Monthly Archives: August 2017

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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

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Bed Bugs in the Workplace It’s Real – Brightmove Recruiting News (blog)

Posted by: Robert Friedman in Recruiting Software Blog, August 3, 2017

Bed bugs They are creepy and crawly, and if you are not careful, they could be coming home from work with you. At least that is what happened at New-York-based media firm, Buzzfeed, last month.

In mid-June, Buzzfeed employees logged on to find an email from the company communications officer alerting workers that the office would be fumigated the following day in the fastest and environmentally safest manner.

Just like no fancy hotel wants it known that there are bed bugs on the premises, neither do employers. For HR in cities with a high incidence of bed bugs, the little bloodsuckers could prove a nightmare. According to pest control company, Orkin, the current top-ten cities for this notorious pest, including residence and commercial properties, include:

While you might think bed bugs should be sticking close to bedrooms, they dont. They could be in your office chair, or in the crack of your desk drawer. While not inclined to bite during the day, they can hitch a ride home with youleading to problems with residential or building infestation.

Bed bugsthey arent just for bedrooms anymore

The bed bug, Cimex lectularius, is a flat, brownish-red insect that feeds on the blood of sleeping humans and animals. As adults, they are about the size of an apple seed, and they hide anywhere they can drop and wait for a nocturnal meal. Bed bugs are not known to spread disease, and they are terrifically difficult to eradicate.

Although Buzzfeed may have fumigated their offices, bed bugs are a whole-building problem that requires vigilance and best practices on the part of all occupants of the space. Once an infestation has occurred in a public space or building, the chore is deterrence and surveillancewithout both, theyll be back.

Pop quizwhich of these types of places has not been known to harbor bed bugs?

Okayyou knew it was a trick question, right? Bed bugs are found anywhere humans and animals are found. While these sites might not harbor large populations, they can provide a ready pool of bugs to jump in your purse, on your coat, backpack, or on your shoe. In the last decade, bedbugs have made an aggressive return to cities, spurred by increasing resistance to pesticides, transmission by traveling populations, and rebound after DDT went out of style as a preventative.

Bed bugs are not new, they are just back. Remember the sweet night time saying, dont let the bed bugs bite? Well, it isnt so sweet. Older generations knew to keep their purse and hat in their lap in the theatre, instead of the seat or couch next to them. Bed bugs like to hop a ride, and can easily do so in a crowded theatre, subway, or other venue.

Who you gonna call?

Unless it cannot be avoided, most commercial and residential property owners do not alert social media when they have a bed bug problem. Even the most expensive hotels have bed bug problems, which are quietly and quickly managed. So what can you do if you happen to work in a charming olderor newerbuilding that could have a bed bug problem?

Office management and HR must respond to signs of bed bugs. Quick action is essential to avoid damage to brand reputation, a bigger infestation, or potential legal claims from affected workers. For HR, the most effective tool is education, letting workers know of the problem and providing information about recognizing bedbugs in their home or workspace. Bed bugs can be brought to work unknowingly by workers who do not realize they have an infestation at home. If a source is identified, the worker may need confidential help ridding their home of the bugs, without bringing them back to your workspace.

Bugs are not just inside computersthey could be behind yours. Know what to look for and how to handle your workplace if it turns out bed bugs are bugging you.

The Importance of Working Environments

What HR Managers Need to Know About Hiring Millennials

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Bed Bugs in the Workplace It's Real - Brightmove Recruiting News (blog)

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A Day in the Life of a Bedbug Collector – OZY

In this occasional series, OZY takes to streets and neighborhoods across the globe to ask a simple question: How was your day?

Louis Sorkin Rye Brook, New York

I began my day packaging some specimens spiders, scorpions and some other arachnids suspended in alcohol that needed to be shipped. Then I got a call from a man who had found some strange insects biting him after hed gone to a park on the Upper West Side. He was really surprised because hed been going to this park for the past 10 years and had never had this problem. So he called and asked if he could come over.

Calls like that are very common. I get three inquiries a week on average, from pest control companies or just regular people finding a strange insect in their house. There are more calls during the summer. The insect that was biting this man turned out to be a predaceous little bug, an adult the immature one is pink in color.

Im 64 and I live in Rye Brook in Westchester County, where I grew up. Ive been working as an entomologist at the American Museum of Natural History for 39 years. Each day is different. Sometimes Im outside the city doing fieldwork, sometimes I have to go to a site with pest control people, sometimes its a day in court as an expert witness to help figure out where the bedbugs in a house or establishment came from. Sometimes I feel like a bedbug sleuth.

I spend a lot of time answering questions about bedbugs in online forums. I also go to businesses and hospitals to present talks on bedbugs: how to recognize them, what to do when you find an infestation, best practices, and so on. But what I enjoy most is going to schools and interacting with kids, especially the younger ones, showing them insects, watching them hold specimens with curiosity, teaching them that insects arent always something to be afraid of. That not everything is a pest.

It might seem like Ive grown attached to them, but in reality, theyre more attached to me.

Childhood was when my fascination with insects began. When I was premed at the University of Connecticut, I took a field entomology course during my first summer. We collected different types of insects, identified them and observed them under the microscope. Thats when I got hooked on insects morphology, their body structures. Thats still what fascinates me the most. After that, I stayed with entomology.

One day in the late 80s, I got a call from a man about what he thought was a strange little bug. He brought it to my office to show it to me. It turned out to be a bedbug, the first live one Id seen. The mans friend, who was visiting from Canada, had probably picked up the bugs there and unknowingly carried them across the border and into the mans apartment. That was around the time bedbugs were starting to crop up everywhere. Since people didnt have bedbugs on their mind, no one really paid attention when they entered a hotel or motel. No one knew much about them; there were so many questions. Thats what got me interested in bedbugs.

Today, I have about a thousand bedbugs in little jars and vials in my house. Their ancestors originally belonged to a researcher who, in the 70s, had collected bedbugs from Fort Dix, in New Jersey. He was a medical entomologist in the army and there was a bedbug issue in the barracks. He had collected some 200 specimens and, later, when bedbugs became a big issue, his population was very useful to scientists trying to learn more about them. The bedbugs that Ive collected have become my pets in some ways. I feed them my own blood I just open the lid of the vial and place it upside down on my thumb and they scuttle down for a meal. Ive never worried that they would escape and take over my house. I dont plan to get rid of them anytime soon. It might seem like Ive grown attached to them, but in reality, theyre more attached to me.

Besides studying insects, I love eating them and that sometimes confuses people. They say, If you have a work animal that you love, why would you eat it? Well, I mostly do it to educate people that theres nothing wrong with eating insects. Some are pretty tasty! Crickets are my favorite. You can get them dried and ground into a powder that can be mixed with flour and used in baking. Theres even cricket-flavored pasta.

I wonder sometimes about what Id be if I werent an entomologist. I might have stayed in premed and gone into medicine. Probably research, not so much working with patients. Although I do work with psychiatrists to help patients get over arachnophobia [the fear of spiders] or entomophobia, the fear of insects. Sometimes we convince patients to handle the spiders and we videotape them and observe them.

Watching people get over their fear is really good.

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A Day in the Life of a Bedbug Collector - OZY

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Vancouver, Surrey among most bedbug-infested cities in Canada – Surrey Now-Leader

Bed bugs are tiny, yet can become such a nuisance in an otherwise happy home.

With summer season the ideal time for travel, pest control company Orkin Canada released a list Tuesday of the top 25 Canadian cities dealing with the unwelcome visitors.

RELATED: Problem plagued Maple Ridge home to be torn down

The rankings were based on all the companys bed bug treatments at residential and commercial properties from July 1, 2016 to June 30 of this year.

Toronto may appear to be the natioanl capital for the pests, but Vancouver made the list at No. 3 as the best of the worst in B.C.

Surrey also clinched the top 20 spot and Burnaby was the 21st worst for the troublesome little critters.

The top 10 cities were:

Entomologists say having a clean room does not prevent bed bugs, which can each lay up to five eggs in one day.

Orkin suggests keeping all luggage elevated while youre on vacation and away from soft furnishings.

RELATED: Bedbugs are here to stay what can we do about it?

Upon returning home, luggage should be left in the garage and all clothing run through the dryer at the highest appropriate temperature for 15 minutes.

To find bed bugs, homeowners can inspect beds, soft furnishings and framed pictures thoroughly and look for insects, blood stains, dead bugs and eggs.

@ashwadhwani ashley.wadhwani@bpdigital.ca Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

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Vancouver, Surrey among most bedbug-infested cities in Canada - Surrey Now-Leader

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Vancouver named among worst cities in Canada for bed bugs – CTV News

CTV Vancouver Published Tuesday, August 1, 2017 10:28AM PDT Last Updated Tuesday, August 1, 2017 11:05AM PDT

Waking up to itchy, red bites on your body is an experience many people are familiar with, but some cities are worse than others when it comes to the scourge of bed bugs.

Toronto tops the rest of the country when it comes to bed bug problems, according to a ranking released Tuesday by pest control company Orkin Canada, followed by Winnipeg and Vancouver.

The list was calculated based on commercial and residential bed bug treatments ordered between July 2016 and June 2017 at Orkin, which warns this could be a bumper year for the parasitic insects.

Surrey and Burnaby fared significantly better, coming in at the 20th and 21st spots on the list of the 25 worst bed bug cities.

Apart from being notoriously hard to kill, bed bugs can live for up to a year without food in the proper conditions. They are also capable of laying 10 eggs in a day.

The pests impact locals and tourists alike, and are known to hop into travellers' luggage and come home with them after a relaxing summer vacation. That's why experts recommend always performing a quick check of hotel rooms before settling in.

"Bed bugs are extremely efficient hitch hikers. They can move easily across a room and climb onto luggage or anything left on a bed in just one night," Orkin warned in a news release.

Hotel guests are advised to keep luggage elevated and check sheets for any sign of the creepy crawlies, including blood stains, dead bugs, eggs and bug exoskeletons.

After coming home, Orkin recommends putting luggage in the garage and throwing clothes in the dryer on high for 10 minutes.

The 10 worst cities in Canada for bed bugs, according to Orkin Canada, are:

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Vancouver named among worst cities in Canada for bed bugs - CTV News

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St. John’s is Canada’s 5th most bedbug infested city, says extermination company – CBC.ca

St. John's has made it to the top of another list, but this time it's not for the colourful houses or oceanfront location.

The most easterly city in Canada is also housing a host of unwanted guests bedbugs.

Pest control company Orkin Canada released data gathered from the number of treatments it performed at both residential and commercial properties throughout the country from July 1, 2016, to June 30, 2017.

Toronto topped its list of bedbug ridden cities, followed by Winnipeg, Vancouver, Ottawa, St. John's, Edmonton, Halifax, Sudbury, Scarborough and Calgary.

Bedbugs rely on humans for more than just lunch.

Orkin released its list of the 25 most bed bug-ridden cities in Canada. (Orkin Canada)

"They're great little hitchhikers, and unfortunately we're a great mode of transport," said Ken Penney, service manager for Orkin in St. John's.

"From our luggage, purses, bags, wallets, cell phone casesthese are all the ways we have confirmed bed bugs navigating from one place to the other."

Penney points to the oil boom and a reliance on the tourism industry for St. John'shigh ranking among much bigger cities on the list.

"In recent years we've become an oil-based society and we rely heavily on tourism, hence we inherit the trends that come with those industries," Penney told CBC Radio's St. John's Morning Show.

"Increased tourists means increased hotel capacities, [workers] travelling between job sites, shared quarters, carpooling and disposable income, which also means vacationing, so all of these things are part of the bed bug equation.

"So it has increased, but that's the cost of our lifestyle."

The parasitic insects tend to live and hide in the areas where we sleep, but they aren't limited to hotels and apartment buildings, Penney said. They've been found in buses, taxis, theatres, food courts and offices.

Some people get red, itchy spots when bitten by bedbugs, some show no signs at all, Penney said, so it isn't always obvious there is a problem.

Penney has seen infestations so severe they had to tear out the walls and flooring in a home and throw out all the furniture.

"And the occupants are just there stood up saying, 'I had no signs, I didn't know that this happened,' and we're finding hundreds of bugs in behind almost every obstacle."

This fed, adult bed bug is no bigger than an apple seed. (Sudbury & District Health Unit/www.bedbugsinfo.ca)

Bedbugs can thrive in a spotlessly clean room, and one female bedbug can lay one to five eggs per day, so vigilance is key.

Penney's best advice is to thoroughly inspect the area around your bed, including linens, creases in mattresses and furniture, the box spring, headboard and framed pictures.

Look for insects adults are reddish-brown and about the size of an apple seed eggs, blood stains and fecal matter.

"St. John's is a small city, but it's also one of North America's oldest cities, hence we shouldn't believe we should be impervious to one of North America's oldest pests."

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St. John's is Canada's 5th most bedbug infested city, says extermination company - CBC.ca

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