Fact Check

Did a Swedish Fast Food Restaurant Wash Toilet Seats in the Dishwasher?

"A customer in an international hamburger chain lost his appetite after discovering the restaurant's toilet seats being washed in its dishwasher."

Claim:
An employee at a well-known hamburger chain in Sweden was discovered washing toilet seats in the restaurant's dishwasher.

News about an unusual sanitation procedure was provided by the Reuters news agency on 15 November 2002:

In Sweden, a customer in an international hamburger chain has lost his appetite, after discovering the restaurant's toilet seats being washed in its dishwasher alongside the kitchen utensils.

The Swedish TT news agency says while visiting the toilet, the man had noticed all the seats in the cubicles had been removed.

When he asked staff about the missing seats, an employee took them out of a dishwasher where they had been cleaned, together with trays and kitchen utensils.

The employee reportedly tried to reassure the customer by saying the freshly washed toilet seat would be warm and pleasant to sit on.

However, the restaurant chain now says the incident is not standard company procedure.

Health officials have since visited the restaurant.

The story as reported was third-hand at best, Reuters' having harvested the story from the Swedish TT news agency, who in turn got it from a regional Swedish newspaper, Nya Wermlands-Tidningen.

According to Reuters, "[A] senior representative of the restaurant chain said the incident was a mistake and not standard company procedure." That could somewhat explain Reuter's seeming reluctance to name the "international hamburger chain outlet" in Arvika, Sweden, where toilets seats were being scrubbed in the dishwasher — it might have viewed the incident as a one-time "boneheaded employee" screwup and wished to spare the unnamed chain undue embarrassment.

Two Swedish publications have stated that the restaurant was a McDonald's, but both publications drew their information from TT, the Swedish news agency, which in turn got it from Nya Wermlands-Tidningen. (There is indeed a McDonald's in Arvika.) Because everything flows from a single source (Nya Wermlands-Tidningen), this tale should still be considered unverified.

Reuters reported that Arvika's environmental and health inspector later visited the restaurant.

Sources

Aftonbladet.   "McDonalds körde toasits i disken."     21 November 2002.

GT.   "Hamburgerbaren körde toasitsarna i diskmaskinen."     21 November 2002.

The [London] Independent.   "Sweden: Restaurant's Reputation Goes Down the Pan."     15 November 2002   (Foreign News; p. 13).

Nordic Business Report.   "Swedish Restaurant Inspected After Toilet Seats Washed Along with Kitchen Utensils."     15 November 2002.

Ottawa Citizen.   "Sweden: Toilet-Seat Washing Upsets Eatery Patron."     15 November 2002   (p. A20).

Reuters.   "Fast-Food Customer Loses Appetite Over Toilets."     15 November 2002.

David Mikkelson founded the site now known as snopes.com back in 1994.