Sunday, April 20, 2014

Recurring bed bug infestations displace Holder residents

ProChem Proactive - One of the places bedbugs love to hide.
Daily Princetonian (2014) explained,

Bed bugs continue to be a problem in Holder Hall and Forbes College. Following two reports of bed bugs last September, at least four reports were confirmed this March.

The students have been temporarily moved to graduate housing, a move different from last year, when four students were moved to single rooms in 1915 hall, in Butler College.

Only the infestation in Holder Hall was disclosed to students. Residents in Rockefeller and Mathey Colleges received emails informing them of the situation.

“It makes sense for you to avoid visiting Holder Hall until further notice,” an email sent to Mathey students on Tuesday by Mathey College Office administrator Patricia Byrne read.

Students in Forbes College did not receive any email, according to students consulted.

University Spokesperson Martin Mbugua explained that cases of bed bugs were reported in Holder Hall on March 22, March 25 and March 31. The University also confirmed another report in Forbes College on April 10, Mbugua said.

Mbugua noted that all of the affected Holder Hall rooms have been chemically treated, and that monitoring of the affected adjacent rooms is ongoing. The affected room in Forbes will be treated this week, he added.

However, according to an email sent to Rocky residents by Housing and Real Estate Services manager Kenneth Paulaski, at least the Rocky rooms will actually commence treatment on Wednesday morning. It remains unclear if Paulaski and Mbugua were referring to the same cases, or whether more cases have been reported recently.

“Any time there is an email, I’m assuming there is a separate room being treated,” Rohan Bhargava ’14, a Rocky residential college adviser, said, adding that he was unsure whether the Tuesday email signified that additional students would be moved out.

Jacob Sackett-Sanders ’16, one of the affected students, has been living in Stanworth Apartments graduate housing for about two weeks.

“It’s fine; it’s not that far of a walk,” Sackett-Sanders said.

Sackett-Sanders said a friend in a different room told him he had bed bugs in his room soon after returning from spring break, but he wasn’t acting on the problem. He said he immediately reported the issue to his RCA, who passed it along to the Rocky College Office.

“They got him out of his room the next day,” Sackett-Sanders said. “They came and set traps in our rooms.”

Seven students and three rooms were affected in Holder by the latest outbreak, Sackett-Sanders noted, adding that he moved into Stanworth about a week after the first student did, because the traps in his room revealed the presence of bed bugs. Four students including Sackett-Sanders moved into Stanworth, whereas three went to other locations, Sackett-Sanders told the ‘Prince’.

Sackett-Sanders said no bed bugs were visible in his quad, but they were visible in his friend’s room.

The response of the Rocky administration to the problem has been prompt, according to Sackett-Sanders.

“Hats off to the Rocky administration. They’ve been the best part of this whole thing,” Sackett-Sanders said, adding that members of the Rocky administration met with the affected students on Monday and gave them different options for housing, including remaining in Stanworth and moving back into their treated rooms in Holder.

Sackett-Sanders said he chose to remain in Stanworth for the remainder of the academic year.

Thomas Kloehn ’17, a Holder resident, said he was aware of the presence of bed bugs in some rooms in Holder, but said the problem was contained to a few rooms.

“It really hasn’t been [a problem] in my part of the building,” Kloehn said.

David Kolet-Mandrikov ’17, another Holder resident, said he only became aware of the presence of bed bugs on Tuesday.

The Environmental Protection Agency website suggests that the best way to identify a possible bed bug infestation is by looking for physical signs, like spotted bedding and the presence of larvae and eggs on bedding.

Bite marks on the skin are a “poor indicator of a bed bug infestation,” according to the EPA website.

The email from Byrne advised students to contact Customer Services during business hours or the Department of Public Safety after two hours if they suspect the presence of bed bugs in their rooms, and to avoid clutter and bringing in secondhand items, such as furniture or televisions.

Rocky Dean Oliver Avens deferred comment to the Housing Services; Housing Services, in turn, deferred comment to Mbugua.

Staff writer Chitra Marti contributed reporting.
http://dailyprincetonian.com/news/2014/04/recurring-bed-bug-infestations-in-holder-force-students-to-be-displaced/

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Battered woman complains of shelter bed bugs Shelter: woman not kicked out for bed bug complaints

Ksat (2014) explained,
SAN ANTONIO -

A woman escaping domestic violence in Houston complained that she and her three children were subjected to bed bugs at a San Antonio shelter and then asked to leave.

The woman, who KSAT 12 is not identifying due to her situation, displayed bite marks up and down her arm and on her neck. Her 13-year-old daughter has a collection of bites as well and so does her 15-year-old son.

The bites, they said, came from bed bugs at the San Antonio Battered Women's and Children's shelter.
"No one's going to live with bed bugs,” the daughter said. “It's nasty. I can't even go to school because I'm sick and I have these bites all over me."

Her mother said the family escaped an abusive home life and ended up fighting bed bugs.

"It's not fair,” the mother said. “Just because you're homeless doesn't mean that you have to live like that. Just because you're in a situation, children shouldn't have to live like that."

She said the shelter kicked her out after she complained and called Metro Health.

"They had the police come out and escort me off of the campus and they said they were done with me," the mother said.

A report from Metro Health shows inspectors from the agency came out and that the shelter provided a pest control receipt from a recent treatment that said two rooms had already been sprayed.

Metro Health was unable to inspect the rooms because they were sealed by the pest control company.

The woman said she and her kids then spent one night in their car, which is packed with everything from ramen noodles to lots of medication.

Marta Pelaez, the president and CEO of the shelter, said the stories that are being told are false and that the shelter is safe and livable.

Pelaez said she could not say anything about a particular client because of privacy issues. She did say the shelter does not kick people out for complaining and that there has not been a bed bug epidemic.

The mother stands by her story.

"I had to do what I had to do for my children,” the mother said. “That no one should live under those circumstances."

The family is now at another shelter, again hoping to restart their lives.

The woman said she wants to prevent this from happening to other people who go to that shelter.

http://www.ksat.com/news/battered-woman-complains-of-shelter-bed-bugs/25217618