Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Once Bitten

The U.S. federal government is waking up to the growing nightmare of bedbugs.
The tiny reddish-brown insects, last seen in great numbers prior to World War II, are on the rebound. They have infested college dormitories, homeless shelters and swanky hotels from New York City to Chicago to Washington.
They live in the crevices of mattresses, sofas and sheets. Then, most often before dawn, they emerge to feed on human blood, leaving bites that can cause allergic reactions and infections.
The growing problem is the subject of a first-ever bedbug summit hosted by the Environmental Protection Agency .
The venue — the Sheraton Crystal City Hotel in Arlington, Virginia— has had no reported bedbug problems, so at least participants will sleep tight.
Washington Post article HERE

Related:
EPA saves the bedbug from extinction
Ask the Hotel Lawyer™: Hotel executives today and the "bedbug letter" . . . Who's the "idiot"? You be the judge.

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