I’ve worked at the Belmont Grand for seven years, and if there’s one secret I wish I could shout from the rooftops, it’s this: don’t touch the little “complimentary” shampoo bottles in your room. They look fresh and new, neatly lined up on the bathroom counter. But the truth? They’re refilled—over and over—from giant bulk containers that have been sitting in storage for months, sometimes years. Expiration dates? Long ignored.
Housekeeping collects the half-used bottles after guests leave, tops them up, and reseals them with a glue gun. The containers we use to refill them have a smell you can’t forget—something between moldy fruit and cheap perfume. Once, I found a dead fly floating inside one. My supervisor just fished it out and told me to “keep it moving.” I wanted to quit right then, but bills have a way of keeping you quiet.
Two weeks ago, a guest checked out in a hurry, leaving her travel bag behind. Management told me to look for her contact info so we could return it. Inside was a small bottle of the very same Belmont Grand shampoo… only this one had a printed label from a lab. My hands shook as I read the results: “Contains traces of bacteria consistent with human skin cells and possible fecal matter.”
That night, I packed my things and walked out for good. The next morning, news broke that the Belmont Grand had been shut down after a surprise inspection. Turns out, that guest wasn’t just any traveler—she was an undercover health inspector. And those tiny bottles? They were the reason the place finally closed its doors.