When I ran a sports club bar, many years ago, I had a constant battle with the (often elderly) volunteers who assisted me, because they kept drying the glasses with tea towels before putting them on the shelves and I tried to insist (as most pubs now do) that glasses should simply be allowed to drain (and NOT 'dried up' at all). That remains the best policy but it's clearly not so practical with things like dinner plates.
The Food Standards Agency simply says this:
"Wash or change dish cloths, tea towels, sponges and oven gloves regularly and let them dry before you use them again. Dirty, damp cloths are the perfect place for bacteria to breed"
https://www.food.gov.uk/news-updates/campaigns/kitchen-check
So the FSA certainly doesn't demand the use of 'one time' drying materials (such as kitchen roll) but such a policy might still be regarded as 'best practice'. (Conversely though, using up so much non-recyclable paper is far from being 'environmentally sound'!)