Michigan:

Michigan Printable Free Health Notice Posters Michigan Cleaning vs Sanitizing Poster

The Cleaning vs Sanitizing Poster is a Michigan health notice poster provided for businesses by the Michigan Department Of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs. This is an optional notification, so while it is recommended that businesses hang this poster if relevant to their employees, it is not required by the Department Of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs.

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©2019 National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF).  
All rights reserved. ServSafe	® and the ServSafe logo are trademarks of NRAEF.  
National  Restaurant Association® and arc design are trademarks of the National Restaurant Association.	
Cleaning VS. Sanitizing	
WHEN TO CLEAN & SANITIZE	
For more information and resources on food safety, visit:
foodsafetyfocus.com	
There’s a big difference between cleaning and sanitizing. Cleaning re\
moves food and other types of soil from 
a surface such as a countertop or plate. Sanitizing reduces the number o\
f pathogens on the clean surface to 
safe levels. To be effective, cleaning and sanitizing must be a 5-step process.	
SCRAPE OR REMOVE FOOD 
FROM THE SURFACE	
1 	
WASH THE SURFACE	
SANITIZE THE SURFACE
ALLOW THE SURFACE
TO AIR DRY	
Everything in your operation must be kept clean, but any surface that co\
mes into contact with food must be 
cleaned  AND sanitized. These surfaces must be washed, rinsed, and sanitized:
•Each time you use them.
•When you are interrupted during a task.
•After handling different raw TCS fruits and 
   vegetables. •When you begin working with a different type of 
   food.
•As often as possible, but at least every four hours if 
   items are in constant use.	
2 	
4 
5	
RINSE THE SURFACE	3 	
©2019 National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF).   
All rights reserved. ServSafe	® and the ServSafe logo are trademarks of NRAEF.  
National  Restaurant Association® and arc design are trademarks of the National Restaurant Association.	
Cleaning VS. Sanitizing	
WHEN TO CLEAN & SANITIZE	
For more information and resources on food safety, visit:
foodsafetyfocus.com	
There’s a big difference between cleaning and sanitizing. Cleaning re\
moves food and other types of soil from 
a surface such as a countertop or plate. Sanitizing reduces the number o\
f pathogens on the clean surface to 
safe levels. To be effective, cleaning and sanitizing must be a 5-step process.	
1 	
Everything in your operation must be kept clean, but any surface that co\
mes into contact with food must be 
cleaned  AND sanitized. These surfaces must be washed, rinsed, and sanitized:
•Each time you use them.
•When you are interrupted during a task.
•After handling different raw TCS fruits and 
   vegetables. •When you begin working with a different type of 
   food.
•As often as possible, but at least every four hours if 
   items are in constant use.	
2 	
4 
5	
3 	
Cleaning VS. Sanitizing	
There’s a big difference between cleaning and sanitizing. Cleaning removes food and 
other types of soil from a surface such as a countertop or plate. Sanitizing reduces the 
number of pathogens on the clean surface to safe levels. To be effective, cleaning and 
sanitizing must be a 5-step process.	
SCRAPE OR REMOVE  
FOOD FROM THE SURFACE
WASH THE SURFACE
RINSE THE SURFACE	
SANITIZE THE SURFACE
ALLOW THE SURFACE  
TO AIR DRY	
WHEN TO CLEAN & SANITIZE	
Everything in your operation must be kept clean, but any surface that co\
mes into contact with 
food must be cleaned AND sanitized. These surfaces must be washed, rinse\
d, and sanitized:
• 	Each time you use them. 	
• 	When you are interrupted during a task. 	
• 	After handling different raw TCS fruits and    
vegetables.	
• 	When you begin working with a different 
type of food. 	
• 	As often as possible, but at least every four 
hours if items are in constant use.	
For more information and resources on food safety, visit: 
©2019 National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF)\
.  All rights reserved. ServSafe® and the ServSafe logo are trademarks o\
f NRAEF.  National Restaurant Association® and arc design are trademarks of the\
 National Restaurant Association.

©2019 National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF).  
All rights reserved. ServSafe	® and the ServSafe logo are trademarks of NRAEF.  
National  Restaurant Association® and arc design are trademarks of the National Restaurant Association.	
Cleaning VS. Sanitizing	
WHEN TO CLEAN & SANITIZE	
For more information and resources on food safety, visit:
foodsafetyfocus.com	
There’s a big difference between cleaning and sanitizing. Cleaning re\
moves food and other types of soil from 
a surface such as a countertop or plate. Sanitizing reduces the number o\
f pathogens on the clean surface to 
safe levels. To be effective, cleaning and sanitizing must be a 5-step process.	
SCRAPE OR REMOVE FOOD 
FROM THE SURFACE	
1 	
WASH THE SURFACE	
SANITIZE THE SURFACE
ALLOW THE SURFACE
TO AIR DRY	
Everything in your operation must be kept clean, but any surface that co\
mes into contact with food must be 
cleaned  AND sanitized. These surfaces must be washed, rinsed, and sanitized:
•Each time you use them.
•When you are interrupted during a task.
•After handling different raw TCS fruits and 
   vegetables. •When you begin working with a different type of 
   food.
•As often as possible, but at least every four hours if 
   items are in constant use.	
2 	
4 
5	
RINSE THE SURFACE	3 	
©2019 National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF).   
All rights reserved. ServSafe	® and the ServSafe logo are trademarks of NRAEF.  
National  Restaurant Association® and arc design are trademarks of the National Restaurant Association.	
Cleaning VS. Sanitizing	
WHEN TO CLEAN & SANITIZE	
For more information and resources on food safety, visit:
foodsafetyfocus.com	
There’s a big difference between cleaning and sanitizing. Cleaning re\
moves food and other types of soil from 
a surface such as a countertop or plate. Sanitizing reduces the number o\
f pathogens on the clean surface to 
safe levels. To be effective, cleaning and sanitizing must be a 5-step process.	
1 	
Everything in your operation must be kept clean, but any surface that co\
mes into contact with food must be 
cleaned  AND sanitized. These surfaces must be washed, rinsed, and sanitized:
•Each time you use them.
•When you are interrupted during a task.
•After handling different raw TCS fruits and 
   vegetables. •When you begin working with a different type of 
   food.
•As often as possible, but at least every four hours if 
   items are in constant use.	
2 	
4 
5	
3 	
Limpiar vs. Sanitizar	
Hay una gran diferencia entre limpiar y sanitizar. La limpieza elimina los restos de 
alimentos y suciedad que hay en una superficie, por ejemplo, de un mostrador o de un 
plato. La sanitización reduce a niveles seguros la cantidad de patógenos que hay en una 
superficie. Para ser eficaz, la limpieza y sanitización deben ser un proceso de 5 pasos.	
RASPE O ELIMINE LOS  
RESIDUOS DE ALIMENTOS  
DE LA SUPERFICIE
LAVE LA SUPERFICIE
ENJUAGUE LA SUPERFICIE	
SANITICE LA SUPERFICIE
DEJE QUE LA  
SUPERFICIE SE  
SEQUE AL AIRE	
CUÁNDO LIMPIAR Y SANITIZAR	
En su establecimiento todo debe estar limpio, pero todas las superficies que entran en contacto 
con los alimentos se deben limpiar Y sanitizar. Estas superficies se deben lavar, enjuagar y sanitizar:	
• 	Cada vez que las usa. 	
• 	Siempre que haya una interrupción en la 
tarea. 	
• 	Después de manejar diferentes frutas y 
vegetales TCS crudos.	
• 	Si ha estado trabajando con diferentes 
tipos de alimentos.	
• 	Lo más frecuente posible, pero por lo 
menos cada cuatro horas si los artículos 
están en uso constante.	
Para obtener más información y recursos sobre la 
seguridad alimentaria, visite: 
©2019 National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF)\
.  Todos los derechos reservados. ServSafe® y el logotipo de ServSafe so\
n marcas registradas de la NRAEF.  National Restaurant Association® y el diseño del arco son marcas r\
egistradas de la National Restaurant Association.

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More Michigan Labor Law Posters 18 PDFS

Minimum-Wage.org provides an additional seventeen required and optional Michigan labor law posters that may be relevant to your business. Be sure to also print and post all required state labor law posters, as well as all of the mandatory federal labor law posters.

Michigan Poster Name Poster Type
Required Michigan Safety & Health Protection on the Job Workers Compensation Law
Required The Michigan Whistleblowers' Protection Act Poster Whistleblower Law
Required Information about Unemployment Benefits (Spanish) Unemployment Law
Required Information about Unemployment Benefits Unemployment Law
Required Workforce Opportunity Wage Act Minimum Wage & Overtime Poster Minimum Wage Law

List of all 18 Michigan labor law posters


Michigan Labor Law Poster Sources:

Labor Poster Disclaimer:

While Minimum-Wage.org does our best to keep our list of Michigan labor law posters updated and complete, we provide this free resource as-is and cannot be held liable for errors or omissions. If the poster on this page is out-of-date or not working, please send us a message and we will fix it ASAP.

** This Document Provided By Minimum-Wage.org **
Source: http://www.minimum-wage.org/michigan/labor-law-posters/2093-cleaning-vs-sanitizing-poster