The City Council and Bloomberg administration officials will announce stepped-up rules today targeting landlords who neglect bedbug problems in their buildings, according to an article today at nypost.com by Sally Goldenberg.
"Under the new rules - which take effect immediately - building owners must inspect and treat apartments next to, above and below any unit that has bedbugs. They also must notify all tenants when bedbugs have been detected and distribute a plan on eradicating them," the article said.
"Property owners who repeatedly fail to take care of bedbug infestations, the article continued, "will be required to get a licensed exterminator to fill out a sworn affidavit indicating the problem has been handled. 'We're sending the message that we're taking this seriously,' Council Speaker Christine Quinn said. 'People are very nervous about bedbugs.'"
The article said that "the Department of Health will be empowered to send landlords who ignore bedbugs to the city's Environmental Control Board, which can issue fines. Presently, only the Department of Housing Preservation and Development can issue violations to landlords for bedbugs. In a last-resort move, the city would sell liens on properties whose owners ignore those fines. City officials will also unveil a Web site - www.nyc.gov/html/doh/bedbugs - to arm residents with information on eradicating the pests."
The website, the article said, "will provide pictures and detailed descriptions of the critters and tips on how to prevent them from entering homes, such as keeping suitcases off floors and beds while traveling, sealing cracks in your home with caulk and washing clothes and bedding on hot settings if you suspect the presence of bedbugs."
"Under the new rules - which take effect immediately - building owners must inspect and treat apartments next to, above and below any unit that has bedbugs. They also must notify all tenants when bedbugs have been detected and distribute a plan on eradicating them," the article said.
"Property owners who repeatedly fail to take care of bedbug infestations, the article continued, "will be required to get a licensed exterminator to fill out a sworn affidavit indicating the problem has been handled. 'We're sending the message that we're taking this seriously,' Council Speaker Christine Quinn said. 'People are very nervous about bedbugs.'"
The article said that "the Department of Health will be empowered to send landlords who ignore bedbugs to the city's Environmental Control Board, which can issue fines. Presently, only the Department of Housing Preservation and Development can issue violations to landlords for bedbugs. In a last-resort move, the city would sell liens on properties whose owners ignore those fines. City officials will also unveil a Web site - www.nyc.gov/html/doh/bedbugs - to arm residents with information on eradicating the pests."
The website, the article said, "will provide pictures and detailed descriptions of the critters and tips on how to prevent them from entering homes, such as keeping suitcases off floors and beds while traveling, sealing cracks in your home with caulk and washing clothes and bedding on hot settings if you suspect the presence of bedbugs."
Architecture Critic
Carter Horsley
Since 1997, Carter B. Horsley has been the editorial director of CityRealty. He began his journalistic career at The New York Times in 1961 where he spent 26 years as a reporter specializing in real estate & architectural news. In 1987, he became the architecture critic and real estate editor of The New York Post.
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