Category Archives: Bed Bugs Alberta

  Alberta, Canada Bed Bug Registry Map
  Thursday 25th of April 2024 07:41 AM


Hotel   Residence   Location   

Zoom In on the above map using the map controls for more detail, and select an incident by clicking on it for address details.

Use the field below to search for incident reports around an address - it will also auto suggest up to 10 incident addresses as you type.


Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

Incident Radius: 400 Miles

We cannot vouch for the truthfulness of any report on this site. If you feel a location has been reported in error, or want to dispute a report, please contact us.

News Links:

Edmonton No. 6 on list of top Canadian bedbug cities – Edmonton Journal

Edmonton ranked sixth on a pest control companys list of the worst cities in Canada for bedbugs.

The city finished behind first-place Toronto, Winnipeg, Vancouver, Ottawa and St. Johns, N.L., according to a news release Tuesday from Orkin Canada.

The ranking is based on the number of commercial and residential treatments Orkin, which bills itself as Canadas largest pest-control company, carried out in each city between July 1, 2016, and June 2017.

It did not release the number of treatments in each city, saying the information is competitively sensitive.

Halifax; Sudbury, Ont.; Scarborough, Ont.; and Calgary rounded out the top 10.

Vishant Sharma, an Orkin Canada branch manager based in Edmonton, said the company receives daily calls about bedbug infestations.

He said the problem has gotten worse in the last decade as bedbugs hitchhike on travellers to the city including workers moving to the region during recent oil booms.

Theres a lot of reasons for it, he said of the increase. More international travel people are travelling a lot more now. People moving around, a lot of camp work, things like that.

Orkin Canadas ranking of the worst cities in Canada for bed bugs.

They can hide in any crack or crevice the width of a credit card, he added, making them particularly difficult to exterminate.

Sharma said the pests can travel on luggage, making the summer travel season a particularly bad time for beg bugs.

According to Alberta Health Services, inspectors conducted 849 housing pest inspections between April 1, 2016, and March 31, 2017. Of those, 257 contained bed bugs.

The bugs have even been detected in office buildings.TheNeil Crawford Provincial Centre in Edmonton, which houses Alberta Infrastructure, was being treated for bedbugs last month.

jwakefield@postmedia.com

Read more from the original source:
Edmonton No. 6 on list of top Canadian bedbug cities - Edmonton Journal

Posted in Bed Bugs Alberta | Comments Off on Edmonton No. 6 on list of top Canadian bedbug cities – Edmonton Journal

Disgruntled man releases bedbugs in Maine city office – WTVC

The city manager in Augusta, Maine, says the municipal office building had to be sprayed for bedbugs after a man threw a cup of the pests onto an office counter and about 100 of them scattered off. (Courtesy William Bridgeo)

The city manager in Augusta, Maine, says the municipal office building had to be sprayed for bedbugs after a man threw a cup of the pests onto an office counter and about 100 of them scattered off.

City Manager William Bridgeo tells the Kennebec Journal the man apparently complained Friday to the code enforcement office about bedbugs at his former apartment then left, but returned after he showed the cup of bugs to a manager at his new apartment and was told he couldn't live there.

Bridgeo says the man let the bugs loose in the General Assistance Office where he asked for a form to request assistance and apparently was told he didn't qualify.

Police didn't immediately release the man's name or say if any charges would be filed.

See the original post here:
Disgruntled man releases bedbugs in Maine city office - WTVC

Posted in Bed Bugs Alberta | Comments Off on Disgruntled man releases bedbugs in Maine city office – WTVC

How to Kill Bedbugs on Clothes With Heat in the Dryer …

Put wet or dry clothes in the dryer to kill bedbugs.

Clearing your home of a bedbug infestation can be challenging. Bedbugs often live in furniture and other items that are hard to clean, and they tend to be resistant to insecticides. But heat-treating your home and belongings can kill bedbugs at every stage of their life cycle. While heat-treating your home might require special equipment or professional help, you can kill bedbugs in your clothes using a normal clothes dryer.

A creature's thermal death point is the temperature at which it cannot survive. Bedbugs die at 113 degrees Fahrenheit, but eggs can survive slightly higher temperatures. The eggs also survive heat for longer than bedbugs at other stages of development. According to Dr. Dini M. Miller of the Department of Entomology at Virginia Tech, 113-degree temperatures kill bedbugs within 90 minutes, but the bugs die at 118 degrees in only 20 minutes. At 118 degrees, bedbug eggs die within 90 minutes; at higher temperatures, the eggs die faster.

The heat of a clothes dryer is high enough to kill bedbugs in all stages of their life cycle. Some machines, however, take longer to heat up than others. If your dryer reaches 120 degrees, it can kill bedbugs and their eggs quickly -- but it might take the dryer 10 to 15 minutes to reach that temperature. Because of this delay, tumble-dry your clothes on high for 30 minutes to make sure the heat treatment is effective. You don't need to wash your clothes before drying them to kill bedbugs and their eggs.

If your clothes are labeled "dry-clean only," put them in the dryer at a moderate temperature, and tumble them for 90 minutes to make sure all the eggs reach the thermal death point. Alternatively, you can take them to a dry cleaner; if you do, transport them in sealed plastic bags and warn the cleaners that the garments are infested. Some dry cleaners might not be willing to take them, for fear of spreading the infestation to their establishments.

Even if you can't tumble-dry an item, you may still be able to heat-treat it without calling an exterminator. Take shoes, bags and heat-safe accessories to a commercial laundry and heat them in a dryer with a shelf, so they aren't subjected to tumbling. Transport them in sealed bags to avoid spreading the infestation, and heat them for 90 minutes to ensure the treatment is effective. Alternatively, seal items in plastic bags and put them in the sun on a hot day. Leave them on your car's dashboard or a sunny deck for at least a full day to kill the bugs and their eggs.

Excerpt from:
How to Kill Bedbugs on Clothes With Heat in the Dryer ...

Posted in Bed Bugs Alberta | Comments Off on How to Kill Bedbugs on Clothes With Heat in the Dryer …

What do I do if my hotel room has bed bugs

QUESTION: We checked into a hotel in Houston, Texas. We believe the mattresses are infested with bed bugs. We have many bite marks all over our body. I removed the bedding from the mattresses and saw brownish spots on both mattresses, but no bugs. I dont know what to do now. Please tell us what to do. Does the hotel owe us money? I cant afford to sue.

ANSWER: Whether you are bitten by bed bugs in either Houston Texas or any other state, the following tips apply to any state. Our bed bug attorneys can help you in any state. First, start collecting evidence immediately. It is common upon first glance not to see the bed bugs. Search the room for bugs if you find any capture them and put them somewhere for safe keeping. Inspect underneath the mattress, on the box spring, in the crevices of the mattress, in and around the headboard, and along the bed skirt. Additionally, the brown spots you mentioned are more likely than not fecal spots and blood stains left behind by bed bugs in your room. Fecal spots are a strong indication that a piece of furniture or room for that matter is infested with bed bugs. Make sure to take many clear pictures of the mattress and other items in the room that have fecal spots on them.

Next step, report the bed bug findings to any employee or manager at the hotel. It is very important a representative from the hotel create a report and provides you with a copy of the report. Then, demand a room change or a refund and relocate to another hotel. Before moving rooms or changing hotels have your clothing and belongings treated by a professional to prevent the spread of the infestation.

Pursue medical treatment for your bites and other injuries. Treatment can be received at an emergency room, walk in clinic or with your primary care physician. It is essential you advise the treating doctor you have come in contact with bed bugs and list all of the symptoms you are suffering from.

Photos are one of the most important components of properly documenting your injuries and loss. It is vital to your claim that you take many photos of your bites, discarded clothing and belongings, as well the room and bed bugs. If you have access to a smart phone or video camera documenting your injuries with a video recording device will strengthen your claim in addition to the photos.

You can contact the Texas Department of Health or Texas Department of Business and Professional Regulations and make a formal report. Let the department know everything you observed and how the hotel handled your complaints and the bed bug infestation.

If you have been injured or suffered a financial loss due to bed bugs, you may be entitled to reimbursement for the following items:

Lastly, contact our bed bug lawyers to discuss how we may be able to assist you. There are never any fees or costs in a bed bug case unless we win.

We respond the same day. We represent claimants bitten by bed bugs all over the United States.

We have handled many bed bug injury claims and you can read about them.

More Resolved Cases

Read what our clients say about us.

More Testimonials

Here is the original post:
What do I do if my hotel room has bed bugs

Posted in Bed Bugs Alberta | Comments Off on What do I do if my hotel room has bed bugs

I found this at walmart Got Bed Bugs? Bedbugger Forums

You know, zerg, I've tried to be patient with you. I really did. I know that you're young; and I know from nearly two decades of experience that people of a certain age (the late teens and all of the twenties) tend to move through life with a nearly imperturbable confidence in their own knowledge base. I don't know for sure that you're in that general age range, but that's my best guess.

I know that in part because I have very clear memories of being equally confident at that age.

However, a lot of the statements in this post fall into a trap. Many of the statements you make above treat your anecdotal observations as absolute facts. I'm not going to parse your post into specifics because it's clear that you're not interested in listening to anything that anyone--newbie or oldtimer, professional or amateur--here has to say if it doesn't confirm what you've already made up your mind to believe. And frankly, I have better things to do with my time than waste it trying to prove that someone is wrong on the internet.

However, for any other readers who might still be willing to listen, I want to point out the following.

Sean is a professional in the pest management industry. He has all the officially recognized bona fides that come with the professional training and experience that the state requires in order to be credentialed to treat peoples' homes to rid them of pests.

zerg_infestor is a bed bug sufferer who has read some stuff on the internets.

I know that for a lot of people,particularly in the rampantly anti-intellectual culture of the United States, charges of elitism are quick to get thrown around. There's a very long tradition in the US of many people mistrusting anyone who seems to be pretentious.

All of which means that especially people who've been burned before by bad PMP or people who generally are inclined to think that the advice to hire a PMP is some sort of conspiracy that reveals that we're in bed (metaphorically) with the pest pros are quick to assume that those of us who push professional help are doing so because of some hidden agenda.

I've said it before and I'll say it again: I get that there are people who are in a tough financial situation and who cannot afford to hire a PMP. But I also know that some people who claim they can't afford to hire a PMP have enough disposable income and just think that the whole thing is a racket.

Clearly, zerg_infestor is in the former category. And zerg's case is complicated by living at home with his or her parents who own the home.

In that case, my advice would be, if zerg's a minor, to call whatever state agencies he or she can to get them to force the parents to treat. Because all the self-treatment in the world isn't going to solve the problem if the whole house isn't treated.

If not, then it's harder, but the answer still has to involve getting the whole family on board somehow. I'm not a social worker or a psychologist. I don't have the experience or the skills to give advice about how to do so; but I know enough about bed bugs to know that until that happens, chances of solving the problem are slim.

If I break my ankle, I'm not going to read on the internet how to set it myself. I'm going to hire someone who has the hands on, day to day experience of setting other peoples' ankles properly. I don't think that makes me elitist or pretentious; it makes me someone who respects the experience that others have that I don't.

There are reasons that, for example, the medical profession prohibits doctors from treating relatives in some situations. When you have a problem that requires specialized expertise to solve, unless you have years to develop that expertise, you hire someone who has it.

Yes, the fact that not everyone can afford to do so creates a boatload of problems. Clearly, laws and our social support system need to catch up to the reality of this infestation.

And zerg's case is particularly complex.

If zerg doesn't own the home, but zerg's parents do, zerg's parents are going to have to get on board with a treatment plan.

If that's not possible, then the fastest, most effective, most likely to succeed, and in the long run cheapest approach is to get the parents to hire a *good* PMP to treat the house.

(For what it's worth, I've always found that most of the PMP here don't speak in pretentious language at all. And I would think that the number of times I've been told by posters to stop using such big words, my evaluation of pretentiousness would carry some weight. Maybe not. Maybe some big meanie like me who actually evaluates how trustworthy I find posts based on a host of complex factors including but not limited to the potential bias of a person because of what I know about his or her entire background, the person's data sample size, the amount of experience the poster has in dealing with bed bugs, and, yes, even the quality of the person's writing and grammar can't be trusted because I'm clearly an elitist, pretentious something or other.)

However, I don't see anything pretentious or elitist in Sean's post. (Please note: for the record, I find ad hominem attacks to be the fastest way to get me to dismiss a person's opinion. If the poster cannot even differentiate between the posts a person makes and the person him or herself, it's a pretty good sign to me that I shouldn't bother engaging with the person in question. I'm just sayin'.)

Pretentious means that someone is putting on airs and talking down to someone in a condescending manner. What I hear in Sean's post is a clear explanation of the actual facts about the regulations for applying a chemical. What I hear in zerg's post is a lot of selective listening.

From where I sit, when you're talking about applying chemical pesticides? I'm going to listen to the person, professional or amateur, who takes the time to explain step by step why a particular kind of application might be dangerous before I take the advice of a person who declares someone who takes that time to be pretentious or elitist by providing such information.

And a post that ends with:

A responsible DIY who is resorting to self-treatment as a last recourse because of financial constraints, it would seem to me, would be happy to hear advice from a PMP on how to most effectively apply chemicals. Responding to a "hey, btw, that product that you're using isn't supposed to be used by people without the credentials of a pest management pro" with that sentence seems to me to be the response of someone who may, in fact, be harboring an unstated bias against professionals in the pest management field or just professionals in general. Coupled with a post that repeatedly describes someone who took the time to share expertise as both elitist and pretentious?

Well, if this were a short story I was analyzing--you know, reading between the lines to see what the story implied as opposed to what it explicitly said?

I would infer that any text so quick to use labels like pretentious and elitist was, consciously or not, probably showing some of that anti-intellectual bias so common today. Since I don't know the person, I can only describe what the text itself gives away, and the text itself is screaming that kind of loudly to me.

I would just like to remind readers that anyone in the US has the right to post anything he or she wants. I can post that the sky is really red and that everyone who calls it blue is wrong and delusional. However, saying that won't make it reality.

When I read statements like this:

And zerg, I just want to be clear: I teach writing for a living. I'm pretty fluent at looking at a sentence and figuring out both what the phrasing in question actually says to most readers AND what I think the writer meant to say.

I'm not sure what a PMP acting like a poster not a PCO even means. My best inference is that PCOs act, well, elitist or pretentious by daring to suggest that the hundreds or thousands of cases of bed bugs that they're seen might give them a larger data set of knowledge and expertise to draw from than someone who is fairly early on in a battle against bed bugs. From where I sit, that sentence reveals more about the bias and suspicions of its author than I think the author meant the sentence to.

I'm also not at all sure what a social failure is, exactly. I mean, I've never met Sean. But I doubt he's a bigger geek than I am. I'm betting he gets out more on weekends than I do (seeing as how I could be at parties downstairs at the conference I'm at rather than typing this up on a Sat. night). More importantly, I do know this:

I don't give a rat's posterior about what a PMP's social life is like if he or she can effectively treat a bed bug problem.

And since I benefitted tremendously from the advice on this subject given by many people on these boards who have tons of professional experience with bed bugs, I would be very, very sad to see them chased off by this attitude that crops up from time to time among a handful of posters that somehow there is some big conspiracy on the part of the pest management industry to hide the good chemicals or the magic secret to getting rid of bed bugs from the general public so that they can continue to profit off of the rest of us.

If there were a safe, effective, OTC treatment for bed bugs, I'd be singing its praises from the rooftops in a heart beat. I expect that the PMP here would, for the most part, move on to treating other pests and do just fine making a living at that.

And I just hope that those posters who are willing to listen to reason will keep those facts and arguments in mind as they wade through the various posts on these issues. I also hope that those PMP who do take time out to help people here for free will not be put off by the people with the pest management equivalent of the whole "the moon landing never happened" or "the US government crashed the planes on 9/11 themselves" of the bed bug world.

(Apologies if this is a bit disordered, but it's the third day of the conference, and I'm pretty tired by this point in the con.)

Read the original here:
I found this at walmart Got Bed Bugs? Bedbugger Forums

Posted in Bed Bugs Alberta | Comments Off on I found this at walmart Got Bed Bugs? Bedbugger Forums