New York, NY – Rats! Official Says NYC Is Failing At Rat Control

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    ILE - In this Dec. 12, 2005 file photo, a rat comes briefly out of its hole at a subway stop in the Brooklyn borough of New York, before retreating at the arrival of the F train. City Comptroller Scott Stringer said Sunday, Oct. 12, 2014 that New York is losing the rat race. He said citizen complaints about pests to the 311 hotline plus online reports went from 22,300 in fiscal year 2012 to 24,586 the next year. (AP Photo Photo/Julie Jacobson, File)New York, NY – New York is losing the rat race.

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    Citizen complaints about pests to the 311 hotline plus online reports went from 22,300 in fiscal year 2012 to 24,586 the next year, city Comptroller Scott Stringer said Sunday.

    “Rats are a daily, stomach-turning insult to New Yorkers — whether they’re scurrying over people’s feet on the sidewalks, invading homes where children sleep or swarming through restaurants,” Stringer said.

    Stringer said an audit conducted by his office found that the city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene isn’t managing its pest control program effectively. The audit said health inspectors didn’t always follow their own protocols, and in 160 cases, no field inspection was conducted.

    “Without a vigilant and timely response by the city to citizen complaints, this problem will come back to bite us again and again,” he said.

    The health department issued a statement saying the agency “strongly disagrees” with the audit and is taking a proactive response to exterminating pests in the city.

    “We believe the auditors reached incorrect conclusions because they focused only on complaints while ignoring the fact that complaint response is a small part of the department’s overall approach to discovering where rats are present, notifying owners about how to respond, and carrying out targeted efforts to exterminate and prevent rats from re-emerging,” the department said.

    Auditors found that in 24 percent of the cases examined, the agency did not check out complaints within its own 10-day target, Stringer said. In addition, action was stopped prematurely on some complaints before the required number of inspection attempts, according to the audit. And in fiscal year 2013, there was no indication that assessments were conducted in 44 percent of 386 instances where inspectors requested cleanup services.

    The comptroller also reported that the department failed to notify some property owners about city orders to eliminate rodent conditions, increasing the risk that rat infestations could spread through a neighborhood.

    The comptroller’s office recommends that the health department identify complaints that have been pending a long time, ensure complaints are not closed after only one failed attempt to gain access to a site, and make sure problems in the field have been dealt with efficiently and completely.


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    6 Comments
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    mewhoze
    mewhoze
    9 years ago

    one problem is that there are too many new medians with shrubbery that the rats are now living in. it was intended to be a nice sitting area but the rats seem to have first dibs on the space instead of the humans. due to everyone leaving garbage out till it gets picked up , rats have quite the smorgasborg to get their fill of foods

    Butterfly
    Butterfly
    9 years ago

    It is not just garbage. If the sidewalk is broken, it never is repaved. We are left with broken sidewalks all over Brooklyn. The edges are cracked and have hyoles like swiss cheese. Mice and rats go in and out. There are streets in Brooklyn in the past 10 and 12 years that have been paved 3 times and some that have not been paved at all.

    PeaceNow
    PeaceNow
    9 years ago

    Garbage can covers can help! So many people have old cheap trash cans without covers and sometimes with holes in them. This brings rats raccoons and opossums on a regular basis.

    Get new trash cans!!!

    gumble
    gumble
    9 years ago

    Just let the snakes out.

    charliehall
    charliehall
    9 years ago

    We need more cats!

    9 years ago

    Rodents may be a problem. Far worse is the oversupply of diplomats in NY at the UN, where all they do is bash Israel. Exterminate them first.