Operations

The National Restaurant Association’s ServSafe team releases reopening guidance for restaurants

The document incorporates best practices on food safety, health and hygiene, cleaning and sanitizing, and social distancing.
NRA
Photo courtesy of National Restaurant Association

The National Restaurant Association’s ServSafe has partnered with the Food and Drug Administration, public health officials, industry representatives, academia, the Conference for Food Protection and Ecolab Inc., to create protocols for restaurants to reopen safely.

The document incorporates best practices on food safety, health and hygiene, cleaning and sanitizing, and social distancing. Additionally, it incorporates recommendations from the FDA’s just-released Best Practices for Retail Food Stores, Restaurants, and Food Pick-Up/Delivery Services During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

The guidance offers instruction on how to begin serving customers in partial- and full-service capacities. The National Restaurant Association encourages combining the guidelines with existing corporate policies, the FDA Food Code, ServSafe training and recommendations from local health officials.

Download the Restaurant Reopening Guidance.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

Podcast transcript: Dutch Bros CEO Christine Barone

A Deeper Dive: Here is the transcript for the May 29 podcast with the chief executive of the drive-thru coffee chain, who talks real estate, boba and other topics.

Financing

McDonald's value perception problem is with its lighter users

The Bottom Line: The fast-food giant took the extraordinary step of publicizing average prices this week. It was speaking to its less-frequent customers, who are a lot less likely to say the chain is a good value.

Financing

CEO pay soared last year, despite a volatile period for restaurants

Pay for CEOs at publicly traded restaurants took off last year, but remains lower than average among public companies, even as tenure for the position remains volatile.

Trending

More from our partners