News

Area hotels work to avoid the bedbugs' bite

  • John Locher/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Todd Nelson of Bed Bug Thermal Solutions prepares a room in a Henderson hotel for his extermination process. Nelson uses a generator, heaters and fans to bring the room to 130 degrees, hot enough to kill the pests. » Buy this photo

By TREVON MILLIARD
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: May 15, 2011 | 2:00 a.m.
Updated: May 15, 2011 | 10:44 a.m.

Todd Nelson usually sits in his unmarked, windowless white van to watch the hotel room mere paces away, closely monitoring the interior by placing devices inside that transmit to his laptop.

But for Tuesday's stakeout, he's hiding in the next hotel room with his laptop and extra matchbox-sized devices fitted snugly into the foam of a large plastic case. He's been waiting three hours.

"Anything above red is dead," Nelson says, pointing at the computer screen.

It's time to enter the room he's been watching. The couch is turned on its side and propped against the wall. Kitchen cabinets and drawers are all open. The headboard is off the wall, and the mattress is against the wall, the thin ticking on the bottom cut open. And the inside door handle is hot to the touch. The room itself is like a sauna.

No one's here. But something is.

Bedbugs.

That's why Nelson is at this Henderson motel. While still not publicizing the fact, many valley hoteliers have begun to aggressively fight the tiny bugs, realizing it's a pest that won't go away on its own but only multiply.

"This hotel owner called me and said, 'I got some complaints. Get down here,' " said Nelson, general manager of Bed Bug Thermal Solutions, who charges $1,000 per hotel room to get rid of the bugs. "Hotels weren't so proactive a couple years ago."

Nelson uses a generator, 125-pound heaters and fans to kill the country's most difficult pest to exterminate. His computer monitors temperatures throughout the room, making sure every square foot is hot enough.

Hot enough is 130 degrees.

"At 115, they come looking for the meal," he said. "At 120, they start dying out."

Such unusual practices are needed because bedbugs have grown resistant to "almost all pesticides" made to treat them, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Instead, exterminators manually vacuum the bugs and eggs or use heat.

RESURGENCE FROM THE EAST

The CDC reports that bedbugs were nearly eradicated in industrialized countries such as the United States up until a few years ago. The first U.S. reports of the resurgence came from the East Coast. Bedbugs infested more than a dozen New York City schools and part of the Empire State Building.

About three years ago, Las Vegas exterminators noticed an uptick in bedbug calls, according to Gregg Wears, environmental health supervisor for the Southern Nevada Health District. The exact extent of Las Vegas' infestations remains unknown. All the evidence is anecdotal because neither the district nor any U.S. agency tracks bedbug cases. And hotels -- well known as the source of many infestations -- aren't required to report cases.

That's because until a couple days ago, bedbugs weren't known to spread diseases, unlike other bloodsuckers.

"They are a nuisance," Wears said. "They itch like the dickens but aren't a health concern."

'IT'S NOT TIME TO PUSH THE PANIC BUTTON'

However, Canadian scientists detected drug-resistant staph bacteria in bedbugs from three hospital patients in a downtrodden Vancouver, British Columbia, neighborhood, according to a CDC report released last week.

"It's not time to push the panic button," said Marc Romney, one of the study's authors, adding that it's unclear whether the bacteria originated with the bedbugs or were merely picked up from the people. The bacteria often are seen in hospitals.

"This is an eye opener," said Wears, adding that it might be cause for the CDC to initiate a bedbug tracking system, depending on findings of follow-up research. "We're in wait-and-see mode right now."

Nevertheless, Wears hypothesizes that bedbugs are on the decline in the Las Vegas area based on continually decreasing bedbug complaints. In large part, this is attributable to hotels no longer trying to sweep bedbugs under the rug, so to speak, as they were during the initial boom of a few years ago, said Wears, who was the Strip supervisor for the past 6½ years. More and more hotels are dealing with bedbugs head on, which is the only way to eradicate the persistent and quickly multiplying bug.

Nelson works with hotels on a regular basis, ranging from mom-and-pop operations to megaresorts, and has also noticed a shifting in many Las Vegas hoteliers' attitudes -- out of necessity. That's because the public has awakened to the bedbug invasion. And they want to know what their hotel is doing about it.

A hotel Nelson worked for received 30 cancellations because the front-desk person gave the wrong answer to a question about bedbugs.

"The odds of getting bedbugs is like pulling the slots lever here in Vegas," Nelson said. "It's just bad luck. But every­one right now is assuming that everyone has them."

One in five Americans has experienced a bedbug infestation or knows someone who has encountered bedbugs, according to the National Pest Management Association, which surveyed adults across the country in November. The association also surveyed 1,000 pest exterminators last spring and found that 95 percent encountered bedbug infestations in the past year, also forcing them to become educated on a pest many had never seen before.

TAKING THE OFFENSIVE

Many local hotels have realized that to keep their image untarnished they can no longer ignore bedbugs but must embrace their resurgence, according to Nevada State Entomologist Jeff Knight, who often speaks to hotels on the issue. He said many hotels are developing bedbug programs so that when guests ask, they're prepared with the right answer. These programs often entail a quarterly check by exterminators, training housekeepers to spot bedbugs and training customer service employees on answering questions.

Wynn Resorts is doing all of this and more. The hotel has its own canine unit for sniffing out bedbugs.

"In light of our efforts, we can state with confidence that our resorts are free of bedbugs," spokeswoman Deanna Pettit said.

MGM Resorts International, which has 35,200 rooms on the Strip, designs its rooms to give bedbugs the fewest places to hide, trains staff to inspect rooms and hires professionals to quarterly check its rooms. As a result, MGM claims it hasn't seen an increase in bedbugs despite the national resurgence, according to spokeswoman Yvette Monet.

This proactive approach is encouraging to Kurt Trombetti, president of the Nevada Pest Control Association and owner of Enviro Safe Pest Control. Otherwise, it wouldn't take long for Las Vegas to be overrun.

"Where you have travel, you're going to have bedbugs," he said of the parasites that hitchhike on people's clothing. "And we're an entertainment capital of the world. Frankly, we have to be pro­active."

He has definitely noticed more bedbug business in recent years but nowhere near the boom back East. He attributes that to Las Vegas hoteliers moving to the front lines, not hiding and hoping to go unnoticed and unharmed. For example, the state pest control association is hosting a bedbug workshop on May 24 for hotels and property managers. Trombetti said he expects representatives from every major hotel there, about 500 total.

The workshop is being repeated at 15 cities across the country through May, the first effort of its kind solely to battle bedbugs, a spokesperson for the National Pest Management Association said.

MORE JOBS THAN HE CAN HANDLE

That's good news for Nelson who has more jobs than he and his white van can handle. He received four Las Vegas house calls while working at the Henderson hotel Tuesday and has to drive to Pocatello, Idaho, by Thursday. Then, it's off to Jackson Hole, Wyo.

"Jesus, I'm never going to get home," he said.

You might see him driving down the road with a magnetic sign reading "Bed Bug Thermal Solutions" stuck to the side of his van. But within five miles of any job, he stops and pulls the magnet off. Time to go undercover.

Contact reporter Trevon Milliard at tmilliard@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0279.

Comments

Registration Notice: The Review-Journal has implemented a new registration procedure that requires all existing and new accounts to validate and login using Facebook. Visit the Registration FAQ for more information.
Terms & Conditions

The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

  1. Peppone Jul. 4, 2011 | 2:12 p.m. Report Abuse

    Let me laugh a second ....

    RESURGENCE FROM THE EAST ..... of course

    How could that be a coincidence that bed bugs started to re-appear when we started to get in some of them mo-SS-lem ""refugees"

    Only another face of jihad and illegal aliens, though Hussein this being the president for now would not want us to take charge of the eradication that his gang should be doing.

    bed bugs indeed, straight from the mosque

  2. bedbugchaser May 16, 2011 | 5:15 a.m. Report Abuse

    Frank, the BedBugChaser here, you may want to Google "Alarming combo: Bedbugs with 'superbug' germ found" this story is scary, isn't it? Also, Avtron just finished our latest and greatest weapon in the war on BedBugs, go to http://www.avtronloadbank.com/lb_whatsnew.htm#Heater to see the what the future holds for the BedBug.

  3. bedbugchaser May 16, 2011 | 5:14 a.m. Report Abuse

    Frank, the BedBugChaser here, you may want to read this story http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110511/ap_on_he_me/us_med_bedbug_superbug;_ylt=AneoRR0nqlQgUeAf3qdV5jhY24cA;_ylu=X3oDMTM0bTQxdms2BGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTEwNTExL3VzX21lZF9iZWRidWdfc3VwZXJidWcEY2NvZGUDZ21wZQRjcG9zAzUEcG9zAzUEc2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yaWVzBHNsawNhbGFybWluZ2NvbWI . It's scary isn't it, BedBugs found carrying a deadly disease! Also, Avtron just finished our latest and greatest weapon in the war on BedBugs, go to http://www.avtronloadbank.com/lb_whatsnew.htm#Heater to see the what the future holds for the BedBug

  4. KatieRoberts May 16, 2011 | 3:44 a.m. Report Abuse

    Whenever I travel I always use the bed bug protection package I bought from www.USBedBugStore.com which has helped protect my family from bed bugs. I use the BB Alert Active and Passive to regularly monitor for any signs of bed bugs and I use the luggage liners to protect my luggage and its contents from the little creatures. I strictly use the anti-bed bug laundry bag when I do my washing. After my brief encounter with bed bugs I am not taking any more risks!

    I think it would be great if this protection was available at hotels as standard. I wouldn't mind paying an extra few dollars to ensure that my room was being closely monitored for bed bugs.

  5. mtnhop May 15, 2011 | 7:54 p.m. Report Abuse

    Before patronizing a hotel, I check www.bedbugregistry.com for reports on the property. The site is a public database of user-submitted bed bug reports. Of course there's no guarantee of accuracy, but it doesn't hurt to look. Report for NV is at http://bedbugregistry.com/location/NV/ . You can look up reports for hotels and other businesses, as well as for apartments and homes in the United States and Canada.

  6. tl.lane May 15, 2011 | 7:48 p.m. Report Abuse

    .....heaty IS NOT the only thing that will kill them.....FREEZING them works as well....if one lives in a part of the country that gets 15 degrees or colder you can kill them by allowing the house to completely freeze for 24 hours and then PRESTO....no more bugs of any sort.

  7. caninelillie May 15, 2011 | 6:37 p.m. Report Abuse

    See my bed bug dog “Lillie” finding bed bugs on YouTube
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqjYKtkQIgM

  8. HendersonVegasNative May 15, 2011 | 12:25 p.m. Report Abuse

    I am so glad businesses are finally taking bed bugs seriously. I had a horrible experience with them 3 years ago in a furnished apartment. It's not just hotels -- apartments can be infested too. Bed bugs are not invisible like people think -- they are flat and dark brown and about the size of a small tick or beetle. The babies are clearish but can still be seen. Every hotel I ever stay at I check for them first thing. Brown or black spots around the mattress creases and edges are proof of their excrement and means that the bugs are present. They can and do spread disease.

  9. Ken.Holly May 15, 2011 | 11:00 a.m. Report Abuse

    Don't kill the spiders: they eat the bedbugs and their larvae.

  10. joe.cool May 15, 2011 | 10:50 a.m. Report Abuse

    Dr. A.R. Campbell, M.D. (1865-1931), once chief Bacteriologist for the city of San Antonio, discovered the CAUSE of smallpox....Cimex Lectularius, the BEDBUG!

Read All Comments

Friday, May 25, 2012
Partly Sunny Partly Sunny, 77° Weather Forecast