LEWISTON — Ron LeBlanc has been dealing with bedbugs for three years.
As a Lewiston landlord, he's seen the tiny bloodsuckers invade single bedrooms, entire apartments and whole buildings. The bugs bit tenants and made their lives miserable. LeBlanc spent thousands on exterminators to spray his units with poison. But bedbugs are notoriously hard to kill.
Sometimes, the spray worked. Other times, it didn't.
The problem has gotten worse.
"I'd say 80 percent of Lewiston is infested," LeBlanc said.
The bedbug situation has become so bad that LeBlanc and business partner Rick LaChapelle recently traveled across the country and spent $65,000 on a machine designed to superheat infested homes and kill the bedbugs inside. Since the pair got the machine a month ago, they've superheated about 20 homes — both their own apartment buildings and those owned by others.
So far, superheating seems to have worked where spraying failed. At least the men, their clients and their tenants hope so.
Bedbugs are in Maine and the desperation to get rid of them is growing.
"In the past two or three months, bedbugs have totally exploded," LeBlanc said. "It's gone crazy."
Bedbugs are apple-seed-sized insets that feed on human blood. They tend to infest beds and bedrooms, but they also hide in walls, under floorboards, in piles of clothes and inside couches. Because bedbugs are so tiny, it can be difficult to see them. Some people don't realize their homes are infested until they find themselves covered in itchy red welts or discover that their bare mattresses look like they've been sprinkled with pepper — dried blood-waste left behind from the bedbugs' previous meals. Although bedbugs don't spread disease, they can make sleeping nearly impossible and their bites can cause itching.
Nationally, bedbug infestations have been on the rise. The insects have increasingly been found in hotels and department stores, as well as homes and apartment buildings. The problem has become so common that the website BedBugRegistry.com has popped as people tell their horror stories and track bedbug infestations in hotels and apartments.
Bedbugs have been creeping into Maine for the past five years and into Lewiston-Auburn for the past three or four, hitching a ride on clothes, in suitcases and in used furniture. Infestations have nothing to do with cleanliness.
"We did one old guy and his apartment was spotless," LeBlanc said. "It was the worst infestation I've seen."
Housing officials in Lewiston and Auburn have seen a rise in bedbug complaints in recent years. Jim Dowling, executive director of the Lewiston Housing Authority, estimated that his agency spends in the low tens of thousands each year trying to kill the bugs with chemicals.
"Our experience in dealing with various pest-control companies and in attending educational workshops on how to deal with bedbugs, it does seem like this is an expanding problem and the best way to eradicate bedbugs is still developing," Dowling said. "In other words, there's no magic bullet. No one knows what works best, exactly how to do it."
But landlords must try to deal with the problem. A new Maine law, effective this month, requires landlords to inspect a building within five days of tenants reporting bedbugs. If bedbugs are found, the landlord has 10 days to contact a pest control agent to treat the problem. Before renting a unit, landlords must tell a prospective tenant if any adjacent units are infested or are being treated for an infestation. And if a prospective tenant asks, the landlord must tell when the unit was last inspected for bedbugs. Landlords are prohibited from renting apartments they know or suspect have bedbugs.
Bedbugs can cost hundreds to thousands of dollars to eradicate from a single apartment unit. Chemical sprays are among the most common ways to get rid of them, but sprays have strict preparation guidelines, including washing, drying and sealing away some belongings, and residents don't always follow those guidelines. Even when they do, the spray can take several applications. And it may not kill every bug.
Atlantic Pest Solutions, which has offices in Brunswick and Arundel, likes other methods, including using dogs to sniff the precise location of the bugs. If the company finds bedbugs have infested a piece of furniture, it has a mobile heat truck that can superheat that piece of furniture. Bedbugs are attracted to heat — such as the heat of the human body — but they die in temperatures higher than 113 degrees.
For more widespread infestations, Atlantic Pest Solutions superheats whole homes. But superheating takes some preparation and has its own challenges.
"It's not as easy as rolling in heaters and cranking up the temperatures," said owner Ted St. Amand.
Although residents don't have to seal away any belongings, they do have to remove medications, aerosol cans, paintings, cosmetics and other items that could be harmed by the heat. They and their pets must stay away for much of the day, then deal with an overly-warm home as the place cools down. And superheating can be slightly more expensive than spraying — $1,200 for a single apartment unit compared to $1,000 to spray two.
But while there are some challenges with superheating, and its full effectiveness is still being judged, it seems to do in one application what chemical spraying can't guarantee in several — kill bedbugs.
"I would tell you, if it was my house and I had bedbugs, I would definitely go with the heat. No doubt about it," St. Amand said.
LeBlanc and LaChapelle went with heat for their buildings. After spending thousands on spraying, they did some research and decided to give superheating a try.
With a 1.2 million BTU propane heater dubbed "The Oven," the men can heat rooms, apartments or whole buildings to 140 degrees or more. They pump the superheated air into the building through vents attached to the windows. The building is pressurized to ensure the heat seeps into walls, floorboards and other cracks and crevasses. And to make certain the building gets hot enough without getting too hot, workers constantly monitor temperatures using wireless sensors and computers.
It can take a furnished apartment three to five hours to get up to temperature. Workers keep it there for another three to five hours to ensure all bugs are dead. It then takes about 30 minutes to cool the building enough to re-enter.
LeBlanc recommends people launder fabrics and vacuum to get rid of the dead bugs. He also tells them to be careful about returning items to the apartment, since a backpack, for example, can harbor the bugs and reintroduce them into the space. But aside from that, he said, there's little else residents need to do.
He has so far been impressed by the heating. It's done what he hasn't been able to do for three years.
"It feels so good," he said. "Right now, we're bedbug-free."









Non Toxic Relief
In reply to your article on bed bugs in Lewiston, I am surprised that someone didn’t research
Diatomaceous Earth. It works great on ant control, and is non toxic to warm blooded animals.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatomaceous_earth
http://www.earthworkshealth.com/get-rid-of-bed-bugs.php
http://www.ghorganics.com/DiatomaceousEarth.html
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In reply to your article on bed bugs in Lewiston, I am surprised that someone didn’t research
Diatomaceous Earth. It works great on ant control, and is non toxic to warm blooded animals.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatomaceous_earth
http://www.earthworkshealth.com/get-rid-of-bed-bugs.php
http://www.ghorganics.com/DiatomaceousEarth.html
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In reply to your article on bed bugs in Lewiston, I am surprised that someone didn’t research
Diatomaceous Earth. It works great on ant control, and is non toxic to warm blooded animals.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatomaceous_earth
http://www.earthworkshealth.com/get-rid-of-bed-bugs.php
http://www.ghorganics.com/DiatomaceousEarth.html
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Let's get real, folks.....there's no way that 80% of Lewiston is infested with bed bugs. As the only B&B in town, it disturbs me that, in choosing front page above the fold for this ridiculously slanted article, that once again Lewiston gets a bad wrap with its own residents as well as everyone within reach of the long arm of the media. 80% of downtown tenements perhaps, but to include ALL of Lewiston is not good reporting. We're trying to improve our image here.....work with us Sun-Journal!!!
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Wow, free advertising for this guy and his business...nice! Course if you had better buildings in nicer neighborhoods a lot of these problems would not exist...oh wait, thats right Section 8 apartment certificates pay better than regular tenants and you're guarenteed payment by the state/fed. I have no doubt they chalk this up as a "cost of doing business"..
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Gimme a break thinkingman. If
Gimme a break thinkingman. If he had better buildings in better neighborhoods some slumlord would own theses infested buildings and probably wouldnt go to the expense or the extent that this landlord has to remedy the problem.. Everyone cries foul when we hear of a slumlord keeping crappy apartments and renting them when infested and then we chastize them on this blog as some sort of lower life form for doing so.. NOW we have a landlord that has and continues to step up to the plate to provide clean and noninfested apartments to tenants and you want to scrutinize him like the hes a slumlord... A slumlord would not take on the up front expense of buying a $65,000. machine to clean up this problem.. Of course they want to make a buisiness out of it.. Its expensive to buy the equipment, There is a huge need for this service in this town/state, not to mention another buisiness to contribute to the towns tax base.. How is this a bad thing....As far as section 8 goes, you of all bloggers should know the number of secton 8 renters in the lewiston area and that if he didnt take section 8 his buildings in these locations would be empty..... Dont criticize this guy and his partners for doing what is right. Criticize the ones not doing the right thing..As far as free advertizing goes the same could be said for any and all other business that gets an article in the paper for one reason or another... At least its about someone doing something good for tenants instead of all the articles about those taking advantage of or mistreating tenants.(DUNN)....Your comment came across as very negative(a dig) and I dont think it was really necessary to be so critical of what really is a good thing to be doing..
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.But that's the way
booby operates.
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Noone asked for your input Tron!! Nor was my comment directed towards you so I would appreciate your abscence from the conversation. All you tend to contribute is baseless personal attacks.
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one is not required to ask for permission to post on any topic. My commentary is NOT baseless.
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You know, we see all this about what tenants can do to protect themselves from bedbugs, but what about the landlords?
What is a landlord does his part by removing any infestation, and then a tenant moves in and brings these pests with them? Will they be held accountable?
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Niight, Night....don't let the bedbugs bite.
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Maybe there will be a part three youtube video (Dirty Lew 3 Now with bed bugs)
Holy Crap! Dirty Lew 80%. Im glad i live in Auburn.
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Reactive treatments are great as far as they go, but there is no magic bullet availble today to stem the overwhelming tide of bed bugs spreading across the nation.
By the early 1950’s bed bugs were nearly eliminated from the North American continent as a result of the widespread use of DDT. Their numbers were so decimated that generations raised after that time thought they were a myth, perpetuated in a nursery rhyme. Unfortunately, bed bugs are very real. The banning of DDT and the marked increase in international travel, have rapidly given us a resurgence of these nasty pests. Their increase started slowly at first, sort of like the front side of a bell curve, but then accelerated and intensified. We now appear to be on the steep and rapidly rising back side of the curve, with no idea of when the population will peak or when the curve will flatten out.
Read More: http://pestcontrolcenter.com/blog/?p=455
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The quote was taken wrong. What he meant by that quote was that in SOME areas, such as downtown Lewiston, it could possibly be as bad as 80%. Not ALL of Lewiston.
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The quote was taken wrong. What he meant was, "we are a clueless company trying to make a buck or two by instilling fear into our neighbors dere. Sacrey Bluey!"
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I am totally disgusted with the Sun Journal for putting such a terrible headline for all to see ....EVERYWHERE...
I would think that the city of Lewiston wanting more business's and more people to move here, would be disgusted as well....
I think it is a way to get more business by these individuals that are claiming this.
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It's just not worth the risk. If I were a landlord, I'd have a sniffer dog as a pet and all new tenants would have to be checked before moving in.
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It's true you can get an infestation and be a very clean person.
I have to agree - don't be buying used furniture.... if you do..... Make sure it's clean before you bring it in the house
I need a shower.........
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FUD is FEAR, UNCERTAINTY, DOUBT
A cheap shot sales trick to get business
...that's all this article is
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Would you like to respond? Login or create a new account. You'll need to verify your account before you can respond.Exactly. That's why they
Exactly. That's why they retell this same story about once a month. It's reaaaaalllyyyy slow in the circulation department right now, they need to sensationalize something.
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How could sunjournal post a comment like that?! people living in this area should be outraged at this statement.... Leblance is an idiot to say that...maybe 80% of his rents are infested....slumlord
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I'm not blaming the SJ for quoting the guy. I'm just saying the guy is an idiot to make such a statement.
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80 percent of Lewiston is infested? What an absurd comment. This guy would have had to survey EVERY house in Lewiston to be able to come up with a statistic like that. Maybe 80 percent of the apartment buildings HE owns are infested. . . but 80 percent of the whole city. . . ABSURD!
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these apartments that these men own and have infestation problems in are probably furnished with beds and couches..who knows how long these pieces of furniture have been there..and who are they renting to..teens , slobs, just dirty people ...been alive for 58 years and I couldn't tell you what a bedbug looks like ..and I lived in Lewiston for the best part of my life....funny how the bedbugs stay in a certain area and in cetain buildings...and dirty hotel rooms that are rented to 1 hour tenants...not saying the people are dirty, but they probably don't clean very often.....
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The article even states, it can happen to clean people. It's also happened in nice hotels.
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IF people are smart watch what you buy could be a chair at garage sale may be full of bugs or at a goodwill store a use bed full of bugs Now not a good time to garage sale it could become very costly in the end for that 5 dollar chair some landlords are not even addressing the problem you know who you are ?
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Here is a link to an article in the Sun from 1984, bedbugs have been a problem for many many years.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=lJMgAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mGcFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1...
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Be real. Such an ignorant statement.
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Please review our commenting policy.
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you must be so proud of your ignorance
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Now I'm itching just thinking about it.....ewww
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