Category Archives: Bed Bugs United States

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  Wednesday 26th of November 2025 11:16 AM


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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

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Stop Bed Bugs Safely – Vermont Department of Health

What are bed bugs?

Bed bugs are small insects that feed on human blood. They are usually active at night when people are sleeping. Adult bed bugs have flat, rusty-red-colored oval bodies. About the size of an apple seed, they are big enough to be easily seen, but often hide in cracks in furniture, floors, or walls. When bed bugs feed, their bodies swell and become brighter red. They can live for several months without food or water.

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Most bed bug bites are initially painless, but later turn into large, itchy skin welts. These welts do not have a red spot in the center like flea bites.

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Although bed bugs are a nuisance, they are not known to spread disease.

Signs and symptoms of bedbug bites will usually affect only the surface of your skin, revealing themselves as small itchy red bumps known as papules or wheals. You might find the lesions in a linear or clustered fashion, indicative of repeated feedings by a single bedbug.

Some people may develop allergic reactions or larger skin reactions such as:

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In most cases, people carry bed bugs into their homes unknowingly, in infested luggage, furniture, bedding, or clothing. Bed bugs may also travel between apartments through small crevices and cracks in walls and floors.

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Stop Bed Bugs Safely - Vermont Department of Health

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Bed bugs bill addressing landlord/tenant responsibilities …

The New Hampshire Union Leader reports that the New Hampshire Senate passed House Bill 482 Thursday, which outlines the parameters for dealing with bed-bug infestations and the responsibilities of landlords and tenants to remediate the problem.

You can read the full text of HB482 here.

According to The Union Leader,

The bill is a compromise among all the stakeholders, including tenants, landlords and municipalities. Proponents say the bill will allow a rapid response that clarifies the responsibilities for remedial action.

The bill grew out of the work of the Bed Bug Action Committee, bringing those affected by bed-bug infestations together to reach a compromise on the best methods to fight the problem.

The bill now goes to the governor.

House Bill 482 has a number of provisions, including the following requirements:

Regarding this last provision, sections IV and V of the bill outline how theyre planning to determine responsibility; it appears that if there havent been other complaints from tenants and if the infested unit and adjacent units havent previously been treated, the original tenant will be considered responsible as the one who brought bed bugs into the building.

Thats a bit troubling, because the problem is, where theres a concern that one might be held financially responsible (and be unable to pay), some tenants simply wont report the problem.

Of course, the bill is smart in the sense it sets up a situation where assuming that happens, and bed bugs spread into other units the original tenant can be held responsible as the true source.

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Bed bugs bill addressing landlord/tenant responsibilities ...

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Bed Bugs Infest WA at a Soaring Rate

Bed Bugs arent just found in the United States, but other countries as well. In fact traveling is a huge cause of bed bugs, bed bugs have been called the hitch hikers of the world. In the past six years there has been a great increase of bed bugs in West Australia. Pest control companies are reporting a 5780 per cent increase. The spread is from hotels, cinemas, private homes, offices and public transportation and the bugs have developed a resistance to chemical treatment. Infestations, like in cinemas, are extremely hard to control.

Typically in a private home someone may spend $600 to get rid of bed bugs, but Greg Mills (owner of Allpest) said he knew of a couple that had spent $7,000 to get rid of the pests in their home. In really bad infestations bed bugs can be found not only in beds but in cracks and crevices, curtains as well as the edge of carpets. Another reason for the huge rise in reported infestations is that bedbugs have built up a resistance to the low-toxicity chemicals used on mattresses to kill them.

Many agree that bed bugs are going to continue to be problematic but there also needs to be effort put forth in order to find a better way to detect and exterminate them.

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Bed Bugs Infest WA at a Soaring Rate

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Bed bugs can survive freezing temperatures

Washington, Dec 09 : While it is suggested that exposing bed bug-infested clothing or other small items to freezing temperatures can help kill bed bugs, a new research has found that bed bugs may be less susceptible to freezing temperatures than previously reported.

Bed bugs, like many other insects, use a "freeze-intolerant" strategy against the cold, meaning they attempt to protect themselves from freeze injury by lowering the freezing point of their body fluids.

For this study, the researchers evaluated the supercooling point (SCP) and the lower lethal temperature (LLT) for all life stages of bed bugs, as well as their potential to feed after exposure to sublethal temperatures.

The authors found that in order to achieve 100 percent mortality, a minimum exposure time of 80 hours at minus 16 degrees celsius is required for all life stages. Temperatures below minus 15 degrees celsius are sufficient to control all life stages of bed bugs after 3.5 days, while temperatures below minus 20 degrees celcius require only 48 hours. They also observed bed bug eggs surviving in short-term exposures to temperatures as low as minus 25 degrees celcius.

Homeowners can place bed bug-infested items in a freezer to destroy them. However, the authors recommend that the items be placed in plastic bags and that they remain in the freezer for 2-4 days, depending on the freezer's temperature.

The study was published in the Journal of Economic Entomology.

--ANI (Posted on 09-12-2013)

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Bed bugs can survive freezing temperatures

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N.H. Law Targets Bed Bug Infestations

Concord New Hampshire landlords and tenants are teaming up under a new law aimed at eradicating infestations of the tiny, blood-sucking bed bug from rental housing.

The law, which takes effect Jan. 1, outlines the responsibilities landlords and tenants have in dealing with bed bug infestations. Advocates for the two groups who sometimes are at odds over laws worked together this year on legislation setting protocols in place so quick action would be taken to deal with the insects that leave telltale red bite marks on their victims.

Rick Castillo, coordinator of the New Hampshire Bed Bugs Action Committee, said the law is an effort to deal with the bugs quickly instead of turning first to the courts while the problem grows.

Elliott Berry, managing attorney for the Manchester office of New Hampshire Legal Assistance, said both sides were willing to give to establish clear protocols.

The new law calls for landlords to begin remediation within seven days of being notified by a tenant that bed bugs are in a rental. If the landlord fails to act, the tenant can ask a judge to order remediation.

The tenant must allow emergency entry to the landlord for 72 hours after notification. If the landlord gets a complaint from an adjacent unit, the landlord is allowed emergency entry into that unit with 48 hours of notice.

The landlord must provide written instructions for preparing the rental for remediation 72 hours in advance. Failure by the tenant to comply may lead to eviction, but landlords must allow for reasonable requests for other accommodations.

Landlords are required to pay up front for remediation, but tenants may be required to repay the landlord if they are responsible for the infestation. Landlords must attempt to work out a reasonable repayment plan with the tenant.

The tenant is presumed to be responsible if only his or her unit has bed bugs and there have been no other reports in the unit or adjacent units in the six months. Landlords can evict tenants responsible for an infestation who dont pay for remediation if the landlord shows a reasonable repayment plan was offered to the tenant.

The law does not specify a form of remediation, but landlords must show a substantial reduction of the infestation in 60 days.

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N.H. Law Targets Bed Bug Infestations

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