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Choosing Green Cleaning Products

By IEHA

Choose low-toxicity - aka, "green" - products that clean well. Ideally, green cleaning products are those that clean effectively while minimizing negative impacts to health and the environment.

 

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Check for third-party certification or recognition of greenness, safety, health, and performance. Recognized green labels include Green Seal, EcoLogo, EPA’s Design for the Environment (DfE), and others.

 

The International Executive Housekeepers Association (IEHA) offers a High Performance Cleaning Product (HPCP) Testing Program in conjunction with the University of Massachusetts Lowell that tests, verifies performance, and helps promote hard surface green cleaning products that clean effectively.

 

The Carpet and Rug Institute provides performance ratings of vacuums, carpet cleaning equipment, systems, and chemicals - many of which have green attributes - through its Seal of Approval program.

 

If these evaluations aren’t available for a specific product, check the specifications or list of ingredients and do your best to make a balanced judgment.

 

Read the label

 

Read the label of cleaning products. Look for labels that list all ingredients so the total adds up to 100 percent. If you don’t know what an ingredient is, ask the manufacturer what it is and for proof that the ingredient is safe. Also ask whether or not product ingredients are selected using resources such as EPA’s Design for the Environment (DfE) safer ingredient criteria - http://www.epa.gov/dfe/pubs/projects/gfcp/index.htm#GeneralScreen

Disinfectant use guidelines

 

Chemical disinfectants are among the most toxic cleaning products. Use them sparingly and carefully. The following guidelines are important for using disinfectants:

  • Use only where and when they are needed.
  • Choose the product that is labeled as effective for the particular application.
  • Use strictly according to directions. Don’t use more than necessary.
  • Ventilate the area during use and shortly thereafter.
  • Don’t mix more than is needed.
  • Use a sanitizer instead of a disinfectant where appropriate. Sanitizers are generally not as strong, but still kill many germs.
(Adapted with permission from Clean and Healthy Schools For Dummies.)
Choosing Green Cleaning Products:  Created on March 2nd, 2011.  Last Modified on January 21st, 2014

 

About IEHA

IEHA

The International Executive Housekeepers Association (IEHA) is a 3,200-plus member organization for housekeeping management. Executive housekeepers are managers that direct housekeeping programs in commercial, industrial or institutional facilities, including upscale hotels, hospitals, schools, and other public places. The non-profit was founded in 1930 in New York City, and is now located in Westerville, Ohio, a suburb of the state’s capitol.