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Boston Bed Bug Registry Maps

  Today Is Saturday 19th of May 2012 16:18:48

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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Bed Bug Infestations

165 Hemenway St, Boston, Massachusetts [2011-08-31]
75 Allston St, Allston, Massachusetts [2011-08-31]
189 Cambridge St, Allston, Massachusetts [2011-08-30]
Boston Bedford Travelodge Boston Bedford Travelodge, Bedford, Massachusetts [2011-08-28]
80 Fenway, Boston, Massachusetts [2011-08-28]
138 Summer St, Somerville, Massachusetts [2011-08-26]
Doubletree By Hilton Guest Suites Boston/waltham Doubletree By Hilton Guest Suites Boston/waltham, Waltham, Massachusetts [2011-08-25]
Doubletree Hotel Boston - Downtown Doubletree Hotel Boston - Downtown, Boston, Massachusetts [2011-08-23]
65 Newbury St, Danvers, Massachusetts [2011-08-19]
Concords Colonial Inn Concords Colonial Inn, Concord, Massachusetts [2011-08-19]


Boston Zip Codes For The Boston Bed Bug Registry Maps

Zip CodeCountyCity
01901EssexLynn
02216SuffolkBoston
02455MiddlesexNorth Waltham
02208SuffolkBoston
01880MiddlesexWakefield
02446NorfolkBrookline
02102SuffolkBoston
01971EssexSalem
02207SuffolkBoston
01840EssexLawrence
02303PlymouthBrockton
02467MiddlesexChestnut Hill
02113SuffolkBoston
01961EssexPeabody
02055PlymouthMinot
01841EssexLawrence
02117SuffolkBoston
02190NorfolkSouth Weymouth
01936EssexHamilton
01845EssexNorth Andover
02453MiddlesexWaltham
01815MiddlesexWoburn
02460MiddlesexNewtonville
02215SuffolkBoston
01899EssexAndover
02465MiddlesexWest Newton
02138MiddlesexCambridge
02112SuffolkBoston
02188NorfolkWeymouth
01960EssexPeabody
02105SuffolkBoston
02139MiddlesexCambridge
02030NorfolkDover
01760MiddlesexNatick
01746MiddlesexHolliston
02106SuffolkBoston
01720MiddlesexActon
02222SuffolkBoston
02466MiddlesexAuburndale
01890MiddlesexWinchester
02050PlymouthMarshfield
02054NorfolkMillis
01865MiddlesexNutting Lake
02356BristolNorth Easton
01938EssexIpswich
02185NorfolkBraintree
02492NorfolkNeedham
01910EssexLynn
02421MiddlesexLexington
01921EssexBoxford

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What U.S. City Tops List For Bed Bugs?

Cities enjoy being identified as safe and affordable. Being labeled as having a lot of bed bug treatments, not so much.

Rollins, the corporation that owns seven pest control companies, including Orkin, says it has seen a 33.6 percent increase in bed bug business compared to 2010. The company has just released its rankings of U.S. cities in order of the number of bed bug treatments from January to December 2011.

And the winner is Cincinnati. Chicago is ranked second, followed by Detroit, Denver and Los Angeles. The report says L.A. moved from 25th to fifth on the list.

Here are the top 50 U.S. cities, ranked in order of the number of bed bug treatments. The number in parenthesis is the shift in ranking compared to January to December 2010:

1. Cincinnati 2. Chicago 3. Detroit (+1) 4. Denver (+2) 5. Los Angeles (+20) 6. Columbus, Ohio (-3) 7. Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas (+43) 8. Washington, D.C. (-3) 9. New York (-2) 10. Richmond/Petersburg, Va. (+6) 11. Houston (-1) 12. San Francisco/Oakland/San Jose, Calif. (+35) 13. Cleveland/Akron/Canton, Ohio (+1) 14. Boston (+4) 15. Dayton, Ohio (-7) 16. Las Vegas (-1) 17. Honolulu (+55) 18. Baltimore (-6) 19. Raleigh/Durham/Fayetteville, N.C. (+9) 20. Philadelphia (-9) 21. Atlanta (+24) 22. Lexington, Ky. (-13) 23. Syracuse, N.Y. (+25) 24. Miami/Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (+27) 25. Colorado Springs/Pueblo, Colo. (+19) 26. San Diego (+13) 27. Seattle/Tacoma, Wash. (-3) 28. Omaha, Neb. (-11) 29. Buffalo, N.Y. (-16) 30. Pittsburgh (-3) 31. Indianapolis (-12) 32. Milwaukee (+6) 33. Charlotte, N.C. (+13) 34. Phoenix (+19) 35. Louisville, Ky. (-3) 36. Hartford/New Haven, Conn. (-16) 37. Grand Junction/Montrose, Colo. (+30) 38. Knoxville, Tenn. (+4) 39. Grand Rapids/Kalamazoo/Battle Creek, Mich. (-17) 40. Nashville, Tenn. (+15) 41. Sacramento/Stockton/Modesto, Calif. (+24) 42. Des Moines/Ames, Iowa (-13) 43. Salisbury, Md. (+46) 44. Albany/Schenectady/Troy, N.Y. (-23) 45. Cedar Rapids/Waterloo, Iowa (-22) 46. Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minn. (-20) 47. Lincoln/Hastings/Kearney, Neb. (-17) 48. Salt Lake City (-8) 49. Charleston/Huntington, W.Va. (-13) 50. West Palm Beach/Ft. Pierce, Fla. (+6)

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What U.S. City Tops List For Bed Bugs?

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WPC Pest


19-03-2012 08:42 WPC Pest & Termite Control has locations in Westborough, Framingham and Natick and serves the entire Metro West Boston, MA area for all pest control, pest inspections and extermination needs. We successfully remove all pests from your home or place of business, including those such as bees, wasps, ants, mosquitos, moths, cockroaches, centipedes, termites, bed bugs, flies, mice and rats. We guarantee success and use the most environmentally friendly processes for pest control and proofing.

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WPC Pest

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Several Spring Break Destinations on Orkin's Top 50 Bed Bug Cities List

ATLANTA, March 15, 2012 /PRNewswire/ –Orkin, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Rollins Inc. (NYSE: ROL – News), today announced its top 50 bed bug cities for 2011, and several of them are popular spring break destinations. Last year, Orkin’s parent company, Rollins, which operates seven pest control brands, saw a 33.6 percent increase in bed bug business compared to 2010. The following cities are ranked in order of the number of bed bug treatments Orkin performed from January to December 2011 along with their shift, if any, in ranking compared to January to December 2010.

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120315/CL71466)

1.Cincinnati

26. San Diego (+13)

2.Chicago

27. Seattle/Tacoma, Wash. (-3)

3.Detroit (+1)

28. Omaha, Neb. (-11)

4.Denver (+2)

29. Buffalo, N.Y. (-16)

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Several Spring Break Destinations on Orkin's Top 50 Bed Bug Cities List

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Family Fun: Bird Walks, 'Bugs World' And Open Cockpit Day

There’s going to be a lot of creepy crawlers in the Hilton Hartford on Saturday, March 17, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. “It’s a Bug’s World,” a free event, is part of the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Entomological Society of America’s Eastern Branch, and will include live insects and bug-eating reptiles and amphibians, beetles that kill Connecticut trees, bed bugs and Ellie, the bed bug smelling dog and much more. The Hilton Hotel is at 315 Trumbull St., Hartford. Information: http://www.entsoc.org/eastern.

Kids’ Korner

Celebrate St. Patrick’s Dayon Saturday, March 17, at RJ Julia Booksellers in Madison from 11 to noon. The celebration includes stories and an activity about Leprechauns, rainbows and even a pot of gold. The program is free, but reservations are required. RJ Julia is at 768 Boston Post Road. Reservations: 203-245-3959 or http://www.rjjulia.com.

Voices of Africa

Voices of Africa performs Saturday, March 17, from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Mashantucket Pequot Museum & Research Center, 110 Pequot Trail. The group uses song, dance, storytelling and various African percussion instruments to present the traditions of West Africa. The program is $5, plus museum admission: $15 adults, $13 seniors ages 55 and older, $10 ages 6 to 15. Children under 6 are free. Tickets: 800-411-9671 or http://www.pequotmuseum.org.

Manross Memorial Library

Make a St. Patrick’s Day craft project on Saturday, March 17, at 11:30 a.m. at the Manross Memorial Library, 260 Central St., Forestville (Bristol).. The program is free, but registration is required. Registration: 860-584-7790 or http://www.bristollib.com.

Open Cockpit Day

Climb into the cockpit of 10 vintage aircrafts on Sunday, March 18, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the New England Air Museum. Get an up close view of two World War II bombers and also take part in a full-motion flight simulator and two static flight simulators. There will also be a demonstration with radio controlled airplanes. Admission to the museum is $11 adults; $10 ages 65 and up; $6.50 ages 4 to 11. Children under 3 are free. The museum is at Bradley International Airport, 36 Perimeter Road, Windsor Locks. Information: http://www.neam.org or 860-623-3305.

Maple Sugaring

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Family Fun: Bird Walks, 'Bugs World' And Open Cockpit Day

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Rick Barnes comes to the rescue of Georgetown boys home

GEORGETOWN — Rick Barnes did not merely give money to the Tara Hall Home for Boys in sums totaling over $125,000. For the University of Texas basketball coach, it was never as simple as matching delivery trucks with the needs of troubled kids.

File/AP

University of Texas basketball coach Rick Barnes

Barnes got down on his knees and scrubbed. He swept floors. He worked for 12 hours on Labor Day.

“I asked him if he sweeps much back in Texas,” said Tristan, a 13-year-old Tara Hall resident. “He said, 'No, I have people that do that for me.' ”

Barnes, a former Clemson coach averaging 21-plus wins per season over 25 years, has a salary of $2.4 million per year at Texas. He and his wife Candy also have a vacation home nearby at DeBordieu Colony, where the family was staying last June when Candy Barnes read a magazine story about rural Tara Hall.

She learned that Father Owen O'Sullivan started the home in 1969 to give wayward boys a path to success, and that executive director James E. Dumm Jr., fresh out of Penn State, began working at Tara Hall in 1971. He has seen more than 600 boys — most voluntarily placed by a family member — come and go.

“Candy called and said she wanted to do some volunteer work over the summer and wanted to come out and look around,” said Dumm, 62. “I said 'sure' and when Candy arrived with her husband, I said, 'are you the Rick Barnes that used to coach at Clemson?' He said, 'Yeah, that's me.' ”

Dumm gave Rick, Candy and their son Nick, 27, a tour of a beautiful, wooded 11-acre campus along Black Mingo Creek that includes a residential hall and school for 15 boys ranging in age from 6 to 13.

“I fell in love with the place,” Barnes said by phone from Austin. “I saw that God was working through my wife to put Tara Hall in our hearts.”

Early into the tour, Barnes stopped and turned to Dumm.

“What is your biggest need?” Barnes asked.

'Let God work'

Tara Hall knows generosity, and sports. Tom and Jean Yawkey, the charitable late former owners of baseball's Boston Red Sox, provided Tara Hall with land near their other Georgetown properties. Mrs. Yawkey used to send the boys to Atlanta Braves playoff games. Coastal Carolina baseball coach Gary Gilmore has conducted clinics for the boys and given them tickets and T-shirts.

Photo Gallery Tara Hall

Tara Hall where Rick Barnes, former Clemson basketball coach now at Texas, has a special relationship.

But Dumm rarely sees anything quite like Rick Barnes.

“We had been fighting a bed bug problem with bugs in wooden beds throughout our living quarters,” Dumm said. “We were saving up for some metal beds. Within a couple weeks of coming out here, Rick had a friend of his ship 24 steel-framed beds.”

Two days later, Barnes showed up at Tara Hall with a contractor. The two men walked through outdated rooms with Dumm in tow.

Barnes: “Jim, you're not asking for enough.”

Dumm: “Well, Rick, I just met you. I don't want to appear greedy.”

Barnes: “Jim, just stand back and let God work.”

Tara Hall was “totally transformed” over a six-week period last summer, assistant director Patsy Morris said.

Every piece of furniture is new in the living quarters. New plumbing and lighting. New flooring. Flat-screen TVs. The recreation room was renovated. Two new pool tables. Video game systems. Barnes had satellite television installed on a campus that previously didn't even get cable, and paid the bill for a year.

“They did a lot of neat things for us,” said Tara Hall resident Andrew, 12. “Everything is so new and a lot more fun.”

Pain before fame

Clemson fans remember Rick Barnes, 57, for taking the Tigers to three straight NCAA tournament appearances (1996-98). They loved it when he argued nose to nose with legendary former North Carolina coach Dean Smith. Rick's Barnestormers held up “Barnes is God” signs at Littlejohn Coliseum.

Barnes grew up in Hickory, N.C., and played ball at Lenoir-Rhyne College across town. Barnes was a toddler when his father left home. They lost touch. Barnes' dad died without ever meeting his grandchildren. Barnes tried to look to his older brother Toby as a role model, but Toby became an alcoholic and died of liver cancer while Barnes was coaching at Clemson.

Sandy Barnes, Rick's only sister and strongest leader in his life, died in a car accident when he was 18.

The former Candy Rhyne, also a Hickory native, was adopted as a child. She is related to a founder of Lenoir-Rhyne. Rick Barnes worked during college summers at a Hickory mill owned by her father, Preston Rhyne.

Candy, Rick says, was his “dream girl” and he fondly recalled their first date.

They rode bicycles down a country road. Rick asked for a first kiss. First, Candy had to remove her chewing gum.

“Before you knew it, I had that ball of gum in the back of my hair,” Rick Barnes said. “It was really a mess.”

Barnes is a famed prankster who enjoyed giving $5 to strangers to get them to walk up to former Clemson athletic director Bobby Robinson in restaurants and ask, 'Hey, aren't you the (bleep) who fired Danny Ford?' ”

But he is very serious about Tara Hall.

“It has been a group effort; we didn't do it alone,” Barnes said. “We knew people wouldn't be able to give a lot in this economy, but a friend from Lenoir-Rhyne donated the pool tables.”

Candy Barnes last summer jumped off the dock and into Black Mingo Creek to swim with the boys. Nick Barnes, now in Egypt on a church planting mission, stopped by often and had a blast.

“We're not doing this for publicity,” Rick Barnes said. “God has blessed us in more ways than we can ever share with people.”

'Pretty amazing'

There is a baseball field at Tara Hall, and kayaks for use on Black Mingo Creek. Every boy has a bike. But the rehabilitation mission is no-nonsense — enrollees are required to stay at least two years.

“We believe it takes that long to have any long-term impact,” Dumm said. “You can change attitudes and behaviors in a few months, but to make it really stick, it takes longer. These kids are coming from such dysfunctional situations that we felt that we had to make them strong enough to withstand various pressures when they return home.”

Most new arrivals at Tara Hall are one to three years behind academically. With four full-time teachers, four child care workers and a computer lab, they catch up quickly. The boys have daily chores and earn extra free time by reaching discipline levels. Five of the 15 boys are in public schools, and some participate in outside sports and other activities.

Tara Hall has a chapel and weekly worship services.

“We believe in exposing kids to Christianity,” Dumm said, “but at the same time we don't try to shove it down their throats.”

Dumm calls the Barnes family connection to Tara Hall “miraculous.”

The boys seem to agree.

“When you think about it,” 13-year-old Tristan said, “it really is pretty amazing what he did for us.”

Reach Gene Sapakoff at 937-5593 or on Twitter at @sapakoff.

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Rick Barnes comes to the rescue of Georgetown boys home

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Marblehead public health nurse set to retire

When Rochelle Bartlett-Ayer was 32 years old, she started her first day here in Marblehead as the public health nurse. Now, exactly 32 years later, she will be retiring from that position.

Born in Marblehead, but only later moving back after her father retired her senior year, Bartlett-Ayer did end up graduating from Marblehead High.

She later enrolled at Beverly Hospital School of Nursing, back “in the ancient days,” as she said, when nursing programs were just beginning.

“When I graduated, that was the new thing,” she said. “When I first started off [as public nurse], I was nervous about everything. I had not done public health before; it was a learn-as-you-go experience.”

But now, after three decades, Bartlett-Ayer has plenty of experience, and she credits the Massachusetts Department of Public Health with playing a major role in her education.

“The department has always been there as a great resource, as they still are, and I learned from them and gained many friends who are still there today and new ones that have come along,” said Bartlett-Ayer.

As part of her job, Bartlett-Ayer has been in charge of pretty much anything that relates to public health in town, from organizing vaccine clinics and beach testing to investigating food-borne illnesses and communicable diseases.

She also teaches health education on all sorts of public safety issues, like Lyme disease, bed bugs, lice and skin cancer.

“A public health nurse’s job is very varied,” she said. “Say if we’re working on a case dealing with a vaccine-preventable disease, such as measles. We find out: were you immunized, when you were, what the lot numbers were of the vaccines, and it goes back to vaccine safety and whether it was a viable lot.”

Anyone in the job needs to work very closely with the town’s health director, which Bartlett-Ayer did for decades. Recently retired director Wayne Attridge said he remembers when Bartlett-Ayer first came before the board to be appointed.

“Rochelle has been a great friend. She’s a very nice and caring person, just the type of person you expect to find in nursing today,” said Attridge. “ She’s been a wonderful, dedicated asset to the town of Marblehead and especially the Board of Health.”

So who will replace Bartlett-Ayer when she retires on Feb. 10?

Tracy Giarla will step in as the new public health nurse, starting Feb. 13. She has 14-plus years of experience in public health nursing.

“Tracy is a very dedicated public health nurse, and has a lot of clinic savvy so she knows what to do, when to do it, and I’m very impressed with [the board’s] choice,” said Attridge. “I think she’ll be a perfect fit. I’m sure transition is always in the back of everybody’s mind, and this will be an easy transition.”

Bartlett-Ayer added, “She will be hitting the ground running because she knows about my job and knows what it’s like. She just needs to learn more about our community.”

In retirement, Bartlett-Ayer plans on staying active with public health education and will volunteer for flu clinics and emergency preparedness. She also plans on volunteering for the American Red Cross. As for her personal life, she’s looking forward to spending more time with her grandchildren, and perhaps exercising.  “Doing things for myself,” she said.

As for her career, “I absolutely have enjoyed my 32 years.”

 

The new public health nurse, Tracy Giarla, may be reached at 781-631-0212, ext. 22, or by e-mail at giarlat@marblehead.org.

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Marblehead public health nurse set to retire

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Little Pest Control Company Goes BIG With Idea to Kill Bed Bugs

Insect Inferno is the HOT product for killing bed bugs and their eggs. The Insect Inferno is a mobile heat trailer invented by Corey and Sue Westrum of Leonard, Mn .

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Little Pest Control Company Goes BIG With Idea to Kill Bed Bugs

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Palacios – Bedbugs – Video


09-08-2008 02:42 Palacios performing “Bedbugs” at the Bridgewater VFW in Bridgewater, MA on August 8, 2008, courtesy of AlexIsLegend.com

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Palacios – Bedbugs – Video

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Bedbugs return to south Edmonton complex

Residents of a south side apartment complex are facing an infestation of bed bugs for the second time in just over a year.

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Bedbugs return to south Edmonton complex

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Flying Bedbugs! – Video


27-12-2011 08:33 I was doing a bedbug inspection at a housing authority when something caught my eye. It was a dead bedbug caught on a strand of spider web. For a second it had the appearance of flying

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Flying Bedbugs! – Video


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