

I have a couple of clients that require the controlled footwear to not leave those areas - the employees have to change out of the boots/shoes and put on their own or another pair of supplied shoes when heading ot lunch, the office, other areas. And then I have most clients where the captive shoes can be worn anywhere in the building - they just can't leave the building.

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Hi Plastic Ducky

 

Not sure how relevant this is as you are USA based.

 

In UK if you produce for retailers they are generally very averse to overshoes because they can “shred” and also are slippery (health & safety perspective)…. For example, if your staff are using overshoes, how are you checking that they don’t shred & transfer contamination throughout the factory? Or become a foreign body risk themselves?.

 

The logic (for UK retailers) is that the use of overshoes is similar to the “magic” gloves…. You know those magic gloves that employees wear all day, then pick product off the floor, scratch their nose etc.etc. but it’s all good because “we’re wearing GLOVES!”……

(an exaggeration, but you get the picture, sometimes employees don’t fully understand the rationale behind their PPE use?)

 

Although expensive (initially) to implement captive footwear, if you produce in a high risk facility and/or have allergen handling areas there is a good case for a change of footwear as you move between risk areas & ultimately it is usually cheaper (and theoretically safer) than overshoes, which are usually kept for factory visitor use only?.

 

Best of luck!

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So...all companies that have a "dedicated" footwear program do not allow their employees to wear the said footwear outside of controlled areas?  Hmmm..... :unsure:

 

I've never been at a facility where employee footwear was isolated only to controlled areas....but that may be me and my experiences.

 

Actually yes - what would be the point of captive footwear if you allowed your employees to wear it outside the building/controlled areas??

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