Daily Archives: July 13, 2017

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Bed Bugs Be Gone: Rutgers Gets Nod for Fighting Pests – New … – TAPinto.net

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ Theyre the creepy, crawly, nasty things that bite in the night.

Bed bugsno one likes em, and few know how to kill em.

But they stand little chance against Changlu Wang. He heads Rutgers Universitys urban entomology lab and has strived for years to rid New Jersey low-income housing projects, including in New Brunswick, of bed bugs. He and his team have earned the respect of their colleagues and beneficiaries in their efforts to develop new strategies to combat this scourge.

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In fact, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced today that, under Wangs leadership, Rutgers is one of four winners of the HUD Secretarys Award for Healthy Homes. The honor recognizes excellence in making indoor environments healthier by improving homes, according to a news release.

The recipients of this award understand the strong connection between where we live and how healthy we are, HUD Secretary Ben Carson, who was appointed this year by President Donald Trump, said in a statement. They demonstrate innovative approaches to making homes healthier, and exemplify the outstanding work thats taking place throughout the nation.

In his drive to fight bed bugs, Wang worked with poor communities, manufacturers and other universities to build better integrated pest management plans, according to the release.

What is an integrated pest management strategy? Well, according to the federal government, it boils down to how workers and residents prevent and control bugs and the like, while respecting the environment.

Wang and his team received a HUD grant in 2013 to implement and evaluate a model bed bug management program in poor communities. He partnered with three Garden State housing authorities and worked in more than 2,000 apartment units to pull off the study, which closed last year, according to the news release.

It designed and implemented a low-cost and highly effective bed bug monitoring protocol and a model IPM program, HUD wrote in its press release, noting that Wangs work was published in a respected peer-reviewed journal on bugs.

Wangs work also touched New Brunswick. In 2012, he agreed to help the city Housing Authority tackle its bed bug problems, according to Rutgers. He found a number of infested apartments and, within six months, killed 96 percent of bed bugs there.

But the Rutgers researcher and his team also planted seeds that could prove more valuable in the long-term fight against the pests.

The really good thing about him was that he didnt just come in like an exterminator and lay down some stuff, the housing authoritys executive director, John Clarke, told Rutgers. He educated our staff and residents about what caused the problem and what we might do to eliminate the problem.

Indeed, Wang and his team have proactively tried to teach residents, especially those in low-income areas, best practices to prevent and control bed bug infestations. This online guide, for instance, dispels common myths and highlights what residents should do to protect themselves.

The three other winners of the award include the Denver Housing Authority, for breaking up concentrated poverty and ushering in mixed-used development; Vermonts Weatherization One Touch Program, which helps increase access to health and energy efficiency; and Washingtons Tribal Healthy Homes Network, for addressing asthma in native communities.

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Bed Bugs Be Gone: Rutgers Gets Nod for Fighting Pests - New ... - TAPinto.net

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Bed Bugs Be Gone: Rutgers Gets Nod for Fighting Pests – TAPinto – TAPinto.net

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ Theyre the creepy, crawly, nasty things that bite in the night.

Bed bugsno one likes em, and few know how to kill em.

But they stand little chance against Changlu Wang. He heads Rutgers Universitys urban entomology lab and has strived for years to rid New Jersey low-income housing projects, including in New Brunswick, of bed bugs. He and his team have earned the respect of their colleagues and beneficiaries in their efforts to develop new strategies to combat this scourge.

Sign Up for E-News

In fact, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced today that, under Wangs leadership, Rutgers is one of four winners of the HUD Secretarys Award for Healthy Homes. The honor recognizes excellence in making indoor environments healthier by improving homes, according to a news release.

The recipients of this award understand the strong connection between where we live and how healthy we are, HUD Secretary Ben Carson, who was appointed this year by President Donald Trump, said in a statement. They demonstrate innovative approaches to making homes healthier, and exemplify the outstanding work thats taking place throughout the nation.

In his drive to fight bed bugs, Wang worked with poor communities, manufacturers and other universities to build better integrated pest management plans, according to the release.

What is an integrated pest management strategy? Well, according to the federal government, it boils down to how workers and residents prevent and control bugs and the like, while respecting the environment.

Wang and his team received a HUD grant in 2013 to implement and evaluate a model bed bug management program in poor communities. He partnered with three Garden State housing authorities and worked in more than 2,000 apartment units to pull off the study, which closed last year, according to the news release.

It designed and implemented a low-cost and highly effective bed bug monitoring protocol and a model IPM program, HUD wrote in its press release, noting that Wangs work was published in a respected peer-reviewed journal on bugs.

Wangs work also touched New Brunswick. In 2012, he agreed to help the city Housing Authority tackle its bed bug problems, according to Rutgers. He found a number of infested apartments and, within six months, killed 96 percent of bed bugs there.

But the Rutgers researcher and his team also planted seeds that could prove more valuable in the long-term fight against the pests.

The really good thing about him was that he didnt just come in like an exterminator and lay down some stuff, the housing authoritys executive director, John Clarke, told Rutgers. He educated our staff and residents about what caused the problem and what we might do to eliminate the problem.

Indeed, Wang and his team have proactively tried to teach residents, especially those in low-income areas, best practices to prevent and control bed bug infestations. This online guide, for instance, dispels common myths and highlights what residents should do to protect themselves.

The three other winners of the award include the Denver Housing Authority, for breaking up concentrated poverty and ushering in mixed-used development; Vermonts Weatherization One Touch Program, which helps increase access to health and energy efficiency; and Washingtons Tribal Healthy Homes Network, for addressing asthma in native communities.

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Bed Bugs Be Gone: Rutgers Gets Nod for Fighting Pests - TAPinto - TAPinto.net

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Frustration with infested apartment led man to unleash bedbugs at Augusta City Center – Press Herald

Charles Manning, the Augusta man charged with assault and obstruction of government administration after he dumped about 100 live bedbugs in Augusta City Center, said in an interview Tuesday that he did it to show the code enforcement officer this is what I had to put up with for four, six months. Staff photo by Joe Phelan

AUGUSTA The 74-year-old man who dumped a cup of live bedbugs in the Augusta City Center last month said he did it because the city wasnt adequately addressing his complaints about substandard housing. And he doesnt regret his actions, even though he is now homeless as a result.

I pulled out the cup and said, Here, help yourself, Charles Manning said during an interview at a coffee shop Tuesday. I reached in my bag and pulled out the cup and I opened it up and put it on the counter, just to let (the code enforcement officer) know this is what I had to put up with for four, six months.

Manning said he now realizes he dumped the bedbugs in the wrong city department on June 2 mistakenly targeting the General Assistance office instead of code enforcement.

The city quickly closed the building for the rest of the day that Friday and called in a pest-control company to spray it with chemicals. It reopened the following Monday.

Manning later was charged with assault and obstruction of government administration, Class D crimes punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,000 fine.

Bedbugs are about a quarter-inch long, with a soft, rounded look. They feed on human blood but are not believed to carry disease.

Mannings reaction to his situation highlights two problems city officials have been working to address in recent years: a lack of affordable housing and some boarding homes and apartments that are infested with bedbugs.

Manning, who said he receives about $900 a month in Social Security payments, described one apartment on Court Street so infested that he avoided sleeping at night, when the pests were most likely to crawl over his bed. He said he was reluctant to inform his landlord of the bugs, fearful that a complaint could lead to his being evicted. But at the end of May, just before Manning moved into a new room on Water Street, he filed several complaints with the citys code enforcement staff.

Robert Overton, one of the citys code enforcement officers, said Manning came to City Center to say that his room had a bedbug infestation, and Overton asked whether Manning had notified his landlord.

We have to give the landlord the opportunity to correct the problem, Overton said at City Center on Wednesday. Manning said he had told a fellow tenant but not the landlord, fearing he might be evicted.

When Manning returned a week later, he told Overton that he had moved, but wanted to be sure his old residence would be treated. He was carrying a cup of bedbugs he had gathered from the apartment, saying it was his proof of the infestation.

I dont blame him for being upset, Overton said.

KICKED OUT, HOMELESS

Overton called the landlord, Gerry Fleury, who told him that Waltham Pest Control was at the building and was treating it at that moment. Overton then asked Manning if he could dispose of the cup of bedbugs he was carrying.

I asked if I could have them to dispose of them, Overton said, but Manning refused. Overton then followed Manning out to make sure he took the bedbugs with him.

Overton said he also contacted the manager of Mannings new residence to indicate Manning had moved from a place that had bedbugs.

Manning returned several hours later, calling Overton a snitch.

He told me he had been kicked out and that he was homeless, said Overton, who directed him to the General Assistance office for aid.

Charles Manning describes how many bedbugs were in a container he dumped at Augusta City Center in June. He said he feared that he could be evicted if he complained to his landlord. Kennebec Journal photos by Joe Phelan

There, Manning learned he didnt qualify for aid because he had another source of income.

Overton said he saw Mannings hand go under the glass partition and throw the bedbugs on the counter, several of which hit the worker there.

I asked them, What am I supposed to do now that you got me kicked out? Manning said.

Overton then escorted Manning from the building, and in late June, police charged Manning with the two misdemeanors. Hes due in court on Aug. 7.

LACK OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING

A Massachusetts native, Manning has lived in various parts of the country and worked as a bus driver, among other occupations. He moved to Maine about 10 years ago to be near his sister. He was living in the Lewiston-Auburn area until last year, when he says he was kicked out of an apartment for complaining about its poor condition. He then moved to Augusta.

He recently stayed in the Super 8 motel in Augusta for about two weeks, but said he cant afford to keep staying there and is now homeless.

If youre in a situation where youre homeless in this community, looking for a place to live and low-income, theres nothing immediately available, said Amanda Bartlett, executive director of the quasi-municipal Augusta Housing Authority.

People who receive approval for Section 8 subsidized housing have a three-year wait to get into that housing, she said.

Bartlett says the lack of affordable housing stems from the 500 units in the city that either were lost or are at imminent risk of being lost because of fire or safety code issues since 2013.

Then there are the bedbugs.

Bedbugs have been a persistent problem in some buildings, and they previously had been found in the citys General Assistance office. The bugs are brown, flat and about a quarter-inch long, with a soft, rounded look. After a blood meal, they are dark red and larger. They feed on human blood but are not believed to carry disease.

The bedbug issue is complicated, Bartlett said. At the Augusta Housing Authority, we work hard with landlords to make sure they comply with federal law. A lot of landlords are frustrated because theyre trying to do the right thing.

PEST CONTROL PROTOCOLS

Tenants also have to do their part, washing all clothing, cleaning the entire apartment and encasing mattresses, she said.

A lot of our clients have some disabilities that make it more difficult for them to comply with those types of pest control protocols, Bartlett said.

She said landlords have to work closely with tenants to try to get them through the process.

Weve seen both sides: landlords not doing what theyre supposed to do and tenants not doing what theyre supposed to do, she said.

To step up enforcement, the City Council passed an ordinance last year that allows city officials to require landlords to bring in pest management professionals to exterminate bedbugs when an infestation is discovered. It also requires tenants to notify their landlords if they know or suspect there is an infestation of the blood-sucking bugs in their rental units and prohibits them from trying to treat the infestation themselves.

Bartlett said the Augusta Housing Authority did strategic planning a few years ago and is implementing ways to increase the housing supply.

Were working hard to develop new housing like we did at the former Hodgkins Middle School, she said.

The housing authority is about to announce successful applications from landlords who sought money through a Great Neighborhoods program to rehabilitate existing housing.

While 17 applications were received, Bartlett said the $500,000 available will stretch to only two or three buildings because of the scope of the work needed.

At one point, 67 percent of folks we were giving a voucher to werent able to find housing, Bartlett said, causing officials to wonder, Is it an inventory issue, or can we do more to help?

Charles Eichacker can be contacted at 621-5642 or at:

[emailprotected]

Twitter: ceichacker

Betty Adams can be contacted at 621-5631 or at:

[emailprotected]

Twitter: betadams

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Frustration with infested apartment led man to unleash bedbugs at Augusta City Center - Press Herald

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Frustration with substandard housing led man to unleash bedbugs at Augusta City Center – Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel

AUGUSTA Charles Manning, the 74-year-old man who dumped a cup of live bedbugs inside Augustas city hall last month, said he did it because officials werent addressing his complaints about substandard housing adequately.

Manning said Tuesday he doesnt regret his actions on June 2.

I pulled out the cup and said, Here, help yourself,' he said during an interview at a local Dunkin Donuts. I reached in my bag and pulled out the cup and I opened it up and put it on the counter, just to let (the code enforcement officer) know this is what I had to put up with for four, six months.

Manning said he now realizes he dumped the 100 or so bedbugs in the wrong city department mistakenly targeting the General Assistance office instead of code enforcement at Augusta City Center.

The city quickly closed the building for the rest of the day and called in a pest-control company to spray it with chemicals. It reopened the following Monday.

Manning later was charged with assault and obstruction of government administration, class D crimes punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,000 fine.

A Massachusetts native, Manning has lived in various parts of the country, including the Pacific Northwest and Texas; and he has worked as a bus driver, among other occupations.

He moved to Maine about 10 years ago to be near his sister, who was living here. He was living in the Lewiston-Auburn area until last year, when he says he was kicked out of an apartment for complaining about its poor condition. He then moved to Augusta.

While Mannings situation and his reaction to it is extreme, his predicament illustrates two problems city officials have been working to address in recent years: a lack of affordable housing and bedbug infestations in some boarding homes and apartments.

Amanda Bartlett, executive director of the quasi-municipal Augusta Housing Authority, noted that more than 500 units in the city either were lost or are at imminent risk of being lost because of fire or safety code issues since 2013.

People who receive approval for Section 8 subsidized housing have a three-year wait to get into that housing.

If youre in a situation where youre homeless in this community, looking for a place to live and low-income, theres nothing immediately available, she said.

Then there are the bedbugs.

The bedbug issue is complicated, she said. At the Augusta Housing Authority, we work hard with landlords to make sure they comply with federal law. A lot of landlords are frustrated because theyre trying to do the right thing.

Tenants also have to do their part, washing all clothing, cleaning the entire apartment and encasing mattresses, she said.

A lot of our clients have some disabilities that make it more difficult for them to comply with those types of pest control protocols, Bartlett said.

She said landlords have to work closely with tenants to try to get them through the process.

Weve seen both sides: landlords not doing what theyre supposed to do and tenants not doing what theyre supposed to do, she said.

Bartlett, who took over the Augusta Housing Authority in late 2013, has worked to have her organization take a more aggressive role in dealing with what she described at the time as a near-crisis situation because of the lack of affordable housing.

In addition, bedbugs have been a persistent problem in some buildings, and they had been found in the citys General Assistance office previously. The bugs are brown, flat and about a quarter-inch long, with a soft, rounded look. After a blood meal, they are dark red and larger. They feed on human blood but are not believed to carry disease.

To step up enforcement, the City Council passed an ordinance last year that allows city officials to require landlords to bring in pest management professionals to exterminate bedbugs when an infestation is discovered. It also requires tenants to notify their landlords if they know or suspect there is an infestation of the blood-sucking bugs in their rental unit and prohibits them from trying to treat the infestation themselves.

NO PLACE TO GO

Manning, who said he receives about $900 a month in Social Security payments, described one apartment on Court Street that was so infested with bedbugs that he avoided sleeping at night, when the pests were most likely to crawl over his bed. He said he was reluctant to inform his landlord of the bugs, fearful that a complaint could lead to his being evicted.

But at the end of May, just before Manning moved into a new room on Water Street, he filed several complaints with the citys code enforcement staff.

Robert Overton, one of the citys code enforcement officers, said Manning came to City Center to say that his room had a bedbug infestation, and Overton asked whether Manning had notified his landlord.

We have to give the landlord the opportunity to correct the problem, Overton said Wednesday at City Center. Manning said he had told a fellow tenant but not the landlord, fearing he might be evicted.

When Manning returned a week later, Overton said, he said he had moved, but wanted to be sure his old residence would be treated. He was carrying the cup of bedbugs at the time which he collected from the Court Street apartment and put in a disposable cup saying it was his proof of the infestation.

I dont blame him for being upset, Overton said.

Overton called the landlord, Gerry Fleury, who told him that Waltham Pest Control was at the building and was treating it at that moment.

Overton then asked Manning if he could dispose of the cup of bedbugs he was carrying.

I asked if I could have them to dispose of them, Overton said, but Manning refused. Overton then followed Manning out to make sure he took the bedbugs with him.

Overton also said he contacted the manager of Mannings new residence to say Manning had moved from a place that had bedbugs.

Manning then returned several hours later, calling Overton a snitch.

He told me he had been kicked out and that he was homeless, Overton said, and Overton directed him to the General Assistance office for aid.

There, Manning learned he didnt qualify for aid because he had another source of income.

Overton said he saw Mannings hand go under the glass partition and throw the bedbugs on the counter, several of which hit the worker there.

I asked them, What am I supposed to do now that you got me kicked out?' Manning said.

Overton then escorted Manning from the building, and in late June, police charged Manning with the two misdemeanors. Hes due in court on Aug. 7.

Frankly, the General Assistance office has nothing to do with bedbugs, the citys development director, Matt Nazar, said in June. Its an extraordinary bit of misdirected anger.

MORE RESOURCES

Manning recently stayed in the Super 8 motel in Augusta for about two weeks, but said he cant afford to keep staying there and is now homeless.

Bartlett said the Augusta Housing Authority did strategic planning a few years ago and is implementing ways to increase the housing supply.

Were working hard to develop new housing like we did at the former Hodgkins Middle School, she said.

The housing authority is about to announce successful applications from landlords who sought money through a Great Neighborhoods program to rehabilitate existing housing.

While 17 applications were received, Bartlett said the $500,000 available will stretch to only two or three buildings because of the scope of the work needed.

Were also creating a housing resource room, which is almost ready to open, she said. Well have someone here to help search for housing.

That would include helping with internet searches and making phone calls.

At one point 67 percent of folks we were giving a voucher to werent able to find housing, Bartlett said, causing officials to wonder, Is it an inventory issue, or can we do more to help?

Charles Eichacker 621-5642

[emailprotected]

Twitter: @ceichacker

Betty Adams 621-5631

[emailprotected]

Twitter: @betadams

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Frustration with substandard housing led man to unleash bedbugs at Augusta City Center - Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel

Posted in Bed Bugs Maine | Comments Off on Frustration with substandard housing led man to unleash bedbugs at Augusta City Center – Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel

Surprising Places Bed Bugs Can Hide – ConsumerReports.org

The steps you take should depend on your personal preferences and the particular environments youre dealing with, experts say. Consider the following:

Know what a bed bug looks like. These small, disc-shaped bugs can be seen with the naked eye, as can their fecal matterpeppercorn-sized black spots.

Be attentivewhere its warranted. Theres little need to keep your eyes constantly peeled for bed bugs, Miller says. But its reasonable to look for signs of them in places where people live and/or sleep, especially where they receive a lot of visitors, such as nursing homes and hospitals.

Other places people may want to be cognizant of are lounging areas with lots of public traffic, such as sofas in public libraries, waiting rooms, and public transportation settings, Potter says.

Protect your belongings. If you suspect a problem in your office, school, or another location, store your coats, handbags, and any other items that youll bring home away from those of other people.

If you know of a problem at your office, keep your personal belongings in a closed plastic bin. If its your childs school, ask to have his or her things secured in the same way.

Treat with heat. Concerned that you or your child might have brought home a stray bed bug? Try this DIY strategy (but don't rely on it for an infestation): Toss clothes, blankets, and plush toys that have come home from your child's school in a hot dryer for 30 minutes.

Reactbut dont overreactif you see one. If you spot a bed bug, remain calm. One bug does not an infestation make. Instead, ask who handles these issues in the location you've spotted the bug init may be management and/or the facilities staffand report what youve seen.

(Management should take quick action if a bed bug is seen on premisesalerting those in the building, examining the area to determine whether its a single stray or a sign of bigger problems, and dealing with an infestation promptly.)

Be vigilant at nursing homes. If you have a loved one in a nursing home, you should be inspecting his or her bed regularly, not relying on people there to do it, Miller says. Thatmeans carefully examining the mattress and headboard (and wheelchair, if applicable) each time you visit, and checking your relative for any signs of biteskeeping in mind that they may not display any.

Consider encasing your relatives mattress and box spring with bug-proof covers, and reduce clutter to give any bed bugs fewer places to hide.

Call in experts at the right time. Think youhave a bed bug problem at home? When in doubt, have an experienced pest control person come to your home and perform a detailed inspection, Potter says.

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Surprising Places Bed Bugs Can Hide - ConsumerReports.org

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