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Bed bugs make an unwelcome comeback: ‘An epidemic’ in Long Beach – Long Beach Press Telegram

Gary Shelton tossed clothes, a wooden bed frame, a directors chair and cardboard boxes stuffed with papers from his community-activist campaigns.

Other clothes the 68-year-old Long Beach man washed, dried and bagged.

Then he waited. And waited. And waited.

An exterminator sprayed his ninth-floor Plymouth West apartment three times for bed bugs: December, January and February.

If there is any evidence of bed bugs they treat again, he said.

Finally, in March, Shelton was given the all clear.

Its like living out of an overnight case for three months, he said of the lengthy process.

Shelton still is pulling clothes out of bags stored on his balcony that he hasnt worn for a while.

Im finding that Im forgetting I had so many socks, he said.

Turns out bed bugs, those not-so-cuddly insects our parents mentioned when they tucked us in at night and that we didnt give a second thought to are very real these days.

And, yes, they bite.

Indeed, experts say the reddish-brown bed bug that is about the size of a grain of rice has made an extraordinary comeback after a roller coaster of a century.

In the early decades of the 1900s, the bug was widespread across the U.S. But the advent of DDT during World War II changed that, killing off huge numbers in the 1940s and 50s.

We thought it was gone forever, said Dini Miller, professor of entomology at Virginia Tech University. When you think about it now, that was kind of stupid.

After lying low for decades, the dreaded insect that was mentioned in medieval European literature is enjoying a renaissance of sorts. Since 2000, its numbers have multiplied.

Its just exploded, Miller said.

Today theyre everywhere.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, theyre in apartments, houses, shelters, college dormitories, cruise ships, buses and trains. They typically live within an 8-foot crawl of where people sleep.

And if you thought your car was a refuge from the blood-sucking pests, guess again. Miller said bed bugs are fond of automobiles for good reason.

The food comes and sits down on a regular basis, she said. And everybody gets something to eat.

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The crazy thing is, you dont know when your blood is being slurped through the bed bugs version of a straw an elongated beak for a meal. The CDC says the bug injects an anesthetic and anticoagulant that renders its bite painless.

Itchy, bite marks do appear in a few days. They are similar to marks from a mosquito or flea bite, a slightly swollen and red area, the CDC said.

Scratching sometimes causes infection. But many people have no reaction at all.

In any event, bed bugs arent considered dangerous.

They do not transmit any diseases, said Dong-Hwan Choe, an urban entomologist and assistant professor of entomology at UC Riverside.

Choe is working to develop a device that can detect bed bugs for hotel chains and other businesses.

It has to be simple. It has to be cheap, Choe said. It has to be small so that it can be placed without being noticed by the people staying in the hotel.

Disease bearing or not, the thought of being dined on is enough to make ones skin crawl.

Choe said the bugs feed mostly at nighttime, which creeps people out.

And dont think you can fool them if you work a graveyard shift and sleep during the day.

In a 2015 article titled, Your Guide to Bed Bugs, University of Kentucky entomologist Michael Potter said the pest will adjust its schedule to yours.

Sleeping with the lights on is also not likely to deter hungry bed bugs, Potter wrote.

Potter said a feeding takes three to 10 minutes. Then the bug crawls back into its hiding place to digest the meal. Its flat body enables it to hide in tiny crevices in mattresses, box springs and bed frames.

When it comes to the creep-out factor, there is at least one thing in our favor: unlike other insects, bed bugs cant fly, Choe said.

But theyre speedy. The CDC says the bugs can crawl more than 100 feet in a night.

The nations big bad bed bug blow-up can be traced to a number of factors, experts say.

For one, DDT is long gone. The EPA banned it in 1972.

Even so, the bugs were building up resistance to DDT, Miller said. And, gradually, they are building up a defense against insecticides being used today.

She said some have developed thick, protective skins.

Others produce enzymes that break down toxic ingredients and render insecticides harmless.

We like to call those the hard drinking bugs, she said.

Still other bed bugs have mutated.

They meet, fall in love and make other genetically immune babies, Miller said.

Perhaps we have ourselves to blame, too.

With the bugs out of sight and out of mind for decades, we have been slow to rally against them.

Plus, we travel a lot these days to faraway places, experts say. And the bugs are good at hitchhiking a ride home on our luggage.

However they got here, the guy who manages the 11-story tower where Shelton lives said the Plymouth West infestation began around 2010. LOMCO President Kent Davis said bed bugs appear to be a bigger problem in Long Beach than in other places.

LOMCO owns and manages a dozen properties with a combined 2,000 apartments in Los Angeles and Orange counties. In most of the firms senior communities, Davis said, problems are minimal.

In Long Beach, its an epidemic, he said.

Whether Long Beach is worse than other cities is unclear.

Katie Martel, spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, said that during the year ending June 30 the county received 1,494 bed-bug complaints.

However, she said, her department doesnt track Long Beach because the city has its own health agency.

Kevin Lee, a Long Beach Development Services spokesman, said the city doesnt break out bed-bug complaints from insect calls.

Choe, the expert from UC Riverside, said he doubts Long Beach is worse than everyone else. But he said densely populated cities such as Long Beach are more prone to infestations than sparsely populated ones.

They tend to have more frequent problems with bed bugs because they have more units and more people living close together, Choe said.

Richard Mitsuda, an Orkin branch manager in Long Beach, termed the pest control operators area calls steady.

While we havent seen a spike in the number of requests for bed bug treatment, we have been responding to reports of bed bugs in senior care facilities, Mitsuda said.

As for the region overall, Los Angeles is the nations sixth worst metro area for bed bugs, according to Atlanta-based Orkin. In the firms 2017 ranking, L.A. followed Baltimore, Washington, D.C., Chicago, New York and Columbus, Ohio.

For the Orkin survey, the L.A. area was defined as Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties.

Miller noted Terminix puts out an annual ranking, too. In its most recent report, Detroit was No. 1 on the list. L.A. was No. 4.

You have to take all of this with a grain of salt, Miller said. But, its one of the few indicators that we have.

Theres no denying, however, that Sheltons home is in one of the hardest-hit properties.

Davis said 84 of Plymouth Wests 196 units have been treated in the past 12 months.

Some units, like Sheltons, have been treated repeatedly.

That may seem over the top. But its in line with the industry experience.

According to a national survey, two to three treatments is typical when insecticide is sprayed.

Survey results were detailed in Bed Bugs Across America, a 2015 report by University of Kentucky entomology professors Potter and Kenneth Haynes, and Jim Fredericks, vice president of technical services for the National Pest Management Association.

More expensive heat treatments are more likely to knock out an infestation in one visit, the report stated.

Because heat treatment can take most of the day, said Glen Ramsey, Orkin technical services manager, conventional treatment is more common.

Heat treatment takes longer than conventional treatment, as the affected areas need to be warmed up to 125 degrees, held for one hour and then cooled back down, Ramsey said.

The report said treatment costs averaged $1,225 for single-family homes and $3,128 for multifamily buildings in 2015, though some apartment managers spent as much as $50,000.

That places Plymouth West at the high end of the range. Davis said LOMCO spent $400,000 for treatments there from 2013 to 2016.

Before an exterminator ever steps foot in the door, extensive preparations are made.

Residents strip beds of sheets and blankets, empty dressers and closets, and wash and bag clothes.

The key is to put them through the dryer for an hour at high temperature, Shelton said.

Shelton then had to leave his apartment for several hours. He returned the same day. Other renters spent a night in a motel.

Underscoring the difficulty involved in eradicating bed bugs, Sheltons unit was sprayed three times. Even then exterminators didnt get everything.

They said they couldnt get the bed bugs out of the bed frame, Shelton said.

So he threw it out and bought a new one.

Life is getting back to normal now. Its been anything but since that fateful day in late November.

A friend was over and noticed a live bug in the middle of the bed spread, Shelton said.

He was stunned. I wasnt getting bites that I was aware of, he said. But he promptly called the apartment manager.

After seeing one, he started seeing a lot more bugs.

Once you see them, youll see them in your mind, Shelton said. Youll see them everywhere.

------------------------------------

Size: 1mm to 7mm, roughly the size of Lincolns head on a penny

Color: Reddish brown, similar in coloration to apple seed

Food: Human blood

Home: Within 8 feet of sleeping quarters. Known to live in apartments, houses, hotels, shelters, cruise ships, buses, trains, dormitories

Travel: Cant fly or jump, but can crawl fast up to 100 feet per day

Bite: Similar to mosquito, flea bites; does not carry disease

Evidence of presence: Bed bugs in folds of mattresses and sheets, rusty-colored blood spots; a sweet, musty odor

Treatment: insecticide, heat; significant preparation required of home occupants in advance; professional treatment recommended

No-nos: Do not spray bed sheets, blankets or clothes; do not apply bleach or alcohol. Applications of rubbing alcohol have sparked fires.

Sources: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Your Guide to Bed Bugs, by Michael Potter; news reports

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Bed bugs make an unwelcome comeback: 'An epidemic' in Long Beach - Long Beach Press Telegram

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Commissioner says he was only checking woman for bed bugs – Gaston Gazette

Kevin Ellis Gazette staff TheGazetteKevin

Gaston County Commissioner Don Grant faces criminal charges of assault on a female and sexual battery, but the Republican says he has done nothing wrong and asks the public to wait before passing judgment.

"When all of this is said and done, I think you will find that I'll be vindicated and it will be well known that these charges are not true," Grant said Friday. "I ask people not to make a decision until they hear all the facts."

Officers with the State Bureau of Investigation took out the warrants on the misdemeanor charges against Grant, but they have yet to be served. Grant remains on the South Carolina coast taking part in job-relating training and said he will turn himself in at the Gaston County Courthouse on Monday. The SBI often conducts investigations when elected officials are accused of wrongdoing in an effort to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest.

The allegations stem from a customer Grant says he saw at his business, Grant Exterminating Co., on June 13.Grant said his accuser came to his extermination office that day complaining she had bed bugs at her home. Grant said his wife of more than 15 years was working at the office when the woman came in. Grant said he agreed to stop by the woman's home while on his way out of town, but did not find any evidence of bed bugs at her home.

Grant said he looked at the woman's arms and back for bug bites, but did not see any signs of the bugs. He said he recommended that she return to his office to buy some products for bugs if she was still concerned.

"There was nothing sexual about it," Grant said.

Grant said the woman's children were home at the time he was there and doors inside the home were never closed.

"I have so much at stake I wouldn't do something stupid to ruin my reputation and my business," Grant said.

Because the warrants have not been served, they are not yet public record and the specific nature of the charges could not be verified with law enforcement. District Attorney Locke Bell would only confirm the charges Grant faces, but declined to go into specifics about the case.

Grant said an agent with the SBI called him last month to discuss the woman's allegations. He said he cooperated, but did not recall her until the agent mentioned the location of the home.

"I remember houses and addresses a lot better than names," said Grant, who has been in the extermination business 43 years.

He said he shared documents with the agent concerning his training related to bed bugs, insect bites and professionalism.

"People that know me know I'm straight up and I'm about as professional as they come," Grant said.

Grant, a former chairman of the Gaston County Republican Party, was elected to a four-year term on the county board in 2016 representing Gastonia Township. He said he has never faced allegations like this before.

He said he will defend his reputation and business, adding that allegations do not mean anything wrong occurred.

"She can say what she wants to, but it's got to be proved," Grant said. "All I did was look to see if the lady had bed bugs."

Efforts to reach the woman believed to have made the allegations against Grant were unsuccessful.

You can reach Kevin Ellis at 704-869-1823 or Twitter.com/TheGazetteKevin.

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Maryland attorney believes Hampton Inn hotel in Philly tried to conceal bed bug issue – The Pennsylvania Record

PHILADELPHIA A Maryland attorney believes a Hampton Inn located in Center City Philadelphia was negligent in allowing bed bugs to infest the hotel and bite her while she slept, causing her serious injury.

Nikiwe Mkwanazi of Bethesda, Md. filed suit in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas on July 3 against Hersha Hospitality Management, LP (doing business as Hampton Inn) of Philadelphia.

On July 27, 2015, Ms. Mkwanazi traveled to Philadelphia, PA to take the Pennsylvania bar exam and checked into room 925 at the hotel. At or about 10:30 p.m. the following evening Ms. Mkwanazi went to sleep in room 925. About an hour later she started itching profusely like she was having an allergic reaction to something. Ms. Mkwanazi walked into the bathroom and saw that there were bumps on her arm, but they did not look like bumps from an allergic reaction. Ms. Mkwanazi noticed that the bumps were large and inflamed and that she might have been bitten by something, the lawsuit states.

Ms. Mkwanazi called the front desk and spoke to a receptionist named Derrick (the receptionist) and asked him for another room. The receptionist met Ms. Mkwanazi on the 9th floor, and when Ms. Mkwanazi showed the receptionist the bumps on her arm the receptionist informed her that her new room would be room 717 on the 7th floor. When they got to the 7th floor the receptionist gave Ms. Mkwanazi the keycard to room 717, apologized for the bedbugs, and gave her a complimentary plastic bag with snacks inside. Ms. Mkwanazi did not sleep at all that night because she was under extreme annoyance, inconvenience and stress. She could not get over the idea that she was probably attacked by bed bugs in room 925, and the thought of getting attacked again in room 717 was worrisome, the lawsuit adds.

Mkwanazi filed an incident report, checked out of the hotel and asked the hotel to store her suitcase because she had to take the bar exam in the Pennsylvania Convention Center. The plaintiff says she suffered inconvenience and economic loss for seeking medical treatment and needing to discard her property that day.

When Ms. Mkwanazi returned to the hotel to get her suitcase, she asked to speak to the manager about her incident report. The assistant manager, Mr. Christopher Thompson, informed Ms. Mkwanazi that he called a pest inspector, bugs were not found in room 925, and the hotel doesn't have bedbugs. Ms. Mkwanazi found this hard to believe because the receptionist had apologized for the bed bugs the previous evening. Ms. Mkwanazi asked to see the pest inspector's report that was in the assistant manager's possession, but, he refused to let Ms. Mkwanazi view the report. Later that evening Ms. Mkwanazi sought medical attention and it was confirmed that she was bitten by bed bugs at the hotel. Ms. Mkwanazi discarded the property that she had at the hotel to avoid contaminating her home, the complaint continued.

Furthermore, the complaint stated: Ms. Mkwanazi then carried out a search on bedbugregistry.com and found 6 reports from customers who stayed at the hotel stating that they were bitten by bed bugs during their stay at the hotel. Ms. Mkwanazi also searched Tripadvisor.com and found that there were customers who had previously stayed at the hotel and reported to the hotel that they were bitten by bed bugs during their stay at the hotel. Ms. Mkwanazi noticed that the hotel responded to bed bug complaints that were made by the customers. For example, in response to a complaint dated April 14, 2009, management declared that they never had a bedbug issue. And [also did so] in a complaint dated August 7, 2012 where a customer had scooped up bed bugs from his room and showed them to the hotel, management wrote that bugs in the hotel were found to be bed bugs by a pest control company.

For counts of negligence, res ipsa loquitor, gross negligence and negligence per se, the plaintiff is seeking damages of $10,100, plus interest, costs, attorneys fees and any additional relief that the Court may find just, equitable and appropriate, plus a trial by jury in this matter.

The plaintiff is represented by Niki Mkwanazi in Bethesda, Md.

Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas case 170700153

From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nickpennrecord@gmail.com

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Maryland attorney believes Hampton Inn hotel in Philly tried to conceal bed bug issue - The Pennsylvania Record

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Bed Bugs Be Gone: Rutgers Gets Nod for Fighting Pests – TAPinto – TAPinto.net

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ Theyre the creepy, crawly, nasty things that bite in the night.

Bed bugsno one likes em, and few know how to kill em.

But they stand little chance against Changlu Wang. He heads Rutgers Universitys urban entomology lab and has strived for years to rid New Jersey low-income housing projects, including in New Brunswick, of bed bugs. He and his team have earned the respect of their colleagues and beneficiaries in their efforts to develop new strategies to combat this scourge.

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In fact, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced today that, under Wangs leadership, Rutgers is one of four winners of the HUD Secretarys Award for Healthy Homes. The honor recognizes excellence in making indoor environments healthier by improving homes, according to a news release.

The recipients of this award understand the strong connection between where we live and how healthy we are, HUD Secretary Ben Carson, who was appointed this year by President Donald Trump, said in a statement. They demonstrate innovative approaches to making homes healthier, and exemplify the outstanding work thats taking place throughout the nation.

In his drive to fight bed bugs, Wang worked with poor communities, manufacturers and other universities to build better integrated pest management plans, according to the release.

What is an integrated pest management strategy? Well, according to the federal government, it boils down to how workers and residents prevent and control bugs and the like, while respecting the environment.

Wang and his team received a HUD grant in 2013 to implement and evaluate a model bed bug management program in poor communities. He partnered with three Garden State housing authorities and worked in more than 2,000 apartment units to pull off the study, which closed last year, according to the news release.

It designed and implemented a low-cost and highly effective bed bug monitoring protocol and a model IPM program, HUD wrote in its press release, noting that Wangs work was published in a respected peer-reviewed journal on bugs.

Wangs work also touched New Brunswick. In 2012, he agreed to help the city Housing Authority tackle its bed bug problems, according to Rutgers. He found a number of infested apartments and, within six months, killed 96 percent of bed bugs there.

But the Rutgers researcher and his team also planted seeds that could prove more valuable in the long-term fight against the pests.

The really good thing about him was that he didnt just come in like an exterminator and lay down some stuff, the housing authoritys executive director, John Clarke, told Rutgers. He educated our staff and residents about what caused the problem and what we might do to eliminate the problem.

Indeed, Wang and his team have proactively tried to teach residents, especially those in low-income areas, best practices to prevent and control bed bug infestations. This online guide, for instance, dispels common myths and highlights what residents should do to protect themselves.

The three other winners of the award include the Denver Housing Authority, for breaking up concentrated poverty and ushering in mixed-used development; Vermonts Weatherization One Touch Program, which helps increase access to health and energy efficiency; and Washingtons Tribal Healthy Homes Network, for addressing asthma in native communities.

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Frustration with infested apartment led man to unleash bedbugs at Augusta City Center – Press Herald

Charles Manning, the Augusta man charged with assault and obstruction of government administration after he dumped about 100 live bedbugs in Augusta City Center, said in an interview Tuesday that he did it to show the code enforcement officer this is what I had to put up with for four, six months. Staff photo by Joe Phelan

AUGUSTA The 74-year-old man who dumped a cup of live bedbugs in the Augusta City Center last month said he did it because the city wasnt adequately addressing his complaints about substandard housing. And he doesnt regret his actions, even though he is now homeless as a result.

I pulled out the cup and said, Here, help yourself, Charles Manning said during an interview at a coffee shop Tuesday. I reached in my bag and pulled out the cup and I opened it up and put it on the counter, just to let (the code enforcement officer) know this is what I had to put up with for four, six months.

Manning said he now realizes he dumped the bedbugs in the wrong city department on June 2 mistakenly targeting the General Assistance office instead of code enforcement.

The city quickly closed the building for the rest of the day that Friday and called in a pest-control company to spray it with chemicals. It reopened the following Monday.

Manning later was charged with assault and obstruction of government administration, Class D crimes punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,000 fine.

Bedbugs are about a quarter-inch long, with a soft, rounded look. They feed on human blood but are not believed to carry disease.

Mannings reaction to his situation highlights two problems city officials have been working to address in recent years: a lack of affordable housing and some boarding homes and apartments that are infested with bedbugs.

Manning, who said he receives about $900 a month in Social Security payments, described one apartment on Court Street so infested that he avoided sleeping at night, when the pests were most likely to crawl over his bed. He said he was reluctant to inform his landlord of the bugs, fearful that a complaint could lead to his being evicted. But at the end of May, just before Manning moved into a new room on Water Street, he filed several complaints with the citys code enforcement staff.

Robert Overton, one of the citys code enforcement officers, said Manning came to City Center to say that his room had a bedbug infestation, and Overton asked whether Manning had notified his landlord.

We have to give the landlord the opportunity to correct the problem, Overton said at City Center on Wednesday. Manning said he had told a fellow tenant but not the landlord, fearing he might be evicted.

When Manning returned a week later, he told Overton that he had moved, but wanted to be sure his old residence would be treated. He was carrying a cup of bedbugs he had gathered from the apartment, saying it was his proof of the infestation.

I dont blame him for being upset, Overton said.

KICKED OUT, HOMELESS

Overton called the landlord, Gerry Fleury, who told him that Waltham Pest Control was at the building and was treating it at that moment. Overton then asked Manning if he could dispose of the cup of bedbugs he was carrying.

I asked if I could have them to dispose of them, Overton said, but Manning refused. Overton then followed Manning out to make sure he took the bedbugs with him.

Overton said he also contacted the manager of Mannings new residence to indicate Manning had moved from a place that had bedbugs.

Manning returned several hours later, calling Overton a snitch.

He told me he had been kicked out and that he was homeless, said Overton, who directed him to the General Assistance office for aid.

Charles Manning describes how many bedbugs were in a container he dumped at Augusta City Center in June. He said he feared that he could be evicted if he complained to his landlord. Kennebec Journal photos by Joe Phelan

There, Manning learned he didnt qualify for aid because he had another source of income.

Overton said he saw Mannings hand go under the glass partition and throw the bedbugs on the counter, several of which hit the worker there.

I asked them, What am I supposed to do now that you got me kicked out? Manning said.

Overton then escorted Manning from the building, and in late June, police charged Manning with the two misdemeanors. Hes due in court on Aug. 7.

LACK OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING

A Massachusetts native, Manning has lived in various parts of the country and worked as a bus driver, among other occupations. He moved to Maine about 10 years ago to be near his sister. He was living in the Lewiston-Auburn area until last year, when he says he was kicked out of an apartment for complaining about its poor condition. He then moved to Augusta.

He recently stayed in the Super 8 motel in Augusta for about two weeks, but said he cant afford to keep staying there and is now homeless.

If youre in a situation where youre homeless in this community, looking for a place to live and low-income, theres nothing immediately available, said Amanda Bartlett, executive director of the quasi-municipal Augusta Housing Authority.

People who receive approval for Section 8 subsidized housing have a three-year wait to get into that housing, she said.

Bartlett says the lack of affordable housing stems from the 500 units in the city that either were lost or are at imminent risk of being lost because of fire or safety code issues since 2013.

Then there are the bedbugs.

Bedbugs have been a persistent problem in some buildings, and they previously had been found in the citys General Assistance office. The bugs are brown, flat and about a quarter-inch long, with a soft, rounded look. After a blood meal, they are dark red and larger. They feed on human blood but are not believed to carry disease.

The bedbug issue is complicated, Bartlett said. At the Augusta Housing Authority, we work hard with landlords to make sure they comply with federal law. A lot of landlords are frustrated because theyre trying to do the right thing.

PEST CONTROL PROTOCOLS

Tenants also have to do their part, washing all clothing, cleaning the entire apartment and encasing mattresses, she said.

A lot of our clients have some disabilities that make it more difficult for them to comply with those types of pest control protocols, Bartlett said.

She said landlords have to work closely with tenants to try to get them through the process.

Weve seen both sides: landlords not doing what theyre supposed to do and tenants not doing what theyre supposed to do, she said.

To step up enforcement, the City Council passed an ordinance last year that allows city officials to require landlords to bring in pest management professionals to exterminate bedbugs when an infestation is discovered. It also requires tenants to notify their landlords if they know or suspect there is an infestation of the blood-sucking bugs in their rental units and prohibits them from trying to treat the infestation themselves.

Bartlett said the Augusta Housing Authority did strategic planning a few years ago and is implementing ways to increase the housing supply.

Were working hard to develop new housing like we did at the former Hodgkins Middle School, she said.

The housing authority is about to announce successful applications from landlords who sought money through a Great Neighborhoods program to rehabilitate existing housing.

While 17 applications were received, Bartlett said the $500,000 available will stretch to only two or three buildings because of the scope of the work needed.

At one point, 67 percent of folks we were giving a voucher to werent able to find housing, Bartlett said, causing officials to wonder, Is it an inventory issue, or can we do more to help?

Charles Eichacker can be contacted at 621-5642 or at:

[emailprotected]

Twitter: ceichacker

Betty Adams can be contacted at 621-5631 or at:

[emailprotected]

Twitter: betadams

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Frustration with infested apartment led man to unleash bedbugs at Augusta City Center - Press Herald

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