Pulse August 2020 | Page 66

TALENT TOPICS CONTINUED clients. Since May 18, we have been be offering curbside retail for those that want products. We are sanitizing the entire school and adding hand sanitizers in every room and at every entrance. We have desk shields at all places where there is student or client interaction. For the first month after we [reopened], we did not take clients; our students [worked] on mannequins to protect their health. We are cleaning all ventilation ducts and vents and installing hands-free faucets. All of our retail testers will be removed. For our classrooms we will space all tables and chairs with a six-foot distance. All decorative items and magazines will be removed. Our library will be converted to online-only. We are working to create schedules to divide our students over seven days from 9 am to 10 pm to minimize capacity. We have designed trainings for students and staff—one being Barbicide training—and are also communicating through email and video postings to share our strategy.” Will future spa professionals be more sensitive to issues of sanitation and hygiene? “Our future professionals are very sensitive to sanitation and creating distance, as the media and all of the news have created that standard. We will be implementing Barbicide training and look for other opportunities to share additional protocols—like daily questions, temperature tests and any other requirements from the CDC, OSHA or the Health Department. The state curriculum already has significant [sanitation] training, which is sufficient for the proper care of our environment. Yet, we must add all of the COVID-19 standards, such as masks, gloves and handwashing at all times.” n STAY TUNED to future issues of Pulse for more stories on the future of the workforce, including input from more spa leaders and organizations such as the American Massage Therapy Association. 54 PULSE ■ AUGUST 2020