Hotel Obligations for Bed Bugs | USA Today


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Christopher Michael, Demand Media

Bedbugs can cause rash and allergic reactions. (Photo: SolomonPhotos/iStock/Getty Images )

From 2000 to 2013, the National Pest Management Association found a significant increase in bedbug infestations across the country. And while there are very few laws specifically addressing the bedbug epidemic, hotels have a responsibility to keep you safe under common law. But even the cleanest, most expensive hotels may have bedbugs. Your best bet is to educate and protect yourself.

No federal bedbug law exists, but some states have passed legislation concerning hotels and their obligations to keep you safe from these pests. Alabama, California, Kansas, Minnesota, Nevada, Ohio, South Dakota and West Virginia enforce some form of bedbug-specific law, but most of them lack teeth; merely setting down in writing that hotels must take cleanliness measures to prevent pests. Only Kansas, Nevada and West Virginia require hotels to stop using the room and exterminate the bedbugs before another guest stays the night.

Under common law, the hotel manager has a responsibility to use reasonable care to promote your safety as a guest. Bedbugs pose a well-known hazard to personal safety; bites can cause rash, allergic reactions and permanent scars. It is reasonable to expect hotel staff to clean, fumigate, disinfect and exterminate any known infestation of bedbugs. But common law does not require the hotel staff ensure your safety, only to take reasonable measures to promote it. If the infestation is new and unknown to the hotel manager, then the common law protection does not apply as long as the room is reasonably clean. It is unreasonable to expect hotel staff to know about an infestation before it starts.

The law can view bedbug bites and infestations as serious injuries, not unlike those suffered in a car crash. The bites themselves can have lasting psychological effects, cause embarrassing rashes, fierce itching and in some cases, permanent scarring. Gather evidence if you become the victim of hotel bedbugs, including pictures of the bedbugs and your bites. Contact the local health department, ask it to inspect your room and get a copy of the report. File a formal complaint with hotel management, getting the manager's name, phone number and email address. You may seek medical attention and get a record of your doctor's visit. Evidence can help you with civil litigation if your injuries are serious enough.

Look for signs of bedbugs in your room immediately after check-in. Look all around and under your mattress for small dots of rusty or reddish blood stains left by crushed bedbugs. Bedbug excrement appears as tiny black dots that may bleed into fabric like the point of a marker. Look for tiny, 1-millimeter eggs that are pale yellow in color, or look for the apple-seed-sized, reddish-brown bedbugs themselves. Bugs commonly hide in the seams of chairs and beds, between the folds of curtains, in electrical sockets, between cushions and even under tacks or loose screws. Bedbug bites produce a raised, red, swollen area with a dark-red center. Bites often come in clusters or make a line across the skin. If you see or feel any sign of bedbugs, leave the room and immediately notify hotel staff.

Bedbugs cling and hide inside clothing and luggage, where you can take them home to start a new infestation. If you come in contact with bedbugs at a hotel, ask for a garbage bag and tightly seal all of your belongings. Transfer all of your washable clothes to a different garbage bag outside of your home and take the clothes to the washer inside of the new bag. Wash the clothes on the hot cycle and dry the clothes on the highest temperature setting for at least 30 minutes to kill any bugs or eggs. Leave the rest of your belongings inside the garbage bag in the sun, where the internal temperature will reach 120 degrees or higher. Or you can place the garbage bag in a freezer overnight to kill the bedbugs. You may hire a pest-management professional to disinfect your non-washable items.

Christopher Michael began writing in 2010 for Break.com. He received a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Writing sports and travel articles helps support his professional baseball career, which has taken him to 49 states, five continents and four oceans.

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