The city that never sleeps? Tell that to New York’s bedbugs.
The tiny blood suckers specialize in feeding off sleeping bodies and this summer in the Big Apple they’re enjoying the pickings of their lives, specialists say.
After infesting unprecedented numbers of apartments and offices, the pests have branched out, raiding clothing stores and, most notoriously, a Victoria’s Secret lingerie outlet in Manhattan’s posh Upper East Side.
PHOTO: AFP
Officials on Wednesday last week warned of an epidemic and promised US$500,000 in anti-bedbug funds.
“We want to send a message to bedbugs,” New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn said. “Drop dead. Your days are over.”
Well, not quite, said Jeffrey White, host of Bedbug TV on www.bedbugcentral.com.
“They’re really starting to become prevalent in a lot of places and a lot of people’s homes are beginning to have a bedbug situation,” he said. “It’s dramatic in offices.”
The city’s 311 complaints line logged 31,719 bedbug-related inquiries in the 12-month period up to June this year, the mayor’s office said. That’s up from 26,000 in the previous year. Over the last five years, calls have risen about 20-fold.
Typically, it’s a problem no one wants to mention — infestations can lead to apartment leases being broken or, at the very least, bills in the hundreds of dollars from exterminator services, but after a series of high-profile outbreaks this month, the dreaded B-word became the talk of the town.
First the trendy Hollister flagship store in Soho briefly closed after critters crawled into hip clothing popular with teenagers and foreign tourists.
Next they scared the locals at an Abercrombie and Fitch clothing outlet in Manhattan, before causing panic in the emergency room at a Brooklyn hospital.
The incidents prompted the chief executive of Abercrombie and Fitch, which also owns Hollister, to write to New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg with a plea for “leadership and guidance.”
Then, in the middle of last month, the bedbugs got creepy, crawling into the delicate items on sale at Victoria’s Secret and causing the outlet to shut down while the exterminators worked.
“Disgusting,” Adriana Baglenao, 42, said a few days later as she emerged from the boudoir-like store with a little pink bag. “I only bought pajamas, but still, I’ll put them in the wash right away.”
City newspapers gorged on the scandal, filling pages with wisecracks about the true nature of “Victoria’s secret” and how the bedbugs were “killing the mood.”
A typical bug is little bigger than a grain of rice, but tough. They live about 10 months on average, with the ability to survive weeks without blood, while females lay about 350 eggs over a lifespan.
Pest control experts and entomologists say bedbugs were almost eradicated in the US after World War II, but then the most effective — and noxious — pesticides like DDT were banned, international travel boomed and by the 1990s the nasty nibblers had found a perfect way back into the nation’s bedrooms.
New Yorkers dread the suckers. To discover one’s building is infected is seen as akin to being informed of a bad medical diagnosis.
“Oh my God, you’re not telling me I have bedbugs,” said Robin, a woman living on Gold Street in lower Manhattan, when told by a reporter that her building appeared on www.bedbugregistry.com, a Web site collating infestation reports nationwide.
Robin, who did not want to give her full name, said she’d looked up her building on the registry when she moved in just three months ago and it hadn’t featured, but the bugs move quickly.
Bedbugs are not dangerous and their bite is uncomfortable, rather than painful. The particular frisson around bedbugs, as opposed to cockroaches, mice or other pests, is simple — vampire-like, they feed on sleeping bodies.
“There’s a psychological component to it: You’re getting bitten when you sleep,” said Jeremy Ecker of The Bedbug Inspectors. “People freak out.”
Ecker’s service is one of several around the city offering dog sniffing inspections. These bloodhounds are considered one of the only ways to track down the tiny bugs that hide in beds, but also cupboards and electronics, such as computers, radios and alarm clocks.
“It’s very similar to drug sniffing, bomb sniffing and cadaver sniffing,” Ecker said, stroking his bedbug hunting beagle Freedom. “They’re trained on one scent and trained only to detect live bedbugs.”
A visit by Freedom or co-hound Cruiser costs US$350 plus tax. If that seems steep, consider the sacrifices Ecker makes.
Dogs need training every day — and that means having a personal store of live bedbugs, which in turn need something to feed on. Ecker’s blood, for example.
“We give them a meal, keep them alive,” he said in a matter-of-fact way as his stable of bugs took turns to gorge on his forearm, before being shut back in their glass vials.
Lawyer and Manhattan resident Deirdre Brady, 32, took a broader view of the problem.
“You have to be able to take the good with the bad when you live in New York,” she said. “There are plenty of beautiful buildings with cockroaches, for example, and people deal with that. It’s part of the cost of living close to each other.”
FRAUD ALLEGED: The leader of an opposition alliance made allegations of electoral irregularities and called for a protest in Tirana as European leaders are to meet Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama’s Socialist Party scored a large victory in parliamentary elections, securing him his fourth term, official results showed late on Tuesday. The Socialist Party won 52.1 percent of the vote on Sunday compared with 34.2 percent for an alliance of opposition parties led by his main rival Sali Berisha, according to results released by the Albanian Central Election Commission. Diaspora votes have yet to be counted, but according to initial results, Rama was also leading there. According to projections, the Socialist Party could have more lawmakers than in 2021 elections. At the time, it won 74 seats in the
EUROPEAN FUTURE? Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama says only he could secure EU membership, but challenges remain in dealing with corruption and a brain drain Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama seeks to win an unprecedented fourth term, pledging to finally take the country into the EU and turn it into a hot tourist destination with some help from the Trump family. The artist-turned-politician has been pitching Albania as a trendy coastal destination, which has helped to drive up tourism arrivals to a record 11 million last year. US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, also joined in the rush, pledging to invest US$1.4 billion to turn a largely deserted island into a luxurious getaway. Rama is expected to win another term after yesterday’s vote. The vote would
CANCER: Jose Mujica earned the moniker ‘world’s poorest president’ for giving away much of his salary and living a simple life on his farm, with his wife and dog Tributes poured in on Tuesday from across Latin America following the death of former Uruguayan president Jose “Pepe” Mujica, an ex-guerrilla fighter revered by the left for his humility and progressive politics. He was 89. Mujica, who spent a dozen years behind bars for revolutionary activity, lost his battle against cancer after announcing in January that the disease had spread and he would stop treatment. “With deep sorrow, we announce the passing of our comrade Pepe Mujica. President, activist, guide and leader. We will miss you greatly, old friend,” Uruguayan President Yamandu Orsi wrote on X. “Pepe, eternal,” a cyclist shouted out minutes later,
A Soviet-era spacecraft plunged to Earth on Saturday, more than a half-century after its failed launch to Venus. Its uncontrolled entry was confirmed by both the Russian Space Agency and EU Space Surveillance and Tracking. The Russians indicated it came down over the Indian Ocean, but some experts were not so sure of the precise location. The European Space Agency’s space debris office also tracked the spacecraft’s doom after it failed to appear over a German radar station. It was not immediately known how much, if any, of the half-tonne spacecraft survived the fiery descent from orbit. Experts said ahead of time