Prep rooms, embalming areas, and equipment surfaces require OSHA-compliant decontamination protocols, not generic surface cleaning. Every shift carries occupational exposure risk that demands trained, certified staff.
Removals and services happen at all hours. Cleaning has to work around grieving families, viewings, and chapel events without ever being visible to attendees.
The cleaning crew should never be seen, heard, or smelled by families. Equipment storage, entry timing, uniform appearance, and staff training all have to support invisibility.
State funeral director boards, OSHA, and individual facility licensing all carry inspection authority. A cleaning failure isn't just a service issue. It's a regulatory issue.
Every team member assigned to a funeral home account holds current OSHA bloodborne pathogen training. Recertification is tracked and renewed annually, with documentation provided to the facility on request.
Funeral home accounts get a dedicated crew, never rotating staff. The same trained people clean your facility every shift, building familiarity with your layout, your protocols, and your expectations.
All cleaning is scheduled outside service hours and family visitation windows. We coordinate directly with your director on calendar exceptions for high-volume periods like holidays or community losses.
All funeral home staff complete annual training on OSHA's bloodborne pathogen standard, including exposure control plans, PPE protocols, and post-exposure procedures.
Surface disinfection uses EPA List N products with documented kill claims against the pathogens typical to funeral home environments. Product logs available on request.
$2MM general liability coverage and full workers' compensation for all staff. Certificates of insurance provided in 48 hours of request, with funeral home named as additional insured where required.
All employees pass background checks before assignment to funeral home accounts. Documentation of clearance maintained on file and available to facility management.
Every cleaning shift is documented with timestamped photographs of completed work areas. Reports are provided to the facility director within 24 hours of service.
We maintain current awareness of New York State Funeral Directors Association and New Jersey State Funeral Directors Association regulatory updates and incorporate guidance into our protocols.
Funeral homes don't get second chances. The chapel that's set up for a service has to feel right the moment the family walks in. We clean to that standard, every visit, on schedules that work around your services and viewings.
Staff arrive in unmarked vehicles, change into approved PPE on-site, and check in with the facility director or designated contact before beginning. No street clothes in service areas.
OSHA-protocol decontamination of prep rooms, embalming surfaces, and biohazard waste areas. EPA-registered disinfectants applied per manufacturer dwell times. Bagged waste removed to facility's designated holding.
Chapels, viewing rooms, family lounges, and lobbies cleaned with attention to surface details (handprints on caskets, water rings on tables, dust on display photos). All cleaning supplies stored out of sight.
Photographs of completed work, time-stamped service log, and any flagged issues (low supplies, equipment concerns, surface damage) submitted to the facility director within 24 hours. Standing communication channel for any urgent needs.
A funeral home isn't a building. It's a place where the worst day of a family's life unfolds with whatever dignity you can give it. The standard your cleaning crew holds either supports that or undermines it. There's no middle.
We built ANVIL to serve facilities where the work has to be invisible, the compliance has to be airtight, and the discretion has to be total. Funeral homes are the clearest expression of that brief.
We respond to every estimate request within one business day. No spam, no sales calls without your invitation.