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Daily Archives: February 19, 2020
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Bed bugs at Radio-Canada – The Ticker Times
Radio-Canada employees must wait even more impatiently to move into their new offices since the brown tower on Ren-Lvesque Boulevard has recently been struggling with bedbugs.
The Maison de Radio-Canada in Montreal is now added to the list of federal buildings, after those in Ottawa and Gatineau, which have faced a bed bug problem.
Following [sic] the detection of traces of bedbugs inside in the past few weeks, we conducted an inspection of the building over the weekend in the presence of dogs detection and a certified exterminator , we can read in an internal note sent to employees and obtained by Le Journal yesterday.
According to what it is possible to learn there, the inspection made it possible to detect the presence of traces of bedbugs in certain targeted places of the tower.
We are not talking about an infestation here, but rather isolated cases. Several floors were free of bedbugs, he added.
The Crown corporation confirmed that a decontamination treatment with steam had been carried out immediately in the limited areas. She also assured that the follow-up would be done with the affected employees.
Rest assured that management takes the situation very seriously and that a preventive bed bug detection plan will be deployed to prevent this from happening again, the e-mail concluded.
The official move date to the new offices located nearby is not yet known.
The building was to be ready on January 1 st. However, Radio-Canada is already in court with its owner. She believes that she should not have to pay her monthly rent of $ 1.8 million since the project is not considered complete.
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Bed bugs at Radio-Canada - The Ticker Times
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Bedbugs, cockroaches, mice gaining ground in TCH properties, reports show – CBC.ca
Pests cockroaches, bedbugs, and mice appeared to be on the risein Toronto Community Housing buildings last year, according to two new reports.
In one document, the public housing agency's staff say demand for pest control treatments jumped almost 18 per cent in 2019, compared to the previous year.
Andthe problems became more acute as the year wore on, according to a separate TCH report.
None of which comes as a surprise to Catherine Wilkinson, a 20-year TCH resident who until recently was a tenant representative on the board.
"Some tenants are actually suicidal, where they take medication to cope, particularly when it comes to bed bugs," she said in a deputation to the board's tenant committee two weeks ago.
"I don't think our tenants should have to live with these pests and we need to do everything to make sure that they don't."
TCH declined to speak on camera with CBC Toronto about the reasons behind 2019's increased demand for anti-bug and rodent treatments. But in an emailed statement, the agency blamed, in part, a city-wide surge in rat and mouse populations.
The problem is "due to increased construction," according to the corporation.
"Toronto Community Housing is committed to delivering clean, safe buildings and improving living conditions for tenants," the statement reads in part.
"As part of our prevention focus, [TCH] has increased its treatments standards by carrying out three treatments in a unit rather than two."
In one of two reports to this week's meeting of the TCH board, chief operating officer Sheila Penny presents numbers that show about 62,000 anti-pest treatments at TCH units by the end of 2019. That compares to about 53,000 in the previous year.
In particular, beg bugs appear to be leading the charge. The numbers show about 5,700 treatments in the first quarter of the year. In the last quarter, there were almost 7,000, and a year-end total of about 25,000 treatments.
Next up were cockroaches with a total of about 16,300 treatments by the end of 2019. Mouse treatments trailed at 11,300 treatments that year. Treatments for a final category of pest, "other,"totalled about 8,300 by the end of 2019. TCH says that includes ants and pigeons.
Ilona Batawas one of the tenants who asked for help with pests in 2019. She said her Oak Street apartment became infested just after a neighbour moved out.
"There was a lot of cockroaches," she told CBC Toronto. "I mean, my kitchen was running with them."
Bata, who's on disability, said TCH did one spraying, but there was no follow-up. She said a personal care worker disinfected her kitchen, which solved the problem.
Bata said tenants should do more to keep their apartments clear of pests.
"My trick is I don't let nobody in my apartment, because people bring in bed bugs; people from the street, people from different apartments," she said. "If they have bedbugs they're going to bring them in and share them with you."
The report is to be presented at the Feb. 20 board meeting.
The TCH statement points out that in 2018, the agency "spent about $2.4 million and we've increased our spending in 2019 as a result of our enhanced proactive response, including full building assessments and treatments, as well as enhanced measures such as heat treatments (sometimes used in units for health reasons) and canine detection."
The cost of the 2018 mitigation effortwasn't immediately available, the statement says.
Penny's reportsaysstaff responding to pest control complaints discovered other problems, which they were then able to address:
"Of all the units visited by the Environmental Health Unit in 2019, more than 425 households demonstrated a need for additional supports, including access to resources to support de-cluttering and preparation for treatment, furniture replacement, or extreme cleaning services," her report notes.
"It is staff's experience that there continues to be an upward trend in support needs for tenants."
The report also points out that the number of pest control treatments in the agency's rent-geared-to-income units "was substantially greater than those completed in market rental units." No reason is given for the difference.
Penny's report concludes by warning the board that "the organization potentially faces orders/costs related to any perceived mismanagement including potential awards of rent abatement at the Landlord and Tenant Board, Municipal Licensing and Standards ...orders for failure to maintain the premises "pest free,"and Health Protection orders from Toronto Public Health."
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Bedbugs, cockroaches, mice gaining ground in TCH properties, reports show - CBC.ca
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