[File this under news of the weird.]

March 10, 2010

A New Breed of Guard Dog Attacks Bedbugs
By PENELOPE GREEN
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/11/garden/11bedbug.html?ref=general&src=me&pagewanted=print


CRUISER made four house calls on a recent rain-soaked Tuesday. There 
were two happy endings and two unhappy ones, a fairly typical outcome 
for a typical day in the life of a bedbug-sniffing puggle.

“Except that there’s nothing typical about this business,” said his 
handler, Jeremy Ecker, 35, whose six-month-old company, the Bed Bug 
Inspectors, has vetted hotels, college dorms and Midtown office 
buildings, suburban homes, bare-bones Brooklyn rentals and tony 
Manhattan co-ops. (Mr. Ecker, who charges $350 for a residential 
inspection, is an independent inspector, meaning he has no affiliation 
with an exterminator, though many hire him to check a property they have 
treated.)

Increasingly, real estate lawyers are urging buyers in contract to 
inspect apartments before they close, and in their advertising, many 
pest control companies exhort would-be tenants to “inspect before you 
rent.” And dogs like Cruiser can inspect a room in minutes, whereas 
lesser mammals like human beings need hours to conduct a visual inspection.

Bedbug-sniffing dogs, adorable yet stunningly accurate — entomology 
researchers at the University of Florida report that well-trained dogs 
can detect a single live bug or egg with 96 percent accuracy — are the 
new and furry front line in an escalating and confounding domestic war.

While experts cite a host of reasons for the upsurge, they agree on one 
thing: the bugs, which were mostly eradicated in this country at 
midcentury by now-banned pesticides like DDT but remained a constant 
scourge overseas, are finding their way back to the United States 
through an increase in global travel.

And in cities like New York, where neighbors are often separated only by 
bricks and mortar, one person’s infestation is everybody’s problem, 
since bedbugs can crawl through walls and along wiring and pipes, and 
hitchhike on clothing, furniture, luggage and more. In this city of 8.3 
million, it seems as if everyone has a bedbug story.

Just ask Gale A. Brewer, a self-appointed bedbug evangelist and a City 
Council member from the Upper West Side. She prodded the Mayor’s office 
to convene a bedbug advisory committee last fall, after years of what 
she and others felt were woeful public policy inadequacies in the face 
of the relentless advances of what some have called “the pest of the 
century.” (The committee — entomologists, civic policy experts and 
advocates for children, the elderly and others — will issue its 
recommendations next month.)

The breadth and scope of the problem has been captured anecdotally in 
anguished tales — the family living in a tent outside their 
lovely-but-infested Long Island home, the woman in the Upper West Side 
one-bedroom who spent $9,500 on extermination and lived out of plastic 
bags, at friends’ apartments, for three months — posted on blogs like 
bedbugger and newyorkvsbedbugs, the likes of which have been spreading 
like, well, bedbugs, over the last few years. They are told over and 
over at community board hearings presided over by Ms. Brewer and others, 
and recorded in mainstream media. Another picture, though still 
incomplete, comes from the city’s Department of Housing Preservation and 
Development, which has been tracking bedbug complaints and violations 
through calls to the 311 help line. Consider that six years ago, there 
were 537 bedbug complaints and 82 violations (in other words, verified 
infestations); last year, complaints topped out at nearly 11,000, with 
4,084 violations cited (nearly double that of the previous year).

But the complaints registered with the department and 311 relate only to 
rental properties; reports of bedbugs scampering through the private 
sanctums of hotels, co-ops and condos, colleges and office buildings 
remain largely uncounted, though real estate lawyers and brokers report 
that co-op minutes reveal a world that’s just as infested as the rest of 
the city.

In the last three months, and for the first time in her 21-year career, 
for example, Lori Braverman, a Manhattan real estate lawyer, advised 
buyers she was representing in three deals to inspect apartments they 
were in contract for, having noted in the co-op boards’ minutes 
instances of bedbugs in their buildings. “One was described as a 
‘significant infestation,’” she said. “It’s the deep, dark secret of 
co-ops and condos.” (All three checked out clean, including a classic 
five on the Upper West Side inspected by Cruiser.) Still, as Ms. Brewer 
said darkly, “Those bugs are everywhere.”

After a day or two with Cruiser, one would have to agree.

NINE-THIRTY in the morning in Borough Park, Brooklyn, at the home of a 
family of seven, two of them still in diapers: the family was poised to 
move to a new house, their things in boxes, the rooms askew, to the 
horror of the mother, who had to welcome a reporter and a photographer 
into the pre-move disarray. (Like all the bedbug sufferers in this 
story, she asked not to be identified because of the stigma surrounding 
the pests.)

Cruiser had been invited because the mother had found a dead bedbug 
floating in the bath of one child the night before, and she wanted to 
make sure, if there was an infestation, that it didn’t travel to their 
new home. The house next door had had a problem, she said, and she knew 
bedbugs travel easily through walls. All this was related to Mr. Ecker, 
while Oscar Rincon, his colleague, waited outside with Cruiser.

“I don’t want to know the details,” Mr. Rincon said later, lest the 
knowledge affect his body language and interfere with the dog’s inspection.

Mr. Rincon, 42, is an old friend of Mr. Ecker’s who worked for years at 
the North Shore Animal League. He and Mr. Ecker, Cruiser and his 
partner, a beagle called Freedom, were all trained for their work at J&K 
Canine Academy in High Springs, Fla., where rescue dogs are schooled in 
the scent detection of termites, bedbugs, bombs, some cancers and 
canker, a scourge on citrus crops. The school has an ongoing 
relationship with the University of Florida, which has been testing its 
results.

In two weeks training with Cruiser and Freedom, Mr. Ecker and Mr. Rincon 
learned how to hide live hives of bedbugs — little gangs of bugs tucked 
into vials fitted with mesh covers, so the scent can travel, but the 
bugs stay put — and work with the dogs in constantly changing scenarios 
(hiding bugs in high cupboards, in drawers, under rugs and so forth). 
Like all scent-detecting dogs, Cruiser and Freedom work for food; put 
another way, they are fed only when they find their target, which keeps 
them accurate and keen on their jobs.

This poses challenges, however, for a dog handler. Back home in Fresh 
Meadows, Queens, Mr. Ecker discovered pretty quickly that his new career 
required an extreme lifestyle commitment. Not only would he have to live 
with bedbugs to train and feed his new roommates, Cruiser and Freedom, 
he would have to feed the bugs, too. Remember that dinner for a bedbug 
is a nice long quaff of human blood; Mr. Ecker rolled up a sleeve to 
reveal a horrifying tattoo of old bites. (Bedbugs don’t carry disease, 
but their bites can itch like crazy.)

Happily, the bugs need to eat only once a month or less, he said. “It’s 
not so bad. You can hardly feel it.”

A few days later at his home, Mr. Ecker demonstrated, tipping a vial of 
bugs onto his forearm, which the critters latched on to like hungry 
newborns, their bodies quickly swelling with blood. Meanwhile, Mr. 
Rincon was cleaning vials, ensuring that the dogs learn to detect only 
live bugs and eggs. He swept the debris — bedbug feces, maybe some eggs 
— into plastic cups, which he filled with water and stuck in the 
freezer, since extreme temperatures are proven bug snuffers.

“You have to be very focused,” Mr. Ecker said. “You can’t sneeze, or 
answer the phone. The cat has to be out of the room. Want to try?”

BACK in Borough Park, Cruiser had started to work. Mr. Rincon wiped his 
paws with a towel and began leading him around the house. The family’s 
boxed possessions, stacked in the basement, were quickly vetted. But a 
wooden crib in a child’s room gave Cruiser pause. The father turned it 
back to front and the dog began pawing the mattress, signaling an alert. 
(What Cruiser does is detect the scent of a bug or an egg; it’s up to an 
exterminator, said Mr. Ecker, to visually confirm the presence of 
bedbugs in the spots a dog has noted.)

The mother exhaled slowly. “That’s where my 2 ½-year-old sleeps,” she 
said. She had the expression, a sort of satisfied wince, familiar to 
parents everywhere, when a nagging suspicion — the toe is broken, the 
teeth need braces, the itchy scalp is really lice — has been confirmed.

Returning Cruiser to a crate in the back of his white Subaru Outback, 
Mr. Ecker, who had been in the extermination business for six years, 
reflected on his new career. Since he and Mr. Rincon returned from 
Florida in September, they’ve done hundreds of inspections. Despite the 
ick factor, “it’s very rewarding work,” he said. “We get to walk dogs 
for a living and we help people get peace of mind.”

Mr. Rincon added: “We see people who literally haven’t slept for weeks. 
They think everything is a bedbug. At a place in Jersey, the wife was a 
total wreck. She’d saved 15 samples of stuff, thinking it was bedbugs.”

It was mostly lint, as it turned out.

A mother of 7-month-old twins in a bedroom community outside of New York 
was not so lucky. It was Cruiser’s last stop of the day; after Borough 
Park, he’d inspected a Midtown office and an apartment in Riverdale. 
Both were bedbug-free, the day’s happy endings. Outside the city, the 
rain was still coming down in sheets. A Manhattan-dwelling relative of 
the mother had had bedbugs, perhaps the source, she said, of her house’s 
infestation, which she had had heat-treated, at a cost of $5,000. (Many 
sufferers with animals or young children choose this nontoxic method, in 
which very hot air is channeled into a space.)

She and her husband and their young family had decamped to a hotel. Back 
in her pristinely renovated 19th-century brick row house a week later, 
however, she was convinced she was being bitten again. The woman 
extended a graceful bare foot with a large, angry welt on the arch. She 
had called the pest control company she had used, but they were backed 
up on inspections and couldn’t promise a dog for another week. “I can’t 
wait that long,” she said.

When Cruiser arrived, he greeted the woman by placing his paws on her knees.

“Does that mean I’ve got them?” she wondered. “I feel like one big bug. 
If I can get through this, having twins isn’t going to be an issue.”

Cruiser spent 15 minutes at the house and alerted four times, scratching 
a parlor-floor loveseat, an upholstered side chair nearby, the mother’s 
side of the bed and a small black suitcase in a closet.

The mother’s eyes welled. “I have to remember no one is sick, no one has 
cancer,” she said. “Is it possible, when we went to the hotel, I brought 
them with me and then brought them back?”

“It’s possible,” Mr. Ecker said. “I’m sorry.”

Cruiser insinuated his wet nose into the reporter’s hand, and she 
scratched his silky ears.

Back in the car, she wondered: Shouldn’t the mother wrap the couch, the 
chair and the suitcase in plastic? What about her mattress? Does the 
inspection mean that heat treatment doesn’t work? Should the reporter, 
who had taken off her muddy boots in the house, throw away her socks?

Mr. Ecker shook his head. “What if I tell her to do one thing and it 
contradicts the pest-control company’s plans?” he said, referring to the 
client. “There’s nothing wrong with heat. There’s more than one way to 
cut apples.”

He added: “We’ve never taken a bug home with us. They’re not like fleas. 
They don’t jump on you.”

Bedbugs need time to get to know you, he explained. A short visit to a 
bedbug lair poses no risks. Still, as Mr. Rincon pointed out, “I never 
sit down.”

Moving Them Out

In the last several years, bedbug infestations have increased 
exponentially in New York City, but so have the resources to deal with 
them. The city offers a guide at nyc.gov. Bedbugger.com, a blog, is a 
Baedeker for treatment and a group memoir; newyorkvsbedbugs.org focuses 
more on city policies than remediation.

Think you have bedbugs? Bites might be the first sign, but not everyone 
reacts the same way: on some they look like welts or hives, on others 
mosquito bites and some people don’t react at all. Once you’ve met a 
bedbug, though, you won’t mistake it for anything else. The bugs look 
different at each life stage: the eggs are clear and the size of a 
pencil point, the babies are semi-transparent and poppy seed-size and 
adults are rust-colored and as big as an apple seed. The city’s Web site 
advises using an exterminator that describes itself as an “integrated 
pest management” service; make sure it is registered with the New York 
State Department of Environmental Conservation; ( 718) 482-4994 or go to 
www.dec.ny.gov.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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