Our on-site sanitation protocols
When we pull up to your Lake Forest job site, our first move is always to lay down our containment tarp—that’s where we stage all our cleaning gear and keep any potential drips from touching your ground. I remember a July wedding setup at a private estate in Lake Forest where the planner was worried about grass stains; our tarp system kept everything pristine. We treat every special event restroom with the same care we give our standard construction units—because germs don’t discriminate. Our process uses a three-bucket method: one for soapy wash water, one with disinfectant rinse, and a dedicated dry-wipe bucket. We pay extra attention to high-touch zones like door latches, toilet handles, and sink faucets. For units with fresh water flush systems, we flush through a chlorine tablet to sanitize the internal plumbing. After we pump a unit, we always run a biocidal deodorizer through the tank—it’s part of our odor control protocol that keeps things fresh until our next visit. We don’t cut corners because we’re the ones handling this equipment daily, and our crew’s safety depends on these routines as much as yours does.
Safety Checklist
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We start every shift by sanitizing our truck cabs, door handles, and radios with EPA-registered disinfectants
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Our crew wears full PPE—gloves, splash aprons, steel-toe boots—that gets changed between sites to avoid cross-contamination
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Every service call includes a full interior wipe-down of all surfaces using hospital-grade virucidal cleaner
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We use closed-system waste extraction to prevent any spillage or aerosolization during pumping
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All hand-wash stations get fresh water refills and new biodegradable soap cartridges at every service
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We log every unit's service history so you can see exactly when it was last cleaned and inspected

