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Cowleys Harnesses Information & Pest Control Technology to Achieve Double-Digit Growth

NEPTUNE CITY, N.J., Feb. 9, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- There is no general consensus on the economic outlook for small businesses in New Jersey. There are as many opinions as there are economists. But no matter what the economists say, most every small business owner agrees that we have a long way to go. With low consumer confidence, tight credit, and stubbornly high unemployment, small businesses are still facing unprecedented challenges. But small businesses can't use that as an excuse. There are still plenty of opportunities for those businesses willing to seek them out.

Last year, Cowleys Termite & Pest Services experienced double-digit growth. 

"Technological advances continue to change the way we run our business. Our exceptional growth rate in 2011 can be largely attributed to embracing new marketing avenues and pest control technologies. There is a misconception that the pest control of today is no different than the pest control of decades ago. The reality is that it's a whole different ballgame starting with more stringent regulations of pesticides. Today's pest control operator must be willing to incorporate new proven technologies that satisfy our customers. For example, with bedbug infestations, we have added bed bug heat treatments to kill the insects with no pesticides at all as well as canine detection dogs able to sniff out a single bed bug. With termite control, we are now offering Altricet(R), a powerful 'green' termiticide for environmentally conscious customers. Also, to better serve our customers, we have new behind-the-scenes routing software to more efficiently schedule our crews," said Bill Cowley, owner of Cowleys Termite & Pest Services.

Cowleys has positioned itself to meet those changes in business operations in 2012 and beyond by implementing a methodical marketing and business plan that integrates and utilizes today's Internet technologies and social media. Although diversified into three distinct business units including termite and pest control, nuisance wildlife, and bird solutions, customers still have the peace of mind of dealing with Cowleys - one business with an earned reputation for excellence. 

To match its three business units, Cowleys implemented three entirely new websites. Each site is content-driven, offering structured, summarized, and highly informative material designed to educate homeowners and businesses with concise, timely information on pests, birds, and nuisance wildlife - all with just a few clicks. This centralized database of key information compiled and summarized from research institutions and other objective sources will give homeowners and businesses the information they need to make objective, informed decisions with regard to virtually any pest, wildlife, or bird infestation.  Resolving pest infestations are a team effort. With informed customers, infestations are removed more expeditiously and with better long-term results. 

Cowleys Termite & Pest Services, founded in 1991, has been helping New Jersey homes and businesses resolve all of their pest infestation problems, including overwintering bugs such as stink bugs, ladybugs and boxelder bugs. Cowleys also offers bird, rodent, and wildlife removal. For more information, visit http://www.cowleys.com or call 866-9-COWLEYS.

For More Information, Contact:

Bill Cowley
Cowleys Pest Services
38 West Sylvania Avenue
Neptune City, NJ 07753-6733
732-897-9553

This press release was issued through eReleases(R).  For more information, visit eReleases Press Release Distribution at http://www.ereleases.com.

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Bedbug Bill Tries to Hold Tenants Accountable For Infestation

LINN COUNTY, Iowa - They're the tiny critters that make your skin crawl.

Bedbugs are creeping their way into the Iowa legislature as landlords try to make tenants more accountable for an infestation.

House study bill 520 would require tenants to report bedbugs within a week of moving into a new apartment or within two days of discovering the bugs. If the renter fails to notify the property manager, they could be stuck with the cost of getting rid of the bugs. The bill is still being debated in a house subcommittee.

According to a study done by Linn County Public Health, it costs about $800 for one professional treatment of bedbugs. Public Health also estimates the community spends tens of thousands of dollars a month killing these pests.

"A lot of times tenants will try to deal with the problem themselves, and then the problem gets out of control,” explained Marion Landlord and former President of Landlords of Iowa, Keith Smith.

Smith says that's the reasoning behind a new bill backed by the Iowa Landlord Association. The bill tells renters they have two days to alert a property manager about a bedbug problem or risk paying thousands of dollars in pest control fees.

Linn County Public Health says it's tough to put a time frame on bedbugs.

"I really think there needs to be a robust education training program with this,” said bedbug expert, Ruby Perin.

Perin says it can take two days or two weeks for a bite to show up on skin. The bugs can also hide in other areas of a home. A person could check their bed and see nothing, but still have an infestation.

"It’s very landlord based,” Perin said, “If I was a tenant moving in, I'd want some kind of certification this is bed bug free."

A member of the Iowa Attorney General’s office, William Brauch, agrees saying he’s “never seen a bill this unbalanced.” But Smith says this is a study bill meant to start conversation about this problem.

He agrees education is a big part of the issue statewide.

"Yes, it's expensive,” Smith said, “we understand it’s expensive, but the sooner you tell us the cheaper it is to be addressed.”

Linn County Public Health Bedbug Information

House Study Bill 520

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SHELTER BUGS: A homeless shelter in Des Moines is infested with bed bugs

11:12 p.m. CST, February 10, 2012

A homeless shelter in Des Moines is experiencing a bed bug infestation.

The Iowa Homeless Youth Centers Shelter has had at least one of their dorm rooms infested with bed bugs.

“This has been an issue that we’re always fighting. Taking as many proactive measures as possible to assure that these don’t get into our facility and regardless every once in a while, it happens.” said Brad Whipple, director of the shelter.

The mattresses from the infested dorm room have been thrown away and the room has been closed off.

An exterminator has also been called to check the rooms and eliminate both the bed bugs and their eggs.

Although the shelter already runs on a tight budget, Whipple says, “We could redirect this money in a lot better way, but this is an important health issue that we take very seriously.”

An exterminator is planned to revisit the shelter next week.

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Railroad project will evict squatters from The Point

An illegal tent city for the homeless made up of shacks and tents cover the banks along The Point where the Gunnison River, left, flows into the Colorado River, right, west of the Fifth Street bridge.


Gretel Daugherty

An illegal tent city for the homeless made up of shacks and tents cover the banks along The Point where the Gunnison River, left, flows into the Colorado River, right, west of the Fifth Street bridge.

QUICKREAD

WHO OWNS THE POINT? WHO KNOWS?

For years, scores of homeless people have scratched out a living on a roughly half-acre swath of land perched above the merging of the Colorado and Gunnison rivers, trespassing all the while.

The land belongs to someone. Mesa County officials now are trying to figure out who.

Staff in the County Attorney’s Office and County Assessor’s Office are digging through records more than a century old in an effort to determine who has legal claim to the property that helps form Grand Junction’s namesake.

The Point, as the tract of land is known, was part of a larger parcel deeded in June 1908 to a man known as H.S. Day. He then gave half of it to Irwin A. Moon three months later, according to Assistant County Attorney Angela Barnes.

At some point, Day and Moon deeded the parcel to another person. But for reasons that remain a mystery, The Point was left off the deed, Barnes said. That means nobody has paid taxes on The Point since 1908. County officials thus far have been unable to find any heirs to the land.

“We do intend to find the owners as best we can,” Barnes said.

Quick read head

Something interesting about the story should be written in this space.

The scrap of land at the confluence of the Gunnison and Colorado rivers looks like a 19th century homestead accentuated with a few modern amenities.

The people who live here — those who have nowhere else to go or, in fact, prefer to call it home — have fashioned crude structures out of wood pallets, tar paper and plastic tarps. They’ve tied string between trees from which to hang blankets and clothes and taped signs to doors advising visitors not to disturb occupants, because they sleep during the day. A few boast generators and electrical appliances. Some keep dogs.

To get here, they must scamper across a railroad bridge with no escape route, hoping they aren’t chased or met head-on by a train, or scramble down a steep hillside that drops them right next to the tracks.

Soon, though, the homeless and transients who to this point have met little or no resistance for years to their illegally squatting on this half-acre sandbar known as The Point will be evicted permanently.

Union Pacific Railroad is finalizing construction plans that ultimately will cut off pedestrian access to the area, which is west of the Fifth Street bridge. Company spokesman Mark Davis said the exact work to be done and cost are yet to be determined, but railroad officials intend to stabilize the riverbank along the tracks with a series of sizable boulders and erect a large fence around the tracks in the area of The Point.

“From a safety standpoint, it’s something we all feel they put themselves in danger each time they go out on that bridge or try to go to their shelters,” Davis said.

While the project effectively eliminates a longtime homeless camp, law-enforcement officials and social workers acknowledge it may simply push those unable or uninterested in finding permanent housing to other stretches of the river. Homeless advocates, however, are working one-on-one with the homeless people to get them out of the elements and into temporary or permanent housing. Their firm goal is to end homeless encampments within a year.

“We don’t want to be a community that has 60, 70, 80 people along the riverbanks,” said Mollie Woodard, operations manager at Homeward Bound of the Grand Valley and chairwoman of the Grand Valley Coalition for the Homeless, which recently announced a 10-year plan to abolish homelessness in the valley.

Although camps are spread along the Colorado River in and near downtown Grand Junction, the camp at The Point historically has been the largest one. The population can vary, swelling to 50 during the warmest months of the year and shrinking to a dozen or so hard-core individuals once freezing temperatures settle in.

Since Union Pacific informed local agencies of its intentions to fence off its tracks near The Point a few months ago, organizations including Homeward Bound, the Mesa County Sheriff’s Department and Grand Valley Catholic Outreach have been advising occupants of The Point that they’ll need to move. Those efforts, coupled with the winter season, have succeeded in relocating nearly everyone. As of last week, Woodard said she was aware of only two people still camping at The Point.

The key to convincing people to relocate off the river — many are not only chronically homeless but also are battling drug addiction and mental illness — often is giving them individual attention, Woodard said.

“Sometimes it’s just meeting people where they’re at, especially with veterans,” she said, “They don’t feel like they have a lot of options. They’re used to dealing with a bigger, larger organization.”

One such person, according to Woodard, was Jim, a veteran in frail health who was infested with bed bugs and had lived on The Point for two years. She met him in December at the Catholic Outreach Soup Kitchen and asked him, point-blank, what he wanted out of his life and how she could help him. He talked about how cold he was and how he treasured his dog, who had been by his side for nine years.

The Veterans Affairs Medical Center offered him showers and connected him with the financial assistance for which he was eligible. He stayed at the Homeward Bound homeless shelter for a few weeks. He’s now in housing through Catholic Outreach’s St. Martin’s Place.

There are just under 1,000 homeless people in the valley, according to the last point-in-time count the homeless coalition conducted in January 2011. Ninety-four percent identified themselves as being residents of the county for at least three years, a fact that tells Woodard officials aren’t dealing with an influx of outsiders but local citizens unable or unwilling to find housing.

When the homeless coalition accounts for local homeless numbers next month, it will shift its focus, conducting what’s known as a vulnerability index count that assesses an individual’s health status and uses risk factors and length of homelessness to identify and rank the most vulnerable.

In the meantime, Woodard will continue to work with the final holdouts at The Point.

“The folks who are down there now, they’re going to take a unique approach,” she said. “I don’t have a quick solution. Everybody who was willing has come out of there. I’m very cautious with anybody who is still down there.”

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State Rep. convenes bed bug task force

CINCINNATI, OH (FOX19) -

State Rep. Dale Mallory (D-Cincinnati) held the first 2012 meeting of the Joint Bed Bugs Task Force on Thursday.

"Bed bugs will continue to be a problem if we allow them to continue to be a problem," said Rep. Mallory. "It is my hope that through effective education and programming, we can eliminate this hazard to public health. As the coalition against bed bugs gains allies and the public increases its awareness on how to prevent and to treat bed bug infestations, the bed bug epidemic will inevitably come to an end." 

The collaborative effort between the City of Cincinnati and Hamilton County is progressing, and has included academia and civil society in the campaign against bed bugs.

In addition to State Representative Mallory, Thursday's meeting of the task force was attended by officials and representatives from Congressman Chabot and Congresswoman Schmidt's offices, Hamilton County Public Health, the City of Cincinnati, the Cincinnati Metropolitan Housing Authority and various private stakeholders.

Copyright 2012 FOX19. All Rights Reserved.

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