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Second Case of Bed Bugs Reported at UNK

From the University of Nebraska at Kearney:

Officials at the University of Nebraska at Kearney confirmed a second case of bedbugs has been found in a residence hall Thursday.

The second case is again isolated to a single room in the same hall where bedbugs were found earlier.

No bedbugs were found in rooms adjacent to, or above or below, the affected room.

A pest control company has been on site, conducted an in-depth inspection and will treat the affected room, as well as the rooms on both sides, and above and below, the affected room.

All five rooms will also have two follow-up treatments.

"We have a protocol in place and will be following that protocol," Dr. Earls said. "If students in the residence halls suspect bedbugs, they should contact residence hall staff immediately. Students seeking treatment for bites should contact Health Care."

While bedbugs are a nuisance, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, they are not known to transmit disease.

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Second Case of Bed Bugs Reported at UNK

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Bedbug expert scratches head over extent of UNL infestation

Posted: Friday, February 17, 2012 9:41 am | Updated: 9:48 am, Fri Feb 17, 2012.

LINCOLN – The large number of bedbug reports at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln – 94 rooms treated for the pests so far -- has led one national expert to wonder whether UNL is getting "false positives" from the dogs it's been using to detect the bugs.

"Something doesn't seem right," said Jeffrey White, an entomologist who serves as technical director for Bedbug Central, an online bedbug information center. He has been a featured entomologist on "Infested," an Animal Planet program about insect infestations.

It's possible that the university's aggressive attack has resulted in false positives, said UNL spokeswoman Kelly Bartling.

Only a handful of the bedbug reports have come from students who actually saw the bugs or were bitten.

The rest were detected through the housing department's efforts to ferret out the bugs, though in some rooms they could be seen climbing and crawling. UNL has estimated that the cost to detect and eradicate the bugs could exceed $100,000.

The university has used five bedbug-sniffing dogs from three different handlers in a room-to-room dragnet.

So far, about 1,300 of the 3,256 dormitory rooms have been checked, with bedbugs confirmed in about 7 percent of the rooms. The handlers do attempt to corroborate one dog's "alert" by bringing in a second dog but don't always take the time to hunt for visual evidence of the bugs.

Despite the possibility of false positives, "the responsible thing to do is to treat the room anyway," Bartling said. "What's the alternative? Nobody wants anybody to get bedbug bites. The strategy is to get ahead of them and identify them before they start biting."

Although campuses across the country are dealing with bedbug problems, White said, he's checked with other major universities and none has ever dealt with an infestation that extended beyond five rooms.

Bedbugs have become more common in the United States in recent years because they have developed resistance to commonly used pesticides. White said college campuses are especially vulnerable to bedbugs.

"College and university dorms are really long-term-stay hotels," he said. "The trick is limiting the spread in a dorm building. You have a lot of socialization among students in a dorm. If you don't catch things quick enough, you have a sort of spiderweb effect."

He said the most common times for college bedbug reports are right after summer break, right after semester break and right after spring break.

Usually, the situation is that students have brought the bugs back with them from their travels, and only a few bugs -- fewer than 20 -- are involved.

High-level infestations, of 100 bugs or more, take longer to develop but are tougher to eradicate.

White said it can be tough to catch bedbugs early. Some studies have shown that 30 percent of people don't react to bedbug bites. The bugs are nocturnal and hide in crevices, cracks and dark places like the inside of a bed's box springs.

White himself has been a bedbug victim. He woke one morning with bites on the nape of his neck. He dismissed them as mosquito bites. A week later, he found a cluster of three bites on the back of his arm.

"I knew only one thing does that."

He checked his box spring and found just one bug, which he quickly killed.

"It was a simple solution, but it brought some reality to the situation," he said. "You can't really understand what it's like until you have them. I had a hard time sleeping for a couple months."

The first residence hall report at UNL came the first week after classes resumed in January. Housing officials said they found a mass of bugs hiding behind a built-in pegboard in a dormitory room.

White said the bugs could have been there for weeks -- and were hungry when the students returned from semester break. Bedbugs can live for three to six months without feeding.

The bugs don't build nests, but they tend to congregate in one area, he said. Their deposits -- which look like black spots -- give off a pheromone that attracts more bugs. Their eggs are usually found in that area.

Adults reach about a quarter-inch in size, and they are round and flat like a tick. Eggs and hatchlings are quite small, the size of the letters on a penny. The eggs are translucent.

The first UNL inspections were done by Spots, a rat terrier handled by James Pelowski of Lincoln. Pelowski said he always works with a secondary inspector who helps him look for visual evidence of bugs after Spots signals the alert.

"With my dog, we always show physical evidence," he said. "There's absolutely no false positives on my end."

After the dog alerts -- and Spots can detect as few as one or two bugs -- Pelowski and his secondary inspector put on their gloves and pull out high-intensity flashlights and magnifying glasses. "We usually find some within 2 to 3 feet," he said.

"Out of all the colleges I've worked with, UNL is definitely doing the best job," he said. "It's definitely the most aggressive in seeking to get this critter taken care of."

Pelowski said he is not affiliated with a pest control company, to avoid creating the appearance that he has an incentive to find the bugs.

Mark Lillis, a canine handler and bedbug division manager for a pest control company based in Topeka, Kan., said one bedbug is as bad as 100. An adult bedbug produces five to seven eggs per day.

"I don't fault what the university is doing by any means," he said. "The reason for using canines is to get ahead of the bedbugs and to eradicate them."

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Bedbug expert scratches head over extent of UNL infestation

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Bank robbery couple sentenced to prison

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) - A husband and wife who robbed a bank together and led police on a wild chase were sentenced today to federal prison.

Adam Quincy Jones was ordered to spend 13 years in prison for the Sept. 28 robbery at the Comerica Bank branch at 857 Four Mile Road NW. He had pleaded guilty to bank robbery and using a firearm.

Then, just minutes after he left the courtroom, his wife Tammy Jo Jones was sentenced to 6.5 years for helping with the robbery. She drove the getaway Budget rental truck.

Adam Jones had nothing to say before U.S. District Judge Gordon Quist sentenced him, but his wife told the judge she was sorry.

"I'm not going to make any excuses," she said. "What I did was wrong. I put a lot of people in danger."

Adam Jones used a gun he bought on the street to rob the bank, getting away with nearly $76,000. He got away on a bicycle, then rode to where his wife was waiting in a Budget rental truck. They led police on a chase through the Grand Rapids area, tossing cash along the way.

Police finally caught up with them behind a Grandville Avenue SW school.

In a sentencing memorandum, Adam Jones' defense attorney painted a picture of a man driven by desperation.

In mid-August, the couple scraped up enough money for a bus trip from Florida, where they were living, to Grand Rapids, where his stepdaughter was in the hospital with a life-threatening blood clot, the attorney wrote. They stayed in a cramped apartment infested with bed bugs and slept on the floor, the document states.

In desperation to return to Florida, they came up with the plan to rob the bank, the attorney wrote.

Judge Quist wasn't impressed by the story of desperation.

"No amount of desperation ... can either justify or mitigate" the robbery, or the chase that endangered the public and police, he said.

The judge also today admonished members of the public who pocketed some of the bank money that littered the getaway trail. The feds say more than $16,000 is still missing.

"It just continues the crime," Quist said. "They know the money's not theirs and they should return it."
 

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Bank robbery couple sentenced to prison

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Don’t let bed bugs bite, Region says

Don’t let bed bugs bite, Region says. People who travel this winter are being urged to be careful not to bring home bed bugs, amid a surge of infestations of the blood-sucking bug. File photo

Niagara residents are being cautioned by the Region’s public health department to take precautions to avoid bringing bed bugs into their homes.
The Region, which issued an alert about a surge in bedbug infestations last August, said on Feb. 8 that people need to be aware of how to avoid having their own infestation.
The same week that the Region issued the alert last summer, the U.S. National Pest Management Association issued sobering statistics from a new survey, showing explosive growth in the number of exterminators’ calls regarding infestations everywhere from buses and taxis to nursing homes, office buildings, schools and hotels/motels in the last year.
For many people, bed bugs are a relic of a bygone era, conjuring up images of filthy tenement housing in big cities like New York City back in the Depression.
But the tenacious little bloodsuckers hung on, and now in a world where people travel more than ever before, they’re back with a vengeance, hitching rides on things such as suitcases and clothing and establishing new colonies in homes, businesses and anywhere else where there’s human blood to gorge on.
Peter Jekel, with the public health department, said the presence of bed bugs doesn’t reflect a lack of cleanliness: they can be found in five-star hotels, buses and gleaming cruise ships. People opting to take a break from winter this month and next months can take the following steps to protect themselves from bed bugs, he said:
• Try to avoid booking a hotel with a bedbug problem.
• Use luggage with hard, smooth plastic without inviting pockets, since bed bugs struggle over smooth surfaces and polished metal.
• Pack clothes into oversized, sealable plastic bags and leave them inside luggage during the trip, or hanging in the closet – never on the bed or floor.
• Leave luggage outside the room and perform an inspection around the bed: peel back the bed sheets and check the mattress for blood stains and bed bug feces. Run your fingers along the upper and lower seams of the mattress and make sure to check the headboard.
• Check the bedside table. Look for signs of bed bugs in the drawers and along the wall on the side of the bed that is less likely to be disturbed by cleaning staff and guests.
• If you detect bed bugs, be sure to inform hotel management and request another room. But just moving to a different room may not be the total answer: You should repeat the inspection of any new or different room you are offered.
• When you pack to leave, inspect your luggage carefully and inspect every item as you pack to help detect any bugs or signs.
• After your trip, unpack luggage outdoors, re-inspect clothing and then put everything into the dryer on the highest setting possible for at least 30 minutes or steam clean (for delicates). Vacuum your luggage thoroughly.
• If you find bed bugs or their droppings, if you have bites or know that you have spent time in a room with bed bugs, vacuum your suitcases and dispose of the vacuum bag. Washable items should be laundered in the hottest water possible and dried on the highest setting possible for 30 minutes.

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Don’t let bed bugs bite, Region says

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IFC discusses conference, character campaign

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln Interfraternity Council met Tuesday evening to discuss the recent Association of Fraternal Leadership & Values Conference, attended by executive officers in St. Louis.

About 2,800 greek organizations, all representing either the IFC, the Panhellenic Council, the National Pan-Hellenic Council and the Multicultural Greek Council attended the conference held Feb. 9-12.

"It was a cool glimpse at how unified the greek community can be," said Jack Christie, a junior advertising and public relations major and secretary of UNL's IFC. "The conference was great motivation to unify all four councils (in Lincoln) into one greek experience."

President Tyson Johnson, a senior economics and political science major, mentioned similar experiences and described "incredible diversity."

In addition to working with other greek councils, the IFC met with its Big Ten counterparts for the first time. Johnson said they left with many good ideas, including methods to possibly poll outgoing freshmen in an effort to understand why those not involved with the greek system decided against it. The council hopes polling could lead to better recruitment strategies and translate into increased enrollment.

Also in attendance was Chris Devlin, a graduate student working toward his master's in higher education and administration. Devlin appeared on behalf of the vice chancellor of Student Affairs to present a new character campaign called "Show Your Red." Launched in August, the campaign aims to identify and promote positive character attributes campus-wide.

"‘Show Your Red' identifies the core characteristics of what it means to be a Husker," Devlin said.

The campaign establishes six core values branded as "building blocks of integrity." While not intended to be all-encompassing, the program will promote "caring, citizenship, commitment, dependability, open-mindedness and respect." By building a relationship with campus events and organizations like the greek community, the campaign hopes to establish a program that rewards good character throughout the campus.

The council announced that the bedbug informational session for the greek system, originally scheduled for March 1, has been moved to Feb. 29 at 6 p.m., and the council noted that, to date, two cases of bed bugs have been confirmed at greek living units.

The council announced plans to schedule luncheons between members of the council and representatives from each fraternity.

"We want you to know that we will be there for you," Johnson said. "The council wants to establish a really good relationship between the IFC and each chapter and this is a good way to start."

The next IFC meeting is scheduled for Feb. 28.

jacobfokken@DailyNebraskan.com

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IFC discusses conference, character campaign

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