Post 9wPbEX5sxtZj9voAoS by Farrell@raggedfeathers.com
(DIR) More posts by Farrell@raggedfeathers.com
(DIR) Post #9wPbEX5sxtZj9voAoS by Farrell@raggedfeathers.com
2020-06-24T15:19:06Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
I do not understand contactless drive thru. The tray used to pass food to the customer serves no purpose. The bags & cups were touched by the employees preparing the order & the customer touches the same on receiving the order. Unless it's a magical tray that somehow autoclaves the items, it achieves nothing.
(DIR) Post #9wPcTbZsg0ZZMaaav2 by ghost_bird@mythago.space
2020-06-24T15:33:01Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@Farrell It reduces contact with customers for the employee(s) who pass you the food, which reduces the chance they’ll get infected?
(DIR) Post #9wPdg64NEatnMSN9aS by Farrell@raggedfeathers.com
2020-06-24T15:46:41Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@ghost_birdThe employees still touch the customer's payment method, though. Some pass the card machine out to the car, true, but most don't; the employees touch the card. They can collect a cash payment on the tray, but they have to touch the cash as they put it into the register. I'm just not sure the tray is actually contributing to the exchange.
(DIR) Post #9wPdwJmm0QZGXBsIoy by edebill@wandering.shop
2020-06-24T15:36:48Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@Farrell does it keep the employees from touching anything the customer touches? I have to admit that the places I've gone to the drive through have just handed things to me like normal :(
(DIR) Post #9wPdwK0FCLLLCyB3om by Farrell@raggedfeathers.com
2020-06-24T15:49:25Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@edebillThat may have been the intent, but the employees are still touching the customer's payment method in most cases, so the tray still seems superfluous.
(DIR) Post #9wPeA9OfQb5sMtCAMq by ghost_bird@mythago.space
2020-06-24T15:51:57Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@Farrell It’s all about reducing risk, I guess. You avoid airborne droplets by not getting close to the customer - touch is less of a problem as long as you wash your hands often and don’t touch your face.