Category Archives: Bed Bugs New York

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  Thursday 26th of September 2024 02:03 AM


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New survey finds Peterborough is best in Canada for fewest bed bug cases – Peterborough Examiner

If Peterborough: Where Roads and Rivers Meet wasn't good enough for a city slogan/tagline, how about Peterborough: Where Beds and Bugs Don't Meet?

Peterborough ranked tops in Canada as the city with the fewest bed bug problems in a nationwide ranking of 25 Canadian cities released Tuesday.

The ranking of 25 Canadian cities was released by pest-control provider Orkin Canada, based on the number of residential and commercial bed bug treatments the company performed between July 1, 2016 and June 30, 2017.

Even without including Scarborough, North York and Etobicoke, Toronto had the most bed bug cases, followed by Winnipeg in second, Vancouver in third and Ottawa fourth. Oshawa was 17th.

Bed bugs thrive in cool, dark places and, while rare, can be found on planes, trains and automobiles.

The critters could be present if you see any of these signs: dead bugs, spots of blood stains, or eggs in the crevice of folds of a mattress or sheets, any sort of soft furnishings and even framed photos. A clean room does not prevent bed bugs as two bugs can lay up to 10 eggs in a single day.

Those who are travelling are advised to keep their luggage elevated and away from linens and fabrics. If you suspect your luggage may have been carrying bed bugs following a trip, put all the clothing in the dryer at the highest appropriate temperature as heat is the only way to kill the bugs.

Orkin offers the following tips to avoid bed bugs while travelling:

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New survey finds Peterborough is best in Canada for fewest bed bug cases - Peterborough Examiner

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The building management used me as bedbug ‘bait’: suit – New York Post

A Bronx woman is bugging out, claiming her buildings exterminators told her to stay in her apartment as bedbug bait after her apartment was sprayed for the pests, according to a Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit.

Dana Alonzo filed a suit against her building and its management company Thursday on behalf of herself and her infant son, alleging that the building told her that they should not vacate the apartment after the eradication attempt because [Alonzos] presence in the apartment was necessary to bait the bedbugs into the apartment, the court papers state.

Alonzos spouse stayed as bait but it was to no avail. She claims the bedbugs remained in the apartment after the treatment using chemical spray.

She initially discovered the pests by examining her infant son, who had red marks as a result of the infestations, according to the court papers. Alonzo alleges her son now has permanent scars.

The court filing argues that using chemical spray on bedbugs is not effective.

[Alonzo] suffered substantial financial cost, including but not limited [to] medical bills, laundry and cleaning bills, moving bills and the cost of replacing furniture that was infected with bedbugs and could not be brought to the new apartment without transferring the infestation, papers state.

Alonzo is suing for unspecific damages. She and her attorney declined to comment.

We stand by our long track record of resolving resident inquiries made by our residents quickly and professionally, and the issue that is the subject of this baseless lawsuit is no exception, a spokesperson for the buildings owner said.

Continued here:
The building management used me as bedbug 'bait': suit - New York Post

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Oregon’s bedbug secrecy law who are we protecting? – InvestigateWest

Redacted By Lee van der Voo, Managing Director | June 30, 2017

Pietr Naskrecki / CDC/Harvard University

Cimex lectularius

The thing that sucks about bedbugs is that if they bite you, you might not know it for a few days. Or if theyre biting around Oregon, you might not know it at all. I had this experience once: bedbugs in a hotel. At the time I didnt realize that a bedbug bite has such a delayed reaction that it can take a few days to know youve been feasted upon. Which is why, four days after an unwitting encounter with bedbugs at a hotel in Michigan, I came home to what seemed like an allergic reaction to nothing. Creeping skin and welts. Dawning realization. And a week of household mayhem that I wish to never repeat.

The experience gave me a rather acute distaste for Oregons bedbug privacy law. Yes, this exists; an actual law protecting the whereabouts of bedbugs. Its an exemption to the Oregon Public Records Law. And I will hold it now up as an affront to reason, because its a perfect example of why the Oregon Legislature should approve the creation of a Sunshine Committee to review exemptions, an idea that got a public hearing June 29 and may be approved before this sessions end.

The bedbug exemption? This ones a gem. In a category of legislative devolution, it should be gold-foiled and enshrined. Generations of gawkers should stand before it, wondering, as I do, How ? In concept, it is like an airplane with one wing, a building made of Jell-O But Ill do my best to describe its merits, because early on it had some.

Passed as HB 2131 in the 2013 regular session of the Legislature, the bedbug law requires certain information pertaining to bedbug infestations to be held confidentially by public health authorities and exempts information from disclosure under public records law.

As is the case with such exemptions, this one was created by well-meaning people who believed that by making information about bedbug extermination confidential, they could pass a law requiring pesticide companies to share data with the Oregon Health Authority and other public health agencies. The plan was to give the state and its counties valuable public safety knowledge about how to fight bedbugs. The data, they hoped, would lead to understanding about the size of the problem, and plans for better ways to deal with it.

Betsy Straus, legislative director of the ACLU at the time, rightly pointed out that the privacy information the law sought to except already was exempt from disclosure under Public Records Law in Oregon, and on a case-by-case basis. That, she said, would have allowed for information to be released to someone when it might have an even more immediate impact on that persons individual health. Today it isnt quite clear why pest control companies sought this extra layer of privacy in the form of exemption from Oregon Public Records Law. And Straus questioned in 2013 whether the states law would really yield much public benefit without transparency. The policy wasnt unprecedented health officials often offer confidentiality in exchange for critical data that helps them fight disease. San Francisco, for example, requires exterminators to report the number of units sprayed by U.S. Census tract monthly. Such legislation puts useful and transparent data in the governments hand without a privacy exemption for property owners.

But then this happened: the legislation which sprang from a public work group that included health officials and pest control companies was haggled over until pest control companies compliance with the reporting became voluntary. Thus, in researching the effect of this law for this column, I found not a single public health report, improved bug-fighting battle plan, or better-informed bedbug-fighting policy as a result of this exemption. In fact, theres been no greater understanding of the whereabouts of bedbugs than there was before this exemption. And thats because pest control companies never volunteered to play ball.

As it turned out, without the stick, the carrot was not enough, said Julie Sullivan-Springhetti, the public information officer for the Multnomah County Health Department. No information has been voluntarily forthcoming since the bill was passed.

Every. Item. Of fabric. In my house. Every shirt. Every pair of pants, shorts, pajamas. Every sock. Every sheet. Every throw blanket, pillowcase, bedspread. All washed in super hot.

Instead, said Sullivan-Springhetti, the countys work group met to discuss what data was available from pest control companies and the details the county would need to improve the public response to bedbugs for nine months. In the end, the industry walked away and said, This isnt workable, were not comfortable sharing this information.

Yet Oregon blazed a trail with this law. During the 2013 legislative session, Governing magazine, a trade publication for government and legislative types, called it an unusual deal between the states Legislature and its exterminators.

How unusual?

Four years later, Oregon is still unique in protecting the confidentiality of bedbug treatments among states surveyed nationally by the EPA last fall. No other state offers confidentiality around bedbug infestations. And Oregon doesnt protect its residents or guests against them in the first place.

For example, the state doesnt require landlords, hotel owners, bed and breakfasts or any other business that offers overnight accommodations (save, ironically, for campgrounds) to keep those facilities free of bedbugs, as other states do. Some states have taken protections further, extending them as far as railroad cars (Illinois), migrant camps (Iowa), orphanages and juvenile jails (Wisconsin), even public schools (New York). South Dakota protects vacation homes, too, perhaps understanding that a secret bedbug problem is a black eye that the states tourism industry doesnt need.

Yet Oregon still doesnt mandate the remediation of bedbug infestations anywhere except campgrounds, and it doesnt prohibit landlords, hotel owners, or Airbnb hosts from renting out rooms that are known to be infested with bedbugs. This, while a law thats never been used to collect data about bedbug infestations remains on the books, standing guard against disclosures about bedbug infestations, potentially complicating the fact that, by law, public housing inspectors just like restaurant inspections are still supposed to be public.

If policy were signs, this one would read something like this: Welcome to Oregon. Take our bedbugs with you. Getting paranoid yet? Me, too.

Mine is an informed paranoia, heightened because, in my own experience of being feasted on by bugs, it took me days to realize it. Days of evaluating where I slept, what I ate, whose cat I scratched, and whether that guy at the airport looked like he might have a host-jumping skin disease. Its a lot of time to wonder about a path to exposure. And absent any public information about hotels, restaurants, movie theaters and other places that might have been a source of bedbugs, one can only guess at what action they ought to take to protect the next person.

This is what that looked like for me: Four days after I returned home from my trip to the Michigan bug hotel, I was popping Zyrtec like a champ. I didnt know what Id eaten, why my skin felt so weird, or whether I could go to work or needed a nonstop shower. An hour or two of internet searching told me I didnt have a spider bite on my arm. And a few photos made me realize that those sheets back at the hotel occasionally dusty, like hubby had been eating dessert in the bed again probably had been visited by bedbugs.

It was a pretty dramatic realization. After all, four days had gone by. Id already hung my clothes back in the closet, put my suitcase back in storage and plopped back into my own bed for a few nights. So it was only after I called my brother-in-law (who, lucky for me, happens to be in pest control) in a semi-hysterical state that I began to understand what a hell-inducing experience this was going to be. On the advice of the family expert, I planted the feet of my bed in baking soda, combed every inch of my furniture with a flashlight, and then washed every item of fabric in my house. Let me say that again, real slow: Every. Item. Of fabric. In my house. Every shirt. Every pair of pants, shorts, pajamas. Every sock. Every sheet. Every throw blanket, pillowcase, bedspread. All washed in super hot. And all the fabric-covered things that dont go in the wash? Pillows, stuffed animals, dog toys all those go in the dryer. The rest got vacuumed about 50 times.

Turns out I didnt bring any bedbugs home. None I didnt kill, anyway. No hitchhikers on my suitcase, which I sprayed with half a can of bug spray to be sure. But that didnt stop my life or my basement from becoming an interminable tower of laundry, or from my having to take time off work just to clean my house, or to contemplate hitting my mattress with a Sawzall and throwing it out the window with a blazing torch behind it.

Would I rather have avoided this whole experience? Yes. And the notion that any hotel that inflicts any such experience on a guest is entitled to its privacy is infuriating, absurd and also nave. This exemption never would have saved bug-infested hotels from the fate of 100 Yelp reviews. It only would have prevented 100 Yelp reviewers from having a better experience.

Of course, the Oregon Restaurant and Lodging Association supported this approach to bedbugs in Oregon. An effective response relies on good data, and we believe that data should be collected in a way that fully protects the privacy of those businesses most impacted, wrote the associations Nellie deVries in testimony supporting the bill. Of course! Data protection and privacy! Who doesnt support those? But we know that if people could actually avoid hotels that were infested with bedbugs, or even areas of hotels that are infested with bedbugs, they would. And they have a right to.

But this column is not about bedbugs. Its about secrecy. And so at least our bedbug law finally has a use: to underscore how badly Oregon needs to review the more than 550 exemptions to Oregon Public Records Law, many of which probably never did what was intended and, meanwhile, threaten harm to the public.

The Oregon Legislature currently is considering HB 2101, which in its present form proposes a Sunshine Committee to review exemptions, and that each freshly proposed exemption comes with a public impact statement that addresses what the impact to closing off records has on the Oregon public.

This group would include at least one public member, and the option for public participation at meetings designed to review these laws. It is badly needed in Oregon to prevent more laws like this one.

Lee van der Voo is managing director of InvestigateWest. She coordinates and reports on projects in Oregon. She can be reached at lee@invw.org.

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What to Do When Bedbugs Bite at Work – SHRM (blog)


SHRM (blog)
What to Do When Bedbugs Bite at Work
SHRM (blog)
Bedbugsthose nasty parasites that feed off human bloodare typically a household problem. But every now and then, the critters find their way into the workplace, as they did last week at BuzzFeed's headquarters in New York City. We are acting out ...

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What to Do When Bedbugs Bite at Work - SHRM (blog)

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What to Do When Bedbugs Bite at Work – SHRM

What to Do When Bedbugs Bite at Work
SHRM
Bedbugsthose nasty parasites that feed off human bloodare typically a household problem. But every now and then, the critters find their way into the workplace, as they did last week at BuzzFeed's headquarters in New York City. The infestation ...

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What to Do When Bedbugs Bite at Work - SHRM

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