Dear Littler: Bedbugs have returned to the office with our employees. What do we do? – Littler Mendelson PC
Dear Littler:Now that our employees have returned to the office, we have discovered that something else has also unfortunately returned bedbugs! Word is getting around, and people are freaking out. Based on where we found them, we believe we can identify the employee who introduced them to the workplace. What do we do now? This is almost making me miss Zoom meetings.
Disgusted in Denver
Dear Disgusted in Denver,
First and foremost: try not to panic. Bedbugs may be an unnerving nuisance, but they are quite common and generally harmless to humans. In fact, I have been getting this question frequently now that in-person work is resuming across the country, so I can assure you that you are not alone in facing this unpleasant predicament. The best approach is to learn a bit more about bedbugs and then formulate your response based on the circumstances. As discussed below, employers have a lot of discretion in handling a bedbug outbreak.
Know Your Enemy!
While I realize youd probably rather not read up on bedbugs, it is helpful to understand the challenge before you. There are many misconceptionsand a lot of unwarranted stigmasurrounding bedbug infestations. Knowing what these pests do, and what they dont do, can eliminate some of the fear and make it easier to remedy the situation.
Bedbugs, for example, do not jump or fly. They crawl quickly and are good at hiding. They hitch rides on humans, in clothing, shoes, purses, backpacks, and other personal belongings, which is how they ended up at your workplace. They are primarily nocturnal.
And yes, they are tiny vampiresbedbugs feed on human and animal blood.1Most people bitten by bedbugs will develop itchy welts, like spider or other insect bites. Importantly, bedbugs are not known to transmit diseases. Moreover, an infestation is not related to uncleanliness. In other words, someone does not end up with bedbugs at their home because they are untidy in any way. It just means they were exposed to bedbugs somewhere (e.g., a hotel, a theater, a school, public transportation, etc.) and unknowingly brought back houseguests. In many ways, bedbugs are similar to head lice: fairly creepy, but still manageable.
On the plus side, bedbugs are visible. Generally, they are reddish-brown and roughly the size of an apple seed when mature.2A flashlight and magnifying glass may be helpful in hunting down the little critters. In searching for evidence of an infestation, employers should keep in mind where bedbugs are likely to hide: the folds and seams of chairs, between cushions, lockers, cubicle walls, corners, baseboards, outlets, under wall hangings, in stacks of paper, and in similar nooks and crannies. If a live bug is found, employers are encouraged to trap it in a container or plastic bag, rather than crush it, so that it can be properly identified by a pest control professional.
Understand Your Legal DutiesOr Lack Thereof
After that delightful background, lets turn to the legal and practical questions. Currently, there are no federal or state employment laws regulating an employers response to a bedbug infestation. Approximately half of the states have some statute addressing the responsibilities of hotel operators and/or landlords if bedbugs are detected, but no such laws have been adopted concerning an employers duties.
In addition, this scenario does not fall squarely under civil rights or health and safety statutes that might already apply to employers. Employer obligations under the Americans with Disabilities Act would not be triggered by an infestation, for example, because having bedbugs is not a disability. Similarly, employees needing time off to manage extermination in their home or apartment would not be protected by the Family and Medical Leave Act because bedbugs do not constitute a serious health condition. The Occupational Safety and Health Act does not expressly cover hazards related to bedbugs, although it generally requires employers to provide a workplace that is maintained reasonably free from insects and other vermin. Even if bedbugs themselves may not rise to the level of such a hazard, employers should proceed carefully if pesticides or other chemicals are applied.
Prepare and Orchestrate Your Response
Given the lack of a legal framework, the real task for employers is to expediently eradicate the bedbug infestation in a manner that is consistent and fair to those affected. Employers should promptly contact a certified pest management professional to confirm the presence of bedbugs and plan an appropriate extermination process.
For many employers, the people issues are as vexing as the parasite issues. At the outset, employers should put real thought into how best to communicate the situation to staff. If an employee comes forward to management and discloses an infestation discovered at home, for example, the employer likely can handle the situation more discreetly, especially if the workplace is not yet compromised.
But an employer in your situation, Disgusted in Denver, will need to address the situation more publicly. A communication to all employeesor perhaps to all employees located near the source, or on the same floor, etc., depending on your office layoutmay be appropriate, to inform them of the presence of bedbugs and explain the employers extermination plan. This communication presents a good opportunity for an employer to share facts about bedbugs (including links to the CDC or EPA websites), to counteract the stigma associated with their presence, and to encourage employees to share any further bedbug sightings or related concerns. If people are freaking out, as you indicated, it may also be helpful to remind employees that negative or accusatory comments about coworkers are neither welcome, nor productive. If your company does not already have a policy concerning pest infestations, it might be a good time to develop and formalize a practice.
Dont Lose Sight of the Bigger Picture
In crafting a response and/or adopting a policy, employers often wonder how far they should go in assisting employees who are dealing with infestations at home. Can an employer require an employee to stay away from the office until they have conquered the outbreak? Can an employer require a doctors note from the employees exterminator attesting that the household infestation has been remedied? How should an employer treat time off taken by employees to address bedbugs at home? Should an employer pay for an employees household or vehicle extermination? These questions often boil down to balancing the cost of assistance against the benefits to the employer. When weighing these options, employers should bear in mind that they will be setting a precedent.
Because employers have significant discretion in this situation, they may require an employee to take a leave of absence until the infestation is resolved, or allow them to work from home if feasible until the situation is resolved.3They may further require the employee to present proof of the abatement from a reputable pest management professional before being allowed to return to the workplace.
Relatedly, an employer could opt to pay the regular wages of nonexempt employees who are sent home or choose to stay home and are not working, even though these workers would not otherwise be entitled to compensation for hours not worked. (Exempt employees are subject to different rules and generally should not be docked pay for absences shorter than a full workweek.) Alternatively, employers could permit employees to use accrued vacation or other paid time off to clear up an infestation at home. If the employer chooses the latter option, it may need to relax certain requirements under its attendance and leave policies, such as a requirement that employees provide certain advance notice before taking time off.
In deciding how to proceed, employers should consider how their messaging may be received by personnel. If an employer sends an employee home until an infestation is eliminated and that leave is entirely unpaid, employees exposed in the future may be less likely to notify the employer of a household infestation. While this approach may be less expensive to employers, it may also make it more difficult to combat ongoing or future outbreaks.
Employers should undertake a similar analysis when determining whether to subsidize the cost of household pest control for affected employees. Some employers volunteer to pay (in whole or in part) for treatment in an employees home, to help ensure the incident is contained. After all, if the employees home infestation is not properly resolved, the employer risks repeated re-infestation at the workplace. Re-infestation means the employer must start again at square one, expending additional time and expense on extermination in the office as well as any preventative measures.
Once an employer has decided how it wants to tackle bedbug or similar infestations, it should train management to follow protocols consistently and fairly for any future incidents. If one employee is granted leave with pay, and/or subsidized household extermination, coworkers may expect similar treatment if they contract a bedbug problem. Failure to treat employees similarly may result in complaints of favoritism or even unlawful discrimination.
Employers facing bedbugs are always itching for a simple solution. In sum, however, there are different ways to approach the situation, and employers should choose the response that makes the most sense in their circumstances. Best of luck,Disgusted in Denver!
A version of this article was originally published in 2018.
Visit link:
Dear Littler: Bedbugs have returned to the office with our employees. What do we do? - Littler Mendelson PC
- Disneys $900 a Night Hotel Suffers Bug Infestation - Inside the Magic - January 23rd, 2026
- 'Horrendous, heinous and abhorrent': Donation forces Aussie op shop closure, future at risk - nzherald.co.nz - January 23rd, 2026
- Experts Share The Best Ways To Prevent Bed Bugs Before They Become A Problem - Southern Living - January 23rd, 2026
- Denver Senior Living Facility Infested With Bedbugs for a Year, Resident Claims - westword.com - January 21st, 2026
- Theres a database that tracks bed bug activity, plus 4 travel tools you didnt know existed - travelhost.com - January 18th, 2026
- Bed bugs keep woman out of jail: Highland Heights Police Blotter - Cleveland.com - January 16th, 2026
- Pennsylvania Bed Bug Hotel and Apartment Reports - Bed Bug Reports - January 16th, 2026
- Communication expert shares 2-step method for talking to people who never admit they're wrong - Upworthy - January 16th, 2026
- This My Strange Addiction story is hard to watch - Q98.5 - January 16th, 2026
- Millions of bedbugs threaten crops, but a Brazilian university project uses wasps and fungi to control the pest and reduce chemical dependency - CPG... - January 14th, 2026
- Worried you might have bed bugs? Here's how to tell, and the first thing to do if you have them - NBC News - January 14th, 2026
- Bedbug infestation detected at Schenectady County's Schaffer Heights office building - WRGB - January 12th, 2026
- Airbnb stay in Kitchener turns to nightmare after couple looks under the mattress - The Record - January 12th, 2026
- Bed Bugs - Public Health Sanitation Program | Texas DSHS - January 12th, 2026
- How to get rid of bedbugs: What the experts advise - Medical Xpress - January 10th, 2026
- Can Cats Carry Bed Bugs? Vet-Reviewed Info, Risks & What to Do - Catster - January 7th, 2026
- Family sues Delta and KLM for $200,000, claiming they were attacked by bed bug infestation on flight - East Idaho News - January 7th, 2026
- Heres how to get rid of bedbugs, what experts advise - Hastings Tribune - January 7th, 2026
- Trusted Bed Bug Interceptors and Monitors from Optimum Pest Control Prevent Future Infestation - 24-7 Press Release Newswire - January 7th, 2026
- The Likeliest Places You Can Pick Up Bed Bugs And Bring Them Back To Your Home - House Digest - January 6th, 2026
- Family sues Delta, KLM for $200K, claiming they were attacked by bed bug infestation on flight - KSL.com - January 4th, 2026
- Sticky Cockroach Trap Adhesive Monitoring Trap for Kitchen, Effective Against Roaches, Bed Bugs & Silverfish (OEM) - Global Sources - January 2nd, 2026
- Ticks named 2025 Pest of the Year as ER visits surge - weareiowa.com - January 2nd, 2026
- Omg guys, someone found bed bugs in this Manchester cinema and the video is horrifying - The Tab - January 2nd, 2026
- Bed bug infestation has a Manitoban frustrated - CityNews Winnipeg - CityNews Winnipeg - January 2nd, 2026
- Family sues Delta, KLM claiming their flight was infested with bed bugs - 11Alive.com - December 31st, 2025
- Ticks named 2025 Pest of the Year as ER visits surge - WQAD - December 31st, 2025
- Family sues Delta and KLM for $200,000, claiming they were attacked by bed bug infestation on flight - CBS News - December 31st, 2025
- Family claims international flight booked through Delta was infested with bed bugs - WSB-TV - December 31st, 2025
- Bed Bugs - Department of Health - December 30th, 2025
- Flights Infested With Bed Bugs Prompts Roanoke Family To Sue Airlines - fox8live.com - December 30th, 2025
- Family Sues Delta and KLM, Says They Were Bitten by Bed Bugs on Flight - Business Insider - December 30th, 2025
- Facial recognition: Burning the house to kill bedbugs - The Korea Times - December 30th, 2025
- Lawsuit claims family bitten by bed bugs on international flight from Atlanta - FOX 5 Atlanta - December 30th, 2025
- Flights Infested With Bed Bugs Prompts Roanoke Family To Sue Airlines - Live 5 News - December 27th, 2025
- Can You Pick Up Bed Bugs While Traveling? What To Know Before You Unpack - Southern Living - December 27th, 2025
- Flights infested with bed bugs prompt Roanoke family to sue airlines - WDBJ7 - December 27th, 2025
- 'I'm a mattress expert don't make this one mistake or risk taking bedbugs with you' - The Mirror - December 27th, 2025
- Flights Infested With Bed Bugs Prompts Roanoke Family To Sue Airlines - WDBJ7 - December 27th, 2025
- Family sues Delta after being 'swarmed and bitten by BEDBUGS' on flight to Europe - Daily Mail - December 27th, 2025
- Urgent warning over a resurgence of bedbugs - as expert reveals they can become active again over winter - Daily Mail - December 25th, 2025
- Virginia family says they were swarmed and bitten by bedbugs on flight, sue Delta and KLM airlines - NBC News - December 25th, 2025
- Family Sues KLM and Delta as Vacation Turns Into Horror After Bed Bug Nightmare on Transatlantic Flight - Inquisitr News - December 25th, 2025
- Redeye? 6 AM Departure? Alaska Wants A New Boss For Inflight Credit Card Pitches [Roundup] - View from the Wing - December 25th, 2025
- Urgent warning over bedbugs as expert reveals they can become active again over winter - MSN - December 25th, 2025
- Family sues airlines after being attacked by bed bugs on flight - The Independent - December 23rd, 2025
- These 6 pests may be lurking in your GA homes spare room. Heres how to deal with them - Columbus Ledger-Enquirer - December 21st, 2025
- Travel experts warn! Why switching on hotel room lights right after check-in can be a costly mistake - Times of India - December 21st, 2025
- Bed Bugs Found in TVs, School Buses and Hospital ORs, NPMA Reports - Pest Control Technology - December 21st, 2025
- Maine school dealing with cockroach infestation, reports of bed bugs - fox23maine.com - December 21st, 2025
- Henderson parents notified of bed bugs in classroom - KLAS 8 News Now - December 19th, 2025
- Maine school dealing with cockroach infestation, reports of bed bugs - WGME - December 19th, 2025
- Unrelenting itchy feeling: Family ambushed by bed bugs aboard transatlantic flight sues over ruined trip - The Independent - December 19th, 2025
- Bed bugs, lack of heat at Karl King cited as trustee files complaint - South Bend Tribune - December 19th, 2025
- Housing authority addresses bedbug issues at Grand Island apartment complex - KSNB - December 19th, 2025
- The Taboo Travel Word: Hotels Take Proactive Measures Against Bed Bugs - TravelPulse Canada - December 19th, 2025
- French Cinematheque To Reopen Cinemas On January 2 Following Five-Week Bed Bug Closure - Deadline - December 19th, 2025
- Hall County Housing Authority address bed bugs in Centennial Towers - KSNB - December 19th, 2025
- Commissioners to meet with Hall County Housing Authority after bedbug discussion - The Grand Island Independent - December 17th, 2025
- Cockroaches, bed bugs and frustration for families in one Maine school - WMTW - December 17th, 2025
- This Bug Looks Like Its Ready for a Night at the Disco - A-Z Animals - December 17th, 2025
- 2 residents of Grand Island's Centennial Towers say their apartments have bedbugs - The Grand Island Independent - December 17th, 2025
- Bed Bugs Found in TVs, School Buses, and Hospital ORs -- And Homeowners Frequently Misidentify Them - PR Newswire - December 16th, 2025
- UK homeowners urged to check beds now amid winter bed bug surge - The Mirror - December 13th, 2025
- Bedbugs pose costly threat during holiday travel, health expert advises on prevention tips - KTXS - December 13th, 2025
- Forget Santa! Bed bugs are coming to town if you travel for the holidays - Tom's Guide - December 13th, 2025
- Bed Bugs - development.saccounty.gov - December 13th, 2025
- Bed bug epidemic warning as infestations soar over winter months - The Mirror - December 13th, 2025
- Simon Cowell reveals hes planning wild TV show about germs and bed bugs that will disgust viewers - The Sun - December 11th, 2025
- Simon Cowell reveals hes planning wild TV show about germs and bed bugs that will disgust viewers - The Sun - December 11th, 2025
- Bed bug infestation hits Britain: Cases surge by 62% as critters hitch rides into homes on luggage and clothing - dailymail.co.uk - December 11th, 2025
- Bed bug infestation hits Britain: Cases surge by 62% as critters hitch rides into homes on luggage and clothing - dailymail.co.uk - December 11th, 2025
- U.K. Hotels Turn to Heat Treatment as Bed Bug Cases Surge Ahead of Christmas, ThermoPest Reports - Reuters - December 11th, 2025
- U.K. Hotels Turn to Heat Treatment as Bed Bug Cases Surge Ahead of Christmas, ThermoPest Reports - Reuters - December 11th, 2025
- NPMA Crowns Ticks as 2025 Pest of the Year - Pest Control Technology - December 8th, 2025
- Another bedbug found at Bradley Central; some parents disappointed with school's reaction - Local 3 News - December 6th, 2025
- Lufkin hotel reopens after updated inspection shows improvement to rooms - KLTV.com - December 6th, 2025
- Dont Let the Bed Bugs Bite - WV News - December 6th, 2025
- New Study Reveals the Real Cause of the bed bugs - mebaneenterprise.com - December 6th, 2025
- Hotel and restaurant cited for evidence of bed bugs, raw fish/eggs, food stored in oven - Local 3 News - December 6th, 2025
