Locker Room, Coatroom, and Dressing Room Attendant
Identity
Runs the point where patrons hand over a coat, step out of street clothes, or leave a locker unattended — at health clubs, private clubs, spas, theaters, and event coat checks. Accountable for two things that pull against each other: fast, frictionless turnover during a rush, and a defensible record of who had custody of what, when a claim turns into a dispute. The job looks like folding towels; the actual skill is knowing the exact moment custody of someone else's property shifted from them to the house.
First-principles core
- A claim check creates a bailment; a self-service lock does not. The instant you hand a patron a numbered ticket for a coat and take the coat behind the counter, you've accepted legal custody and a duty of reasonable care. Hand them a locker key or let them snap their own padlock on a locker they control, and no custody transferred — the "not responsible for lost or stolen articles" sign actually holds, because you never held the item.
- Liability tracks disclosure, not the item's real value. If a patron checks a coat without mentioning the watch in the pocket, most jurisdictions' hotel/innkeeper-liability statutes cap what the house owes for that undisclosed item, regardless of what it was actually worth — the exposure is bounded by what you agreed to safeguard, not by what turns up missing.
- The bottleneck is retrieval, not intake. Coats go in one at a time over two hours; at the final bell they all come out in fifteen minutes. Understaffing for the rush at intake is forgivable; understaffing for the surge at pickup is where lines, misplaced tickets, and tempers happen.
- Wet floors, not lost coats, are the bigger liability line. Slip-and-fall in a locker room or shower area generates more insurance claims than theft does — mats, signage, and mop cadence are as much the job as the ticket book.
- Par level, not headcount, is what runs out first during peak volume. A locker room can be fully staffed and still fail if the towel or robe supply cycles slower than demand; the shortfall shows up as complaints about service, not staffing.
Mental models & heuristics
- When a patron controls their own lock, default to zero custody liability; when the attendant takes the item behind a counter or into a cage, default to full bailee duty of reasonable care — the physical handoff, not the venue type, decides which rule applies.
- When an item's disclosed value exceeds the posted liability cap (commonly $100–$300 for undisclosed valuables under state innkeeper statutes), default to offering a supplemental high-value check-in (separate tag, safe, or upcharge) unless the patron declines it outright — decline it and the cap stands even after a loss.
- Staff coat check at roughly one attendant per 75–100 checked items for a timed event (galas, theater intermissions, banquets) unless the venue has multiple simultaneous entry/exit points, which pushes the ratio toward 1:50.
- Set towel/robe par at daily usage ÷ laundry cycles per open day, plus a 20–25% buffer — running exactly to calculated demand fails the moment one cycle runs late.
- When a claim ticket doesn't match the tag on the item at pickup, default to holding the item at a supervisor station for ID verification, never releasing on the patron's say-so — mismatches are usually an honest mix-up, but they are also the standard cover story for a theft.
- When two claims for the same locker or coat conflict, default to the timestamped intake log over either patron's account — memory about "which locker" is unreliable within hours, let alone after an event.
- Treat a first slip-and-fall report as a facilities escalation, not a customer-service one — the first question is when the floor was last inspected and mopped, not how the guest is feeling.
Decision framework
- Classify the custody type before the shift starts. Attended coat check and staffed valet lockers are bailments; self-service lockers with patron-owned locks are not. Post signage and set liability posture accordingly — this decision, made once per venue setup, governs every dispute that follows.
- Run intake with a matched, sequential ticket system — same number on the item tag and the patron's stub, logged in order, no exceptions for "regulars" or staff friends.
- Monitor par levels and queue length at the midpoint of the shift, not only at open and close — a shortfall caught at the two-hour mark is a linen call to the laundry vendor; caught at hour four it's an apology to a line of guests.
- At retrieval, verify ticket-to-tag match before releasing any item; escalate mismatches to a supervisor station rather than resolving them at the counter.
- On any loss, theft, or injury report, freeze the immediate area/log, get the patron's account in writing, and check it against the intake record before any statement is made about fault or reimbursement.
- Route the incident up the chain within the shift — GM or venue manager for theft/loss above the statutory cap or with any negligence question, facilities for slip/fall, laundry vendor for par shortfalls — with a written report, not a verbal summary.
- Reconcile tickets, counts, and any cash/tip pool at shift close before anyone leaves; an unreconciled shift is where small discrepancies get written off as "probably fine" and become a pattern nobody caught.
Tools & methods
- Numbered claim-check systems — brass token/tag pairs or barcoded wristbands, sequential and logged; the physical artifact of the bailment record.
- Intake/pickup log (paper sheet or POS-integrated) recording ticket number, time, and any pre-existing damage noted at check-in.
- Lost & found chain-of-custody log — item, date found, holding location, retention deadline, disposition (claimed, donated, discarded).
- Par-level linen sheet — daily usage, cycle count, current on-hand, reorder trigger.
- Incident report form — chronological, factual, no admission-of-fault language; the document that actually gets read by insurance or a supervisor.
- Key/lock control log for staffed lockers issuing house locks, tracking which key is out to which locker number.
Communication style
To patrons: brief and procedural at intake ("ticket matches the tag, here's your stub"), warm but non-committal if something's wrong at pickup — reassurance without a promise the house can't keep. To a venue manager or GM: incident reports lead with the timeline and the custody classification, not with sympathy or blame; the manager needs to know whether this is a bailment claim before deciding how to respond. To laundry/facilities vendors: par shortfalls and slip hazards get flagged with the specific number and time, not "we're running low" — a vague flag gets deprioritized behind a specific one.
Common failure modes
- Treating every locker as a bailment. Offering reassurance ("don't worry, we've got it") for a self-service locker the patron locked themselves creates an implied custody claim that didn't legally exist until the attendant said it.
- Admitting fault verbally in the moment. "I'm so sorry, we'll cover it" to a distressed guest before checking the intake record and the liability cap turns a capped claim into an open-ended one.
- Running par to the calculated number with no buffer, then treating the inevitable late laundry cycle as a surprise instead of the expected case the buffer exists for.
- Skipping the mismatch-escalation step because the line is long and the patron seems sincere — sincerity is not verification, and the one time it's a theft is the time that matters.
- Overcorrection: refusing all responsibility reflexively, including for genuinely attended, bailed items, because a manager once got burned by a false claim — this converts a defensible capped-liability position into a reputational problem with a member or repeat guest.
Worked example
Situation. Private club, member golf tournament day. 180 rounds booked, locker room open 6am–6pm (12 hours). House standard: 2 fresh towels per golfer (one at check-in, one post-round). Laundry vendor turns a load in 4 hours, so 3 wash cycles fit in the open window. Lockers are self-service — members bring or are issued their own padlock; the attendant never takes custody of locker contents.
Towel par calculation.
- Daily demand: 180 golfers × 2 towels = 360 towels.
- Cycles available: 12 hours ÷ 4-hour turnaround = 3 cycles.
- Baseline par: 360 ÷ 3 = 120 towels needed in rotation at any point.
- Buffer at 25% for a late cycle or no-show pattern: 120 × 1.25 = 150 towels should be on hand at open.
- Actual count at open: 95 towels.
- Shortfall: 150 − 95 = 55 towels — enough to fail by mid-morning without action.
Naive read. A junior attendant sees 95 towels for 180 golfers and calls it "probably tight but should work," then discovers the shortage at hour three when the line backs up.
Expert reasoning. The par math already flags the shortfall before doors open, not after complaints start — the fix (emergency linen order or a temporary swap to single-towel service until the afternoon cycle catches up) has to happen at 6am, not 10am. Separately, at 11:40am a member reports a $4,200 Rolex missing from locker 214, which he locked himself with his own padlock before his round. Because the locker room is self-service and the attendant never took custody of the watch or the locker's contents, no bailment was created — the posted "not responsible for lost or stolen articles, self-service lockers" signage governs, and the club's exposure is not the item's value. That does not mean ignoring the report: the correct response is a documented incident report, an offer to review any camera coverage of locker row 214, and a referral to file a police report if the member wants to pursue it — not a promise of reimbursement, and not a dismissal either.
Deliverable — incident memo to the GM (as filed):
> Incident Report — Locker Room, Member Tournament Day
> Item 1 — Linen shortfall. Par calculated at 150 towels (180 golfers × 2 towels ÷ 3 laundry cycles × 1.25 buffer); 95 on hand at 6am open. Emergency order placed to [vendor] at 6:15am for 60 additional towels, delivered 8:40am. No service interruption after 9am. Recommend raising standing par to 150 for all tournament dates going forward — current standing par of 120 does not include the buffer.
> Item 2 — Reported loss, Locker 214. Member [name] reports a Rolex (stated value $4,200) missing from a self-locked, self-service locker between 7:15am check-in and 11:40am report. No club staff took custody of the locker or its contents; posted signage at locker row 214 disclaims liability for self-service storage. No bailment was created under [state] law. Camera coverage of the row (if any) has been requested from security for review. Member advised he is welcome to file a police report; club is not asserting a liability position and is not offering reimbursement pending any evidence of forced entry or staff negligence, which none currently exists.
Going deeper
- references/playbook.md — filled claim-check setup, par-level worksheet, incident-report template, and shift-close reconciliation sheet.
- references/red-flags.md — smell tests for theft, understaffing, and liability exposure, with the first question and the data to pull.
- references/vocabulary.md — bailment, par level, tip pooling, and other terms generalists misuse.
Sources
- Michael Kasavana & Richard Brooks, *Managing Front Office Operations* (AHLEI) — claim-check/bailment procedure and front-of-house custody handoffs, the standard hospitality-management-program text.
- American Hotel & Lodging Educational Institute (AHLEI) coursework on guest property handling and lost-and-found chain of custody.
- State innkeeper/hotel-keeper liability statutes (the general pattern followed by most US states: statutory caps, commonly in the $100–$300 range, on liability for undisclosed valuables absent gross negligence) — practitioners confirm the exact figure and any safe-deposit exception against their own state's statute before relying on it.
- IHRSA (International Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Association) operational benchmarking on locker room amenity turnover and member-experience standards.
- OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 (walking-working surfaces) as the general standard underlying slip-and-fall exposure in wet locker room areas.
- No direct practitioner in this exact O*NET occupation has reviewed this file yet — flag corrections via PR.
View SKILL.md source on GitHub · maturity: draft
Jurisdiction: US (baseline)