Daily Archives: February 18, 2012

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This Is What It Takes To Get Kicked Out Of The Cheapest Hotel In Manhattan

Robert Johnson — Business Insider

This is the only sign that marks the Vigilant Hotel.

There are not many places to stay in Manhattan if your prospects are dim and your funds are low.

It wasn't always this way. Once, Manhattan was pocketed with unseemly dives that for a few bucks a night would keep you dry and off the street.

One of the last of those is the Vigilant Hotel at the north end of Chelsea on 8th avenue between 28th and 29th.

Wedged between a small cafe and a Chinese restaurant, the Vigilant offers rooms for 40-bucks a night, or $140 a week. More or less anyone with an ID can get a cubicle within a large room, with no windows and no ceiling but a screen, to call their own. 

Anyone except journalists. 

I was prepared to spend the night at the Vigilant, but made the mistake of taking pictures of the entry on my way in. I didn't realize there were video cameras in the clerk's office, or that he would be so opposed to cameras — until I started taking pictures and a man started screaming.

"We don't want you here. Get the hell out or I'm calling the police."

I didn't think it was directed at me until I saw him. Halfway up the stairs a bald white man, about 70 years old, with no shirt and a flowing ascot of white hair around his neck leaned from a hole in the wall, pointed at me and hollered "Get the f*** out."

Clearly he was talking to me. I pushed onward.

"I have a reservation," I said, like this would somehow make him calm down. It did not.

"We don't take f******* reservations!"

I'd stopped in before to quickly look around and see what was what, so I knew what I was getting into, even when I'd called the day before to make sure there would be a room for me.

The clerk had needlessly warned me that the rooms weren't pretty, that what he offered were "Bowery style" rooms. No ceilings, little privacy, and no windows. "Like solitary confinement," he'd said on the phone.

"I feel properly warned," I'd replied before hanging up the phone in the office.

Robert Johnson — Business Insider

The rules at right are posted upstairs next to the office as well. Even if I'd seen the surveilance notice, don't think I would have believed it.

I wasn't there to write about the bedbugs or be a sanctimonious voyeur, and I wasn't prepared for him to be screaming at me. I was there to see how this one facet of the city looked before it was gone forever. Feeling justified I continued up the stairs to the clerk's window stuffing my camera into my backpack.

By the time I stood in front of the thick iron bars that secured him from the guests, he was apoplectic.

The bars were ornate, covered in what looked like 100 coats of tan paint. Without the semi-gloss, they looked like something from the movies shielding an Old-West bank teller from a pistol toting outlaw.

"I want to write a story on this place. On you. I know you've been here for 25 years. Don't you want to tell your story?" I spewed out between his threats.

"There ain't no story," he said leaning back in his chair and rubbing his bare, beach ball belly. "And I been here more than 25 years."

And he started talking. That bit about the 25 years, I'd picked up from dated stories about the place online. Obviously, he was concerned about more bad press. Fair enough.

"I just want to spend the night and see what it's like," I told him when he appeared to be calming down. 

"No you don't," he said. "This ain't a good place. The only people that stay here need to stay here," he said leaning forward. "And I ain't got nothin' to say."

For the next hour or so he told me that the Vigilant has been around since 1911 when they let rooms to mostly sailors and soldiers for five cents a night, doing a banner business between the World Wars.

After World War II, he told me that the garment industry put a lot of people in the hotel. "There used to be a lot of push-cart traffic," he said. "From the district over to the storefronts at Times Square. But all those jobs went to Asia."

The garment workers were gone by the late eighties and then the rooms were taken by "messenger types," he said. "But those jobs disappeared in the '90s after email and faxes came along."

Who stays here now?" I asked. He flared up. 

"People with no other f****** place to go. I ain't got nothin' to say."

About every fifth sentence was him telling me he had nothing to say. 

"It used to be this was a place people came on the way to something better," he told me between my questions. "Now it's the end of the line."

"We got a lot of people that lost their jobs a few years ago, but those benefits ran out. Our rates have gone up from $100 to $140 a week." He threw his hands up, and brought them back down to his round stomach, caressing its shiny round surface as he thought.

Robert Johnson — Business Insider

As far as I got with the camera.

"Forty bucks is a lot at this level," he said. "At this level even a little is too much."

His office was cluttered with aerosol cans of bedbug spray, takeout containers, and empty prescription bottles. A 17" monitor with the nine small surveillance screens that had given me away sat on his desk.

At one point a well-dressed, dark-skinned man, came up and told me. "This is a good place, and..."

The clerk re-ignited. "Arthur this f****** guy is not welcome on this property and I'll call the cops on both of you if you talk to him." Arthur shut up, and stood to the side for a while, holding a half-empty spray bottle in his right hand.

The clerk told me he didn't know how long they'd be able to stay open. The building is owned by a corporation that apparently works with the Vigilant, "But Con-Ed is putting us out of business," he said.

Utility rates may be what does the Vigilant in after over 100 years.

Feeling like all that was to be said had been said, and he wasn't going to let me a room, I stepped back as a man with dreadlocks, wearing a North Face shell and bike pants, excused himself to get past me.

He said the clerk's name and asked that his spray bottle be refilled. It was the same as the one Arthur held before he wandered off.

He hung the empty from the metal grate, and said he'd pick it up when he came back.

On the side in black marker, it said, "bed bug spray."

I said, "Everyone gets one of these when they check in." More a statement than a question, pointing to the empty bottle.

"Yeah," the clerk said reaching for the phone. "I told you, this ain't a good place. Now get out. I'm calling the cops."

He picked up the handset on an old black, push-button phone, and I stepped away holding up my hands.

"OK," I said, "Thanks for your time."

"Yeah, sure thing."

I faced a hallway of rooms on the way back to the stairs. Old wooden doors closing off a string of spaces about six-and-a-half feet high. Just bi
g enough for a foam mattress and a cot. Open at the ceiling with black window screen peeking from the edges that faced the hall.

"Robert Johnson, right?" the clerk said through the hole in the wall on my way back down the stairs.

"Yes, sir." I replied looking up.

"Don't f****** come back."

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This Is What It Takes To Get Kicked Out Of The Cheapest Hotel In Manhattan

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Some GAR rooms to be treated for bed bugs

Posted:Today
Updated: 12:50 AM
Two of the pests were found. Kistler Elementary was treated after one bug was discovered there.

WILKES-BARRE – Wilkes-Barre Area School District expects to treat several rooms in GAR High School this weekend after the discovery of two bed bugs earlier in the week.

“A couple of bed bugs were found at GAR,” Superintendent Jeff Namey said. “What happens is they come in on people’s clothing; I think one was found on a book.”

Two bugs were found in one room on the same day, Namey said. The room was visually inspected and no other bugs were found, but as a precaution the district planned to get professionals to come in and spray the room this weekend.

The discovery came less than three weeks after a bed bug was discovered in a Kistler Elementary School room. At that time, Namey said the district called in an exterminator and had the room and four others sprayed for bugs. Dogs trained to sniff out bed bugs were then brought in and no other bugs were detected.

The incident prompted numerous comments from parents, one of whom spoke at the school board’s Feb. 8 meeting, questioning whether enough had been done. At the time, Namey stressed the district followed the advice of the professional exterminator.

There was no school Friday because it was a teacher in-service day. Namey said letters have been sent home to all parents explaining the situation at GAR and what the district is doing about it.

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Some GAR rooms to be treated for bed bugs

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Classrooms in Hampton school treated for bed bugs

by Brian Farrell

WVEC.com

Posted on February 17, 2012 at 6:11 AM

Updated today at 11:41 AM

HAMPTON -- A spokeswoman for Hampton City Schools told 13News classrooms at Tucker-Capps Fundamental Elementary School would undergo a second treatment for bed bugs Friday.

Earlier in the week, staff members found the bugs in 2 classrooms of the building. Letters went home to parents who have children in those classrooms.

"When I get the letter, my child's been home, she's been all over my house for an hour," said parent Michele Cavanaugh, frustrated the only notification came via letter. "It is so easy to send a Connect-Ed message. It's free. I don't know what the problem was. I don't know why that wasn't utilized, and I don't know why the entire school wasn't notified."

Cavanaugh received the letter Wednesday, the same day contractors treated her daughter's classroom. On Thursday, her daughter's teacher recovered another bug.

"They all share a same coat closet. They all hang their bookbags in the same place, so if a child's bringing 'em in, it's likely to be on everybody's stuff in that classroom," noted Cavanaugh. "I don't want bed bugs coming to my house, 'cause I know the City of Hampton isn't going to come out and treat my house if an infestation comes home on my child."

While bed bugs do not transmit diseases, they do feed off people's blood. They grow in number rapidly, hiding in any kind of crack or crevice. They often infest mattresses and can be found in or on other pieces of furniture. Even piping on cushions or pillows provide hiding spaces. They can latch onto clothing or bags easily, making it easy for them to spread from one place to another.

An expert on bed bugs told 13News bed bugs in school settings are not uncommon. In fact, he, personally, knows of 8 cases during the past year in different cities in Hampton Roads including Virginia Beach, Norfolk, and Portsmouth.

While treatment methods vary, the most critical element is inspection by a person who is certified in the removal of bed bugs. Multiple treatments then follow to ensure the issue is addressed properly.

HCS spokeswoman Ann Stephens-Cherry told 13News in addition to another treatment planned for the infected classrooms, staff members intended to meet about the situation again Friday.

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Classrooms in Hampton school treated for bed bugs

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Unlucky Employees: Ohio Lottery offices invaded with bed bugs

CLEVELAND, OH (WOIO) -

The Cleveland Health Dept. has confirmed that there are bed bugs in the Cleveland State Office building on W. Superior. 

A spokeswoman with the Health Dept. says that the bed bugs found are confined only to the area that houses the Ohio Lottery office and they are not spreading.

The management of the building tells 19 Action News that there will be an exterminator out on Monday to take care of the issue. The Health Dept. will return on Tuesday to make sure everything was taken care of.

The Ohio Lottery released this statement:

"The Lottery is working in conjunction with the building owner the Department of Administrative Services to treat what has been identified as a localized incident of bed bugs. We responded immediately and have made arrangements for spraying of the area over the weekend. We will move forward with any other measures appropriate to the circumstances."

-Danielle Frizzi-Babb, Ohio Lottery Spokesperson

 

Copyright 2012 WOIO. All rights reserved.

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Get Rid of Bed Bugs Naturally Without Using Pesticides, BedBugExterminator911.com Reveals Exterminators Secrets

In order to assist bed bug sufferers the consumer help site BedBugExterminator911.com has created a online videos to get rid of bed bugs naturally, without using pesticides. As a bonus for attendees of the get rid of bed bugs naturally video series. They will be offered access to a complimentary non pesticide solution which will get rid of bed bugs and prevent them from coming back. The solution is used by bed bug exterminators currently and finally released to the public.

New York, NY (PRWEB) February 17, 2012

A new video series by bed bug exterminators is being released to explain the procedures to get rid of bed bugs naturally. Due to the high influx of report the site BedBugExterminator911.com has received. The director of relations has put together a free video series to help bed bug sufferers get rid of bed bugs naturally. As a special bonus, all bed bug sufferers will receive access to bed bug exterminators non pesticide solution that will get rid of bed bugs and prevent them from back.

The video series will explain the three critical parts of a bed bug extermination, which any bed bug sufferer can use. BedBugExterminator911.com explains, "The webinar series that has been put together is not only for bed bug exterminators, it's focus is also on helping bed bug sufferers as well. The information we share will show the three part procedure to identify, inspect, and remove bed bugs."

Bed bug outbreaks have been on the rise in the United States as well as overseas. There is concern on the exact bed bug exterminator cost one will incur when hiring a pest professional. The second part of the series will also explain a true bed bug exterminator cost, one should expect when hiring a pest professional.

The direct of relations explains, "Many bed bug sufferers are getting different costs for a bed bug exterminator. Each case is unique, but the video series hopes to give a better understanding of the exact bed bug exterminator cost you may incur. By identifying multiple scenarios of a bed bug outbreak. A bed bug sufferer can identify a possible cost by the situation we explain in our video series. If the cost is to high for the consumer, the series will also offer advice on how to get rid of bed bugs naturally."

As a bonus for all attendees BedBugExterminator911.com is releasing a complimentary sample of a non pesticide solution to get rid of bed bugs and prevent future outbreaks. To receive your complimentary sample and video series, visit http://www.bedbugexterminator911.com.

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Caroline Smith
Bed Bug Exterminator
1 (877) 978-6501
Email Information

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Get Rid of Bed Bugs Naturally Without Using Pesticides, BedBugExterminator911.com Reveals Exterminators Secrets

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