Thursday, December 9, 2010
2 gallon zip loc bags
Other shops have not paid any attention, so this is a real find. They are made by GAM Associates in Goshen, NY 10924 - and sold as the Nicole Home Collection.
So if you don't live near Jack's in Manhattan, try googling that information.
Monday, November 22, 2010
Next Media Animation mocks America's epidemic
While New York wastes time with deadly and useless chemicals to treat bedbugs (see previous post), New Haven in Connecticut has the solution. And excerpt from the New Haven Independent spells it out. Hopefully Bloomberg will get the hint or get impeached. I do not mind saying he is a stupid, incompetent jerk who is noted for having fondled his male interns. Don't like what I am saying then don't read my blog!
On Wednesday morning Housing Authority of New Haven (HANH) officials scheduled a pre-bid conference for contractors who would like to provide it with the Temp-Air-40kw Mobile Heat Treatment System and training in order to elminate bed bugs throughout city projects.
This equipment has already completely eliminated bed bugs at the Tower One and Tower Two senior developments, according to HANH Chief Operating Officer Renee Dobos,
“It’s a quick kill,” said Lee Purvis, the HANH staffer in charge of the project.
HANH officials said they haven’t experienced a spike or invasion of bed bugs. They want to get ahead of any new problem that might develop.
HANH did a pilot on eight apartments already. It worked, officials said. Each thermal radiation machine costs about $50,000; the HANH hopes to buy two.
Within six to nine months, Dobos said, all affected apartments in the system should be cleaned.
Harmful chemicals used in New York to combat bedbugs
Gentrol EPA # 2724-351 The active ingredient is hydroprene, which interferes with normal juvenile hormone levels within the insect, creating an imbalance at critical periods in insect development and maturation.
Sterifab EPA # 397-13 Active ingredients are 3-phenoxybenzyl D-cis, trans 2.2-dimethyl-3-(2-methylpropenyl) cyclopropanecarboxylate, isopropyl alchohol, didecyl dimethyl ammonium chloride n-alkyl and dimethyl benzyl ammonium chloride.
Ecopco D.x EPA # 67425-16 The active ingredient is 2-Phenethyl Propionate, a botanical insecticide, which all dealers refuse to sell to users in New York State.
Demon ultrawet powder EPA # 432-1304 The active ingredient is cypermethrin, a synthetic pyrethroid used as an insecticide in large-scale commercial agricultural applications. It behaves as a fast-acting neurotoxin in insects. Cypermethrin is highly toxic to fish, bees and aquatic insects, according to the National Pesticides Telecommunications Network (NPTN). Excessive exposure can cause nausea, headache, muscle weakness, salivation, shortness of breath and seizures.
D-force-Hpx EPA # 9444-217 The active ingredient is deltamethrin, which produces typical type II motor symptoms in mammals. Type II symptoms include a writhing syndrome in rodents, as well as copious salivation. Acute exposure effects in humans include the following: ataxia, convulsions leading to muscle fibrillation and paralysis, dermatitis, edema, diarrhea, dyspnea, headache, hepatic microsomal enzyme induction, irritability, peripheral vascular collapse, rhinorrhea, serum alkaline phosphatase elevation, tinnitus, tremors, vomiting and death due to respiratory failure. Allergic reactions have included the following effects: anaphylaxis, bronchospasm, eosinophilia, fever, hypersensitivity pneumonia, pallor, pollinosis, sweating, sudden swelling of the face, eyelids, lips and mucous membranes, and tachycardia. Studies have shown many cases of dermal deltamethrin poisoning after agricultural use with inadequate handling precautions, and many cases of accidental or suicidal poisoning by the oral route at doses estimated to be 2- 250 mg/kg. Oral ingestion caused epigastric pain, nausea, vomiting and coarse muscular fasciculations. With doses of 100-250 mg/kg, coma was caused within 15-20 minutes.
Saturday, October 9, 2010
From the Vigilant to the Waldorf
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Of bugs and nerds
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
TURN ON THE HEAT!
But whatever, the sprays do not work. They are a way of placating people and getting on record some action so landlords can avoid taking real action. As they benefit large chemical companies, there is a conspiracy of silence in a world run by billionaire idiot politicians. Ooops, did I say idiot? Yes I did, and since this is my blog, that is not going to be deleted as were my comments on www.bedbugger.com. They also deleted a very pertinent comment I made about druggies being a danger to society when they walk around spreading bedbugs...I wonder who runs that site. What I do not see often there is real mention of how to get rid of bugs...#1 is heat, as TIME and other publications tell you - going so far as to mention that chemical sprays, especially DDT - are ineffective. Turn up the heat to 114 degrees Farenheit, and you will quash the bug. End of problem. It really is that simple.
#2, or maybe it ought to be #1, is cleanliness.
#3 is ziploc everything they may get into, on this blog I spotted where in Manhattan one can buy ziplocs up to 20 gallon size.
What does it take for politicians, journalists and anonymous commentators to act? Are they deliberately trying to talk over the facts so that this bedbug epidemic lasts and lasts, an endless opportunity to sell chemicals? That has happened in the past; William Farish (grandpa of WF III, who was Bush's appointee as US Ambassador to the Court of St. James') was indicted for working with Standard Oil to prolong WWII so they could make more profits...this happens all the time...Philip Habib in the Pentagon surpressed good intel about Hanoi which led to troop inaction and the prolonging of the Vietnam War...and what about this nice little profitable war halfway around the world? Profits for chemical companies...more napalm...depleted uranium which has poisoned hundreds of thousands of US troops...
The war on bugs could be won in weeks, with a government initiative to heat buildings that are government run or low income. Information on cleanliness and ziploc bags could be disseminated, with free bags to low income people.
But that would end this crisis. The Daily News, the NY Post, and the NY Times have not shown any interest in ending it, and I wonder about the site, www.bedbugger.com
So attack me if you want, it is obvious I am making enemies here; oh the gentlre art of making enemies! But it has to be done. Or else we will have millions of enemies crawling up our backs at night.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
20 Gallons ziploc bags
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Steps to eradicate bedbugs
So here it is. Get lots of ziplock bags. I keep books, papers, socks, etc. in these,
and my hanging gear hanging in full length dry cleaning bags.
As to ziplocks, it's hard to source large ones. In Manhattan I found a 99cent store
on 23rd near 8th that had gallon size bags, which hold 81/2 x 11s, (but not UK A4, which is taller)
for $1.29. The ten gallon size bags, 20" x 24", hold oversize - but cost $7.99 for four at Duane Reade, though not all DR carry these, I got mine near Penn Station.
The bugs have less places to breed this way, and I can put on clean threads each day and not carry them around. This is important. I do not have to scratch on the subway. It is not hard to defeat them.
They tend not to like splippery surfaces, one sufferer noted they do not climb the smooth wood on pool tables, but this is not 100%. They can if they really need to, but it does help.
Putting sticky traps around the bedposts also works.
But the real way to be rid of them I hear is heat, 113 degrees, or excessive cold.
Another tactic is to keep a spray bottle of acohol for those close encounters.
And take a bath before bed, so your smell is less obvious - mask it with alcohol, lotion, oil, etc.
And of course lots of periodic cleaning.
Hope this helps and please leave any other tips as a comment so we can add to this list.
Update on the Vigilant and its guests
Sometimes I can be mean, as many journalists can attest. It started with a hapless teacher I had at PS 64, who sent me home with a note to my mother to complain about my attitude. The next day, the note was signed and in the teacher's hands. She looked it over and demanded to know why it was scribbled over. I had to tell her my mother had me correct her spelling. And I've been correcting the spelling of the hapless ever since, whether they by journalists, mayors, or weak young men who can't hold a paintbrush.
And of course building managers and owners who can't get good help.
And then of course I have the same proclivities towards local politicians who are out-of-touch with reality - and that might or might not be Christine Quinn, who has not responded to two emails and whose phone does not pick up; or Mike Bloomberg, who leaves NY every Friday morning to play in the Bahamas. Or any number of other employees who take our hard earned and play games while we have to host these bugs.
So maybe I will be giving Quinn and Bloomberg the number of army recruiting; but I don't think they would want them any more than the hapless blubberer.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
TIME article on bugs
The problem is growing out of control. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the EPA, and the Department of Defense are all involved. Why the latter? Because this is a real and present danger. If it continues to infest the US, it will bring the US to a halt. People in Ohio sleep outside so bad are the bugs in their houses.
In NY, the press continues to sleep, copying the odd press release from AP, or trying to sell us DDT (which TIME notes is useless). I went to the offices of the Daily News on Thursday, only to be shut out. I called them, and no one wanted to give a name or tell me why they were ignoring a story about the building down the road from them where former servicemen are evicted for cleaning; and where thousands of bugs leave each day to infest America. I guess the Daily News does not care about America or its servicemen. They do care about themselves, with high security all over that building. It's like trying to talk to scared sissies. What are they afraid of? All I had in my hands was the article from the Epoch Times...and of course the dangerous weapons os sarcasm...way too much for them to take. When I asked their names they refused to be identified. What stinking cowards.
The Post did a lengthy piece this week by a rich person - they seem to do one whenever someone rich or trendy gets a bug - who also did not want to be identified - writing under the nom de plume of Cordelia von Bedbug. I wonder if any of it was even true. But that may be just my cynical nature. Which may be due in part to the fact that crackheads write major stories in the press here in NY that are not true or are stolen from other journalists - just ask Jayson Blair of the New York Times; from which I am still waiting to hear back.
In the meantime, I have fired off a letter to Christine Quinn, one of the most powerful politicians in NYC - and so we will see what she does about this. BTW, the building is a one minute walk from her office...
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Front page story about bedbugs in Epoch Times
The Epoch Times did a large front page article about where they are in NY, and how to get rid of them. And I helped with that article. It is not often I am surprised by a journalist's diligence - Justin Brown is one reporter who did a great job (and got fired for it after questioning the local politicians in his reporting on the Kenmore Hotel in NY), and Genevieve Roberts at the Independent/Evening Standard in London are two stars in that world, which for the most part I find lackluster. Now Andrea Hayley shines in my opinion. She took weeks to do this story, looked up the science on the subject, talked to a number of experts and politicians, and actually snuck into a male only establishment late at night to get her scoop.
The site of her clandestine nocturnal escapades is the Vigilant Hotel, situated at 370 Eighth Avenue in Manhattan. It is where I collected 4,000 bebugs in one room in 4 months. From its portals it is estimated that a steady stream of 2,000 bugs a week leave on the residents and the trash. And this has been going on for years, so it is thought by many to be the 'Ground Zero' of New York's epidemic.
For some reason management does not want residents to clean it; former paratrooper Chris Lugo was told to leave immediately after trying to clean his room of bugs, thousands of them he notes in the article.
To be fair to the owner, Hayley called the hotel and interviewed the manager, Mike Snell, who tried somewhat to defend the situation. But there is not much defence here - not for a place where garbage cans go uncovered and mice play in them all the time. Not in a place that evicts people for cleaning. Not in a place where the ceiling style of the rooms harbours mice and bugs - they refuse a court order to change this.
So what are New Yorkers to do about this place that breeds bedbugs? Possibly nothing. Which means that the bugs will win, they will come out and bite you, your babies, your pets, and anything with blood. They will defecate all over anything and leave their outer shells around when they moult. So, as Snell, the Vigilant manager seems to urge, just get used to it. Those are your options. Fight or die.
What things ought the city and its residents do? #1 is take over the Vigilant as a menace to society. Get a hold of the owners - Hayley notes that she couldn't quite track down 'Yumin Management' btb owned by Etsuko Takeuchi - and throw them out. As for individuals, thouroughly clean your apartment. Then get ziploc and snapshut bags and containers, place all papers in the bags and other things that might hide bugs in containers. Get sticky traps around the legs of your beds. And urge your legislators to close the Vigilant.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Office bugs
Monday, August 23, 2010
Mosque plans lower Manhattan cancelled due to bedbugs
http://www.thespoof.com/news/spoof.cfm?headline=s2i81136
Some basic facts about bedbugs
We also hear that DDT is supposed to get rid of them; au contraire, they actually increased when DDT was used. One wonders if someone is trying to sell this illegal chemical. Use it and the Bald Eagle will be destroyed - it was banned for this very reason in 1972. It is also bad for humans.
Then there are all the ads for sprays; it has been proven that most of these do not work. Bedbugs are good at developing immunities.
Then we are told they can go without food for six months. Actually, they can go up to 15 months without a drop of our precious blood.
And it seems that they are nocturnal: no, they come out whenever they can, day or night, summer or winter, though they are somewhat of a warm weather fiend. They do not all hibernate in the winter, that is false.
And one more attempted falsehood is the insinuation that they come from the poor and/or immigrants. In reality, they seem to like the Upper East Side, the Hamptons, upscale clothing shops, rare book rooms, etc. Now they are in the Empire State Building.
Truth is that they find rich fabric, especially sumptuously pleated material, a good place to live.
And many journalists forget to check their reproductive rate, which beats rabbits any day; a female can lay up to 400 eggs in her lifetime, and they can reach sexual maturity at six weeks. In cosmopolitan places they start having their sexual adventures early, as there is plenty of human flesh to suck. So we need to get our facts straight and not waste time with ineffective sprays and false hopes that they will just go away during the day and all go to Florida for the winter. Unless prompt action is taken, they are here to stay.
By the way, I have written a letter to the New York Times in which I am giving my real name if they care to publish. Fear and social stigma are not for me, but for cowards and slumlords who do not bother to keep their buildings clean.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Recent News on bedbugs in New York
it seems Jeremy Sparig is, in the words of some, a "mattress left on the street, something best avoided in these times."
If so, Sparig has losers for friends. I will be mentioned in an upcoming article and am not afraid to tell people who I am. For one thing, it's hard to fight this and be anomymous. That's for cowards. Sparig says he is like a leper...
No one having to fight bedbugs ought to go through this. They are not contagious, and if one is clean, and washes out one's clothes, they do not need to travel with you. They hitch no rides on me, I was in the military where we learned to fight these things by being neat. The first thing we did in bootcamp was fold our shirts in equal thirds. So it is not hard to keep the bugs at bay, or at least at home. And then we had ratguards on all the ships, which is a good idea, and can be copied in designing bug-guards around the legs of the bed.
My landlord was probably counting on this fear to keep people from coming forward, many work in some famous places and would not want their boss to know, so I guess it's fair to say some people ought to remain anomymous, but for everyone to do so is cowardice. There is a plague upon the city and the men must be men and stand up and fight it.
Some stories from Thursday and Friday include a note in the amNewY0rk about bedbugs biting in the Times Square AMC 25-plex. Movies theatres are prime targets, and anyone wise would stay out of them. Use common sense: rent a DVD and watch it at home. The AMC did not replaces all its seats - and bedbugs run fast and spread. In a minute they can go the length of a room, so taking out two seats is just a joke. AMC Magic Johnson theatres in Harlem also got them: word to the wise, stay away, unless you want to give blood to these creatures of darkness. And, as I just read in the Audubon Field Guide to North American Insects and Spiders, they can live for 15 months without food. So they may lurk for over a year in these dark spaces full of carpets, soft seats, curtains, and other places of interest to the bloodsuckers.The Daily News had much the same story, with Erica Pearson, presumably the same Erica who did not ever get back in touch with me, contributing. It seems it takes two journalists to write 250 words...the story also says that the bugs are hitting prisoners in Riker's. So, don't do the crime unless you want lots of weird looking cell mates. In the Metro, Amy Zimmer says they will be as common as mosquitos. And unless we get Bloomberg to act right away, they will be...even more, as bedbugs are year round pests - do not believe the stupid stuff some journalists are telling you about them hybernating in winter...they are less numerous, but they bite all year round; nor are they nocturnal - they come out when their meal is sleeping, but if you sleep during the day, well, there is no rest to these wicked creatures. You will be eaten alive day or night. Journalists ought to check facts more.
Boy am I mean on the hacks! But they deserve it. The truth about bedbugs, and their HQ on 8th Avenue, known to locals as Ground Zero, ought to have been printed long time ago. But it is being printed now, I hear it will be in on Wednesday, but do not waste your time looking in the Daily News of the NY Post...the reporter has been on this for weeks and will give their readers something worth reading.
And then I expect to hear back from Mayor Bloomberg, and others who do not seem to know how to do their jobs.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Daily bedbugs stories in Daily News
Then they had a cartoon about a couple in bed with the bugs on p.21. Today They mentioned again that bugs haunt the offices of the DA in B'klyn - p.3 - noting that the Secret Service has offices there. So thanks, now Al Qaida knows where the USSS is located in NY. Not so secret evidently...
But while the DN is telling Al Qaida where the USSS is, they are keeping secret the fact that bedbugs are in ALMOST EVERY GOVERNMENT OFFICE IN MANHATTAN - I got that surprising bit when the journalist called me to tell me they had spoken with Gale Brewer, the bedbugs advocate for NY; I happen not to be in her constituency, but in Christien Quinn's, and we will be having a word with Ms. Quinn.
This journalist is really on to this story, which we think will run as a serial as it is really too large to put in one article.
Monday, August 16, 2010
Front page article in Daily News
they thought. So the previous figure on this blog of 400,000 is now superseded by ahe figure of 800,000 New Yorkers who suffer from these bugs, as cited by a Daily News-Marist poll.
It quotes Dan Kass, an assistant commissioner at the Dept. of Health: "There's not a lot of common knowledge about bedbugs...We're now at the point with the resurgence of bedbugs that everyone will have to start looking for them."
Well, duh. Sorry if I sound mean. And it took two journalists there to get this story out...they could have read this blog and known as much in 30 seconds.
And they could also have deduced that the city is not doing enough about it - their poll says 46% of New Yorkers think so.
The NYDN article does not get very specific, or tell us the names of any buildings with any major infestations. That is real journalism and is being left to a more capable paper to handle, so stay tuned to this site...
Sunday, August 15, 2010
District Attorney gets bugged
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Daily News story is no story
Did they email me back, meet me that day, or call?
NO, NO & NO.
So they ignored a serious story.
WHY?
Another paper sent in undercover journalists and has a real story. That paper is being very thorough, they are working with me on this very carefully, they put more than one reporter on the case, took pictures, and will have a REAL STORY. Not some ambiguous tale about a dog wagging. And that paper will do a real service; it is called preventative journalism. What the Daily News has is called junk. As someone who has lived here since my diaper days, I resent seeing papers like it waste our time. Get some real journalists on it to do some real stories that are of benefit to NY, then I’ll buy it. But till now, there is another paper in town that is working hard and delivering the news. Stay tuned here and I will post more on this...
Friday, August 13, 2010
Press reaction
Expect a story in a New York newspaper next week, that's all I can say for now.
When it hits, it hits, and the owner will have to answer to New York for his mess
of a hotel.
So sit back, enjoy the weekend, and check back here for a firecracker of a story.
Then we'll see if any of the politicians do their job.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
REviews of the bedbug palace
Seems they are real quality!
Bedbugs are a specialty
By Melvyn, 08/09/10
The first review really summed it up. A year or more later this place is so bad you can get over 1000 bedbugs a month in a room. Men cry out at night from the pain of these insects. The city lets it exist, it may be some sadistic streak on the part of the rich boy mayor who does not care.
User Rating
Bedbugs
By A Yahoo! Contributor, 08/24/09
If you like bedbugs---you will love this dump. It is a disgraceful---unsanitary--horrible buidling--that should be condemned!
User Rating
Friday, August 6, 2010
Shocking revelations on www.bedbugregistry.com
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Bedbugs on the books at Mid Manhattan Library
Well, no wonder; Cimex loves to read! And they love to breed in the spines of your books, moult
on them, and defecate all over the edges of the pages. Entire libraries can be at risk here.
So how is the press responding? Rather poorly. Bedbugs have recently been described erroneously on the CBC, with a picture of a beetle instead of a bedug...
But what do we expect from the 'churnalists'? Actually, I am talking to one now, or rather playing phone tag with one who just may do a rather good job. We will see soon. Hopefully the city will listen and close 'Ground Zero', which is what some people call the building on 8th Avenue near the offices of the Daily News (who have NOT responded to calls and emails about this problem.)
Monday, August 2, 2010
The NY Post on bedbugs: article by Paul Driessen
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Report from Michigan
Wenona July 30, 2010 at 11:42 am
My husband works in pest control here in Michigan and has tons of bedbug jobs yet the news hasn’t covered it all around here. I found one tiny article where the Flint Job corp dorms were said to have bedbugs.
In truth homes, apartment complexes and other places around MI are infested with bed bugs. A friend of ours just realized their house was infested and it turns out their son brought them home from a friend’s house- the day he left their house they were getting treated for bedbugs by an exterminator- yet they let a kid stay with them??? And then take home bedbugs spreading the infestation, how stupid is that?
Anyway bedbugs are a major problem and normal pest control products, sprays powders, etc don’t seem to be working. It involves a lot of time intensive work including vaccuming and steaming.
What a mess!
I just pray my husband doesn’t bring home any of these nasty critters from work.
Spanish language press on bedbugs in NY
Conflict of interest in NYC bedbug board
What was mentioned that was telling was the fact that Gil Bloom, who is an advisory board member, is president of Standard Pest Management in Long Island City. So if bedbugs persist in the thousands of apartments, this guy makes money. It they stomp out the bug, he loses out. So no wonder the city is dragging its feet. My loud and plaintive cries for them to do something about this cell of jihadi bugs on 8th Avenue are being ignored while people involved make money, and could stand to make billions out of an epidemic.
Friday, July 30, 2010
War on Bugs is a scam
It made me think of a funny story that goes like this. Japanese planes attack US Navy base in Pearl Harbor. The president calls the military in and promises to take action. They do a 39 page report, and then decide to set up a website some time in the future to analyse the situation...
Bloomberg has allocated $500,ooo to such activities. They will have a website and a bug czar some time in the future. Meanwhile, there are lots of websites including this one. And I did not spend $500,000. And further, this site has more information on it as I am telling you where Ground Zero is. All the king's men and all the king's horses have no clue, and the hapless journalists at the New York Daily News, who have been invited to do the story, which is in their own backyard - and those of the New York Post, who also have this site close to their offices - do not respond. Is it because they don't care? Or are stupid? Or afraid of me because I say mean things about stupid journalists and stupid celebrities?
So we wait to see what this bedbug czar is going to do, and I have a feeling I will have a lot more mean things to say...
Once again, anyone who wants to contact me and take some real action about this building full of mice and bedbugs, email me at bugout77@hotmail.com
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Finally the two guys left, and the female owner stayed to harrass me. I told her politely to leave, but she only got louder and suddenly stubbed her toe in the hall and claimed she would call the police and say I assaulted her. Not a scratch on her, I expect if she is foolish enough to call the police she will find out that it is a crime in this city to make false statements to the police and I have notified my lawyer about this. Of course, she could just be bluffing, so I'll see.
On a higher lever, the mayor appointed a bedbug czar yesterday, and I will find out who this person is and contact them as to why a building with so many bedbugs is allowed to operate and whether this Superb Pest Control is even registered. They may be, but they sure need to have a lesson in dealing with people. No one in their right mind would let these rude guys into their room! But if they are not, then that needs to be explored.
And as to the press, they are just ignoring the building with the bedbugs...Lindsay Lohan is more important, or just easier to report on as all they have to do is cut and past AP reports, whereas a story on the bugs here in NYC demands some real time and effort; and that is a rare commodity among so many churnalists.
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
An open letter to all Americans and New York City residents
And we are threatened with reading more and more about them, as the battle to get rid of them is being lost. As we are finding out, many sprays do not work; they are good at developing a resistance to chemicals.
In New York City, they have evolved to take over the niche of the once ubiquitous cockroach. These former insects were once public enemy #1 in our apartments, now they are starting to be welcomed as they are known to be enemies of the bedbugs. What an irony.
Soon, though, the cockroach may be gone from the Big Apple; the much smaller bedbug has usurped their role and is here to stay, it would seem. From Manhattan to the Hamptons, as noted so well in the New York Post on 9 July, they are biting us and sucking our life fluids out while we sleep; if at all we are able to do that, as in some places the infestations have reached such a point that people toss and turn all night as they feel these creatures crawling on them with impunity.
And so we complaining, and journalists write a note or two in the papers; more often, it seems, when the rich and famous are the ones who suffer, as was the case with the Post article. The hoi polloi do not get merit a full page as did the model and her family did.
Which is a shame - because this is a plague about to happen. Yesterday in the Metro as much was said by an anonymous writer, who noted their presence in the home, the theatre, the booktore, the library, the clothing shop - the list went and on.
This week and last I have spent my time alerting city authorities and the press about a building that houses up to two million bedbugs, which it has had, according to the manager and occupants, for about ten years. This year all parties agree is the worst ever, not surprising, as New York is in the grip of a heat wave and these buggers like it hot. I specifically metioned the danger of having so many in a hotel with over 100 rooms, and that each room had up to 300 in day. Collected in one jar of alcohol are 3,500, all gathered in the space of three months in one room. Other evidence, such as sheets stained with blood and tell-tale marks of their droppings, was offered to journalists. But they did not care. They took lots of time lately to tell us of the likes of Lindsay Lohan, her trip to France and her trip to jail, but for the citizens of the US and the residents of New York City, they did nothing. Calls and emails to the Post and the New York Daily Mail were a waste of time.
So I am writing to everyone to tell them that there is a danger. A place so badly kept that mice run free, their droppings collecting on the wire ceilings of rooms which are full of inescts that can multiply at the rate of 200 times a year. A place that has been run this way for years, so that the bugs have had time to develop a cell, from which a number of them hitch rides every day on the residents and then infect the city. And in which one resident has been diagnosed with scabies.
This is a disaster. And no one is taking note, for whatever reason. The most that gets done is that the landlord, after a court case goes against him, does some extra spraying - which has been observed to be completely ineffective. The measures indicated to him as necessary he has not taken. The halls are full of crevices where these creatures breed, and so great are their numbers that this place has been called the Ground Zero of bedbugs. It will destroy New York if this issue is left alone.
And it may well be left alone until all buildings in New York have these insects, which no one seems to be able to rid us of. Then it will spread from New York to other cities. At a multiplication rate of 200 a year, we cannot waste time with reluctant journalists and lazy city officials.
So I am writing an open letter to all Americans and residents of New York City, and also to the Mayor, whose ultimate responsibility this is. You cannot afford to have such a disgusting place in your country or your city.
Once, when a new resident moved in, I got to talking to him; he, like me, was in the service, so we talked shop about our days - he had tales of Khost, Afghanistan, and I told him about Gitmo, Cuba. He had been many places, some in the Third World, and he remarked that this place, right here in the US, was worse than anything he had ever seen. So he went out and bought some cleaning supplies and set about making his room habitable. Well, at 3am, the manager found him disinfecting his bed, and told him right then and there to leave.
That is how this place treats former servicemen. It is a disgrace beyond words. And it is also a disgrace that the city administration and the press in this town allow this kind of hotel to go on breeding these pests.
For anyone out there interested in helping - contact me at bugout77@hotmail.com
I am happy to meet face to face and give my real name to serious people and of course any journalists looking to do the right thing.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Bugs in the Big City
The Indians are wise to collect the bugs - I have 3515 in a bottle of alcohol, so they are not getting out. The press in NY has ignored my pleas for them to do this story - NY Post is a pathetic joke, with Amber Sutherland, who is noted for her plagiarism, and a receptionist who just wasted my time yesterday.And no word from Juan Gonzalez at the NY Daily News whom I emailed. On Thursday, my hotel will send in exterminators, but I can find no listing for them - Superb - so I suspect they are unregistered. Who knows what they are spraying. We can all lose our tourism industry due to these bugs.And oh, got a reply from the DHCR on Sat., 24 July, telling me that the landlord claims the mice, roaches and bedbugs were taken care of. It was dated 21 July and said I had 5 days to respond if this was not the case. It sure wasnt't. But getting up there on such short notice was a pain - I tried to get their # off the net, but a real person does not answer the phone, so my hope of faxing them was out. Had to take the train to Harlem, and proceed to 133rd and B'way and find 94 Old B'way, which is an obscure street that only exists between 131st and 133rd. Got them just before 4pm, which is the deadline, and they looked at the form like they'd never seen it before...probably they haven't had anyone make this last minute deadline which is slanted towards the landlords in an age of new laws giving away much to landlords. But I got it in, and made them give me a copy with their seal as proof of delivery.So we will see. If anyone out there gives a damn - including any journalists, get off your butt and get in touch with me. But then, some say I bark too loud; so you may just prefer to sit there and do nothing and have the bite of the bugs.
( you can contact us at bugout77@hotmail.com )