Category Archives: Bedbug Infestations

Manitoba Declares War on Bedbugs

A good portions of our orders come from Manitoba.  This below article is republished from the Winnipeg Free Press (fun fact -  Natalie from Canada-Bedbug.com’s  great-grandfather was the editor of the Winnipeg Free Press many, many years ago).

Bedbugs in Winnipeg Manitoba Declares War on BedbugsThe province will unveil its $770,000 battle plan against bedbugs today to enlist Manitobans of every stripe to get the upper hand on the pests that have infested many homes and businesses across the province.

The government will institute a bedbug website and hotline and put together a coalition of municipalities, health authorities and business groups to come up with a common solution to get rid of bedbugs.

However, the plan does not include mandatory public reporting of places that have bedbugs, which had been requested by paramedics and other professionals who must enter a large number of homes and buildings.

MP Pat Martin, who battled a bedbug infestation at his Winnipeg Centre constituency office, said Wednesday night the Selinger government’s strategy won’t work without a mandatory registry.

“People have a right to know if there is a risk of contact with these nightmare parasites, whether you are a potential renter, a tradesman or a first responder attending an emergency,” he said.

More details of the province’s bedbug strategy will be outlined by Healthy Living, Youth and Seniors Minister Jim Rondeau at a bedbug symposium at Assiniboine College in Brandon.

The money is for the first year of the bedbug blitz, as it’s acknowledged bedbugs won’t go out without a fight.

“Bedbugs can cause a great deal of stress and financial hardship for those affected,” Rondeau said in a prepared statement obtained by the Free Press. “They are not exclusive to any one area or group of people. Everyone in our communities will have a role to play in finding affordable solutions.”

The bedbug fight comes as multiple levels of government in Canada and the United States look for the best way to fight the parasites, regarded as rare in North America as recently as a decade ago, but now a daily occurrence.

Cities across the continent have seen a surge in bedbugs, partly because of an increase in international travel, but also because of a ban on highly toxic pesticides such as DDT and a growing bedbug resistance to lower-strength insecticides.

Ontario was first province to roll out an anti-bedbug plan, a $5-million strategy to educate Ontarians and fund public health agencies across that province to go on the offensive against the pests.

“It’s a global problem,” Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger said in a recent interview. “Where it attacks a building, and people that are living in the building, we have to be willing to get involved and work with them through the private sector, through the public sector and with the different levels of government.”

Manitoba’s strategy will give qualifying organizations access to specialized materials to help combat bedbugs at low cost. Items such as mattress and box-spring encasements, specialized laundry bags and insect monitors will be included.

A grant program will be introduced to help not-for-profit community organizations in their education, management and prevention efforts.

The province has enlisted Winnipeg Mayor Sam Katz. Katz, who has pledged city staff will work with the province and other organizations to attack bedbugs.

The first part of the strategy will be evident in several weeks through a media campaign focusing on prevention and eradication. It will include brochures, posters, fact sheets and a bedbug website, which will provide information on how to prevent and identify an infestation and what steps to take when one happens.

A bedbug phone line will be set up to give information to Manitobans. Calls will be tracked to help evaluate the bedbug situation throughout the province.

In Winnipeg, bedbugs have recently been found in places as varied as Martin’s office, the Millennium Library and an increasing number of city apartments and homes.

Winnipeg’s 311 telephone service fielded 638 bedbug complaints in 2010, up from 504 the year before. The sites included 283 apartments, 93 rooming houses, 21 personal-care facilities and 10 commercial premises.

Manitoba’s decision to fight bedbugs makes sense, according to one pest-control company that’s been pushing for more public education to keep the bugs from spreading.

“Right on. Our big push has been education and they’re taking us seriously. It’s great,” said Shaun Jeffrey, manager of Abell Pest Control. Last year, the company took 2,800 calls to get rid of bedbugs. Six years ago, it was a handful.

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Landlord Takes a Tough Stance on Bedbugs

Winnipeg landlord Leon Wieler keeps his building bedbug free by taking a hardball approach to bedbug prevention.

Written by Jen Skerritt

bedbug free landlord1 300x243 Landlord Takes a Tough Stance on BedbugsA local landlord has cooked up a solution to help stop bloodsucking bugs from crawling into bed with more people.

Leon Wieler has converted an old trailer into an oven, but the hot temperatures aren’t for breads and muffins. It’s designed to heat mattresses, box springs and any other furniture with crevices that can harbour bedbugs to a “killing temperature” that can annihilate the pests.

Wieler first started researching how to squash bedbug infestations when the first one turned up at his Sherbrook Street building four years ago. He discovered that heat is the bedbug’s Achilles’ heel and now uses the bedbug baker as one of his key weapons to prevent the spread of apartment infestations.

Anyone who moves into the building with a history of bedbugs loads their furniture into the makeshift machine, which uses fans and heaters to 75 C. Tenants caught dragging mattresses down the hallway or spraying raid in their suites instead of confessing they have a bedbug problem could be handed an eviction notice.

Wieler’s plan seems to be working. His building has been bedbug-free for six months.

“I figured I should do something about this because I do everything hands-on,” Wieler said, noting he studied to become a licenced exterminator to beef up his bug knowledge. “I’m very serious about bedbugs. Some might even call me anal.”

Wieler’s approach has gained traction among some Winnipeg landlords who are desperate to attack the growing problem.

Bedbugs have infested hundreds of apartments and have been reported everywhere from personal care homes to libraries. It’s a problem cities across North America are encountering, partly because of an increase in international travel and a ban on highly toxic pesticides such as DDT, and a growing bedbug resistance to some insecticides.

Multiple levels of government in Canada and the United States are trying to draft strategies on how best to tackle the problem.

Wieler said his approach is simple: get tenants to co-operate, educate them on how to prevent the spread of bedbugs and ensure the exterminator does a thorough job. He asks his tenants to notify him first if they spot a problem so they can deal with it early before the infestation gets worse.

Wieler said all furniture in an infected suite is wrapped in plastic and taken to the parking lot to be put in the bedbug baker. The suite is prepped for spraying, treated twice, and Wieler installs interceptors on bed frames to catch any lingering bug.

“It’s a big, big problem, and it’s getting worse,” he said.

Wieler is consulting with other landlords to help them rid their apartments of the bloodsucking pests.

Wieler said he recently visited a Broadway apartment building where 21 out of 50 suites had bedbugs.

Wieler said he’s never had an infestation spread from one suite to another, though he has spent his own money to help prep suites and address the problem.

He spent several thousand dollars installing fans and heaters to build the bedbug baker but doesn’t plan to get it patented. Wieler said an American inventor patented something similar to get rid of pine beetles.

He’s also paid out-of-pocket to help tenants prepare their suite for chemical treatment.

“It’s expensive,” he said. “On the other hand, my building has no bugs.”

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition February 19, 2011 A10

Bedbugs Found at Canada Winter Games

bedbug nova scotia 300x224 Bedbugs Found at Canada Winter Games Bedbugs have forced 85 athletes and coaches competing at the Canada Winter Games to be moved from the Tim Hortons Children’s Camp at Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia, 90 minutes northeast of Halifax.  The camp was being used to house athletes for the Halifax-centred Canada Games, which run until Feb. 27.

The camp was being used as lodging for freestyle skiers and coaches competing this week at Ski Wentworth.  Athletes from eight provinces and territories were staying in other “pods” at the camp and were not affected by the outbreak in the unused dorm.

Canada Winter Games CEO Chris Morrissey said the bedbugs were found in an unused dorm at the camp.  “No evidence of bedbugs were found where the athletes were staying,” Morrissey said at a news conference in Halifax.  The athletes involved in the relocation were competing at a nearby ski hill. They were relocated to a military base in Halifax as a precaution and will stay there for the duration of the Games.  No evidence of bedbugs was found in any area where the athletes were staying, a release from Games officials emphasized.

canada winter games 300x169 Bedbugs Found at Canada Winter Games The organization running the camp where bedbugs forced 85 Canada Games athletes out of their accommodations says it’s dealing with the same problem faced by camps and hotels around the world.  “We are in the same situation now that the entire hospitality industry is facing,” said Dave Newnham, executive director of the Tim Hortons Children’s Foundation.

The bedbugs were discovered in the weeks leading up to the Games, but organizers thought that a steam cleaning followed and opening the dorms to the freezing cold would eradicate them.  Morrissey reported that the dorms are being inspected twice a day for any sign of a return.

bed bug games 300x183 Bedbugs Found at Canada Winter Games Bed bugs have done nothing to dampen the competitive spirits of the young freestyle skiers competing at the Canada Winter Games at Ski Wentworth.  “It’s had no impact whatsoever,” said Team Alberta manager Patrick Breault.

While Robert Strang, Nova Scotia’s chief public health officer, reminds those concerned that, “the risk of athletes being exposed to bedbugs is no greater than the risk to anyone traveling”, the reports are an uncomfortable reminder that bedbugs, which not too many years ago were rarely a major concern, are now becoming a problem.



Forum on Preventing and Eradicating Bedbugs

By Scott Taylor
LEWISTON — Professor James Dill got his first good groan of the day when he talked about the bedbug’s “piercing, sucking mouth part.”

The close-up picture on the screen behind him, illustrating the pest’s sharp proboscis, certainly added to the effect. A few people groaned; several laughed nervously.

bedbug discussion1 Forum on Preventing and Eradicating BedbugsAnd many began to scratch involuntarily.

“That’s the business end,” he said. “And what does it feed on?”

Nearly all 140 people attending a forum at Bates College on Friday replied, almost in unison: “Blood.”

Everyone in the room, which included health officials, social workers, landlords, health care workers and contractors, was quite familiar with bedbugs and their piercing, sucking mouth parts.

The topic of the forum sponsored by the Lewiston-Auburn Health Committee was what to do about the pests.

Dill, pest management specialist at the University of Maine Cooperative Extension, said there may be nothing we can do about them in the long term.

“Eradication is really tough,” Dill said. “We may be able to eradicate a bedbug population in an apartment or even a building. But eradicating bedbugs in our lifetime, that’s probably something we won’t ever see.”

The bugs have evolved alongside their human hosts, and that makes them tough to combat. They are small — adults may be 5 millimeters long, while eggs and newly hatched nymphs can be less than a millimeter in length.

That means they can hide just about anywhere.

“The thing about them is, they could be on a light switch,” he said. “The screw on a light switch, there could be a dozen eggs in the slot on that screw — or more. Bedbugs are not just in your bed, they’re not just beside your bed. They can be anywhere.”

The bugs are nervous, hiding when they sense movement, venturing out from cracks in the walls and floors to feed once every few days.

Dill blamed a number of factors for the bug’s resurgence in recent years — a more mobile society, less reliance on sprayed pesticides and evolved resistance to pesticides we do use were the top reasons.

For example, one common treatment has been to use “diatomaceous earth,” a powder that contains sharp, microscopic shards. The powder can be puffed into cracks where the bugs hide, cutting their tough cuticle shells and killing them.

bedbug appearance 300x224 Forum on Preventing and Eradicating BedbugsIn response, Dill said bedbugs have started evolving harder shells.

Many hire experts to battle the pests, according to panelists at the forum.

One tool is to use heat: Consistent temperatures above 120 degrees kills the adults and eggs instantly. But it’s expensive, said Ted St. Amand, president of Atlantic Pest Solutions, costing thousands of dollars to treat a single apartment.

“There is a heck of a learning curve when it comes to heat,” St. Amand said. “You are not just looking at the composition and the structure of the room, but the dynamics of the wall and floor coverings — plaster, carpeting. They might hold the heat, or they might deflect it.”

Chemicals and pesticides can still work well and are less expensive, but multiple treatments are necessary, Paul Morin of Modern Pest Control said.

“With chemical treatment, you don’t kill the eggs,” he said. “You have to do the treatment, wait two weeks for the eggs to hatch and then treat again to kill the hatchlings.”

Both tools are important, said Kathy Murray, an entomologist with the Maine Department of Agriculture.

“But the most important tool is knowing what you have and where,” she said. Regular inspections and awareness of the problem are the best strategies.

“We’ve had situations where someone had something precious they didn’t want to get sprayed or heated up,” Murray said. “They took it out before the treatment, then brought it back after everything was done and they reinfected the house.”

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Bedbug Reach the Yukon

This is an interesting article by John Thompson of the Yukon News. Click here to view original article.

Think the Yukon is safe from the scourge of bedbugs because of our cold climate?

Think again.P3bedbugs Bedbug Reach the Yukon

The bloodsuckers have tormented Sherrill Armstrong, a social housing tenant who lives on the second floor of 408 Alexander Street in Whitehorse, since July.

As if that weren’t bad enough, Armstrong also had to worry about a threatening letter sent to her by the Yukon Housing Corporation, which owns the building. It warns her that she owes $711 for fumigation costs and the disposal of her bug-ridden bed.

That’s a lot of money for someone on a fixed income, such as Armstrong.

“Failure to make arrangements to pay this amount by January 18, 2011 may result in a termination of your tenancy,” warns the January 4 letter.

Armstrong never replied. “I’m not paying for something I can’t control,” she said.

Thankfully, the housing corporation has since stood down on its threat, following a phone call from the Yukon News.

The corporation typically charges tenants for the cost of damage to units, said housing corporation spokesperson Nathalie Ouellet.

But, given the “ambiguous” nature of a bedbug infestation, they’ve decided to suspend the fee until the corporation sorts out how to deal with bedbug problems, she said.

Blame is difficult to pin down with bedbugs.

Armstrong suspects the bugs crawled up from the unit directly below her, which, she claims, had a bedbug infestation earlier in the summer.

She also wonders whether recent renovations may have stirred up the bugs, when the building had its siding, carpets and linoleum replaced.

And Armstrong faults the housing corporation for taking too long to deal with the bedbug menace. “They prolonged it and it just got worst,” she said.

But Ouellet disputes all of this. To the corporation’s knowledge, only two social housing units have had recent bedbug infestations. The other is not in Armstrong’s building – it’s in a stand-alone house. “They’re not related,” said Ouellet.

And in both cases, the corporation quickly dispatched fumigators, said Ouellet.

She stressed that, to date, bedbugs are “not a big problem here.”

But the pests have crawled their way back into many North American cities over the past five years, so their arrival in Whitehorse shouldn’t be a surprise.

Nor would it be surprising if there were a wider bedbug problem that has so far gone unreported. Armstrong, for one, has heard they’re a problem at one low-budget hotel in Whitehorse.

Bedbugs don’t spread disease, so they aren’t considered a public health threat. But they’re horrid to live with – and remarkably hard to get rid of.

Armstrong started finding red blotches on her arms and legs, “like chickenpox,” in July. But she never witnessed the bugs bite her. Bedbugs prefer to strike in the deep of night.

When she saw a doctor about her problem, he told her she had a bedbug problem.

Armstrong washed all her clothes in hot water. She had her apartment steam-cleaned, vacuumed and fumigated twice. She had her baseboards caulked – the bugs often hide in tiny cracks in the wall during the day.

And Armstrong’s buggy bed was thrown out. She now sleeps on the sofa, which she steams twice a day.

Armstrong hopes the bugs are gone. But it doesn’t appear they are. She pulls up one pant leg to reveal a dime-sized red rash.

But she doesn’t want to throw out the sofa as well. “It’s a good couch,” she said. And then where would she sleep?

No point in buying a new bed, either. “Why bring in something new, when I’d just need to throw it out? I don’t think it’s safe.”

Armstrong is in her mid-50s. She’s not well. She’s suffered two strokes, and she’s socially isolated.

She hasn’t slept well in recent months, knowing that bugs may be gnawing at her through the night. She’s become a “nervous wreck,” she said.

Orkin PCO Services offers fumigation services in the Yukon. But its Kelowna-based branch manager, Rob Wiebe, was unable to say how many bedbug calls they’ve dealt with in Whitehorse lately: his Yukon fumigator recently departed.

However, Wiebe has observed a “steady increase” in the number of bedbug outbreaks across Western Canada over the past five years.

Growing international travel is partly to blame. Canadians travel to buggy parts of the world and bring the pests back with them.

Blame also the bedbug’s resilient genes, which have grown resistant to certain poisons.

Wiebe, for his part, also blames the banning of certain poisons. Apartments were once commonly nuked with organophosphates as a preventative strike against cockroaches and bedbugs. But these chemicals have been taken off market, for fear they may be poisoning people too.

“Bedbugs have always been around,” said Wiebe. “But now we have no effective chemicals to deal with them.”

People often feel ashamed because of bedbug infestations, but their presence is not an indication of hygiene. They’ve found their way into five-star hotels. Armstrong had never dealt with bedbugs until July.

Most people will never know they’ve been bitten by a bedbug, said Wiebe. Red welts are the result of an allergic reaction, he said.

The insects inject a numbing agent into your skin before they feast. “The only time you might notice is a tiny blood spot on your sheet.”

It takes a bedbug about 10 minutes to feed. During that time it can drink three times its own weight, growing red and fat.

They’re able to live up to a year before feeding again. But, if they can, bedbugs like to feed weekly.

Bedbugs are excellent hitchhikers, which is what allows them to spread so easily. Cold weather isn’t a deterrent – they can survive temperatures as cold as -35 Celsius.

If a bedbug stowaway has found its way into your coat, chances are it will hang on tight as you trundle through the cold—until you’ve reached your warm, soon-to-be-buggy home.

To reach the writer of this article, contact John Thompson at johnt@yukon-news.com