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