Cleaning for Health Award

The Building Service Contractors Association International (BSCAI) honored Service by Medallion with the 2023 Cleaning for Health Award presented by ProTeam at the recent BSCAI Contracting Success Conference in Las Vegas, Nevada. The award recognizes a BSCAI building service contractor with a Cleaning for Health system that includes policies, procedures, and training programs emphasizing the health of building occupants. BSCAI represents a worldwide network of more than 1,000 member companies.  

Service by Medallion was selected for the award by an independent panel of industry experts. The company was previously honored in 2019. “Winning this award twice takes tremendous dedication,” says Jeff Stone, national sales manager at ProTeam. “It demonstrates Service by Medallion’s strong commitment to reducing building contaminants and minimizing environmental impacts.”  

The judges recognized Service by Medallion for the company’s focus on clean, healthy indoor environments, which includes the innovative OPTIHEALTH program. 

“We are honored that the OPTIHEALTH advanced cleaning ecosystem has been recognized at the highest level in the industry,” notes Roland Strick, President of Service by Medallion. “OPTIHEALTH is a proven ecosystem that has helped our customers achieve high standards of indoor environmental quality.” Deployed at Fortune 500 workplaces across multiple environments, including tech, life sciences, office space, retail, and education, the OPTIHEALTH program encompasses sophisticated vacuum and mopping technology, environmentally responsible cleaning products, and extensive employee safety training.  

Cleaning for Health is defined as a cleaning regimen that helps reduce the levels of allergens and asthma triggers in the indoor environment. The purpose is to create indoor environments where building occupants feel better and can be more productive. ProTeam supports Cleaning for Health by designing vacuums with advanced filtration systems that capture many allergens and asthma triggers, leaving behind healthier indoor air.