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Custodians deserve more respect

By Cindy Reitzi

Some people do the “expected” work of a society for others; we notice what’s “expected” by its invisibility, not by its visibility. The grocery shopper magically refills the frig; the process goes unnoticed until the kids are out of chocolate milk. So it is with the work of school custodians. When paper products or soap are fully stocked in the bathroom,we don’t notice. When students leave the floors strewn like they just staged a parade and the janitor didn’t get to our room that night … well,we do notice. Generally speaking, with custodial and other service jobs, competence is indicated by its very invisibility: if we don’t notice, the job is getting done; if we do notice, something is missing or undone.

Perhaps this very invisibility is why custodians often receive little recognition from adults and even less from students. Face it, it’s just not human nature to exclaim,“Wow, I’m so grateful for all these paper towels – we have great janitors” or “Oh, look! They dusted!”

Most schools are not falling over themselves to organize Custodian Appreciation Day, yet good principals know they’d be lost without an efficient custodial staff. Teachers, if they’re smart, also know to nurture good relationships if they want to locate hitherto hidden classroom furniture that only the janitor can find or want something moved.

And yet, sometimes, janitors are not even treated with minimal courtesy. One custodian thanked me for saying,“good morning” to him or simply chatting with him in amiable conversation. Apparently, some of the staff thought it beneath them to acknowledge or greet him in a civil manner. He wasn’t asking to be friends with them. Likewise, high school students with delusions of their alleged class superiority to “the help” have a habit of littering their school with soggy garbage when the trash can is within spitting distance (and yes, they do that too) and they’re just too bored to deposit their waste in the proper receptacle, let alone leave less unnecessary work for the custodians. “That’s the janitor’s job” is the standard response when I call them on it.

The mess isn’t limited to the school grounds perimeter. Observe yards in the neighborhood, littered with McDonald’s wrappers, cigarette butts, and other evidence of teenagers “marking their territory” and you mouth the question,“Hmm, live near a high school?”

Since I used to clean up after other people as a maid and as a waitress and since I spent years cleaning up tables after young adults who sculpted little Zen gardens from the easy-pouring sugar containers in the booths, I’m sensitive to clean up or contain my own mess when someone is cleaning up after me.

I used to chat with one witty custodian, Gary, who not only dispensed wisdom about physical-plant issues, but also about the political state of the school.

“Kids leave you a mess today?” I’d open.“No more than usual,” he’d reply philosophically.

Ask any custodian and they’ll probably have a story like Gary’s. There was this “one kid” – maybe there’s always this “one kid” – who really pushed Gary’s buttons. As if to drive home his version of the American caste system, the boy always threw paper, ketchup packets, and anything particularly messy on the floor, right in front of Gary and especially if he was close to the trash can. Just to make his point.

“Pick it up,” snapped Gary.

“That’s your job,” sneered the kid. This was an almost daily event recalled Gary. But then … a golden opportunity at the Golden Arches. One day, Gary walked into McDonald’s and saw the same student, not only in a McDonald’s uniform, but sweeping the floor in the dining room, like some sort of parallel karmic irony. Gary bought his meal and decided it was worth sacrificing lunch. In a move worthy of his evil twin, he dumped his shake on the floor, smeared ketchup on the table, and ground his burger into the linoleum. Right in front of “the kid.”

“Clean it up!” bristled the indignant boy.

“That’s your job,” echoed Gary, chuckling.The kid stormed off to get the manager to confront Gary. Gary blithely relayed to the manager that he was a custodian and his McDonald’s employee made an equivalent mess at Gary’s workplace almost every day. The manager turned to the little weasel and said,“Clean up this mess. Then, get this gentleman another meal.” Payback.

The student never dumped garbage at Gary again. In fact, in that weird, alpha-dog-hierarchical-male universe, which I will never understand, they became good friends.

Today's Classroom page

March 26, 2007

Education News