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RI, MA EHS Pest Control Blog

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Mice Exclusion in a Restaurant

10 Sep 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Location: Providence, RI

What does a small boutique restaurant shop do about mice when they are spotless clean yet they are attached to other stores? This is what often happens in a mall because pests don’t know property lines! Your neighbors pest issue can easily become yours! That is the case here. The two restaurants in the strip mall have mice but EHS does not service them. The mice branched out to the store we do service. The only thing we could do was completely exclude (using stainless steel mesh screening) every possible opening so the mice would not be able to get in. Totally organic pest control! Complete structural exclusion for mice! The results were immediate as the store was not longer seeing any mice activity. Another unique pest solution by EHS!

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More Rodents Found With Hantavirus

28 Mar 2011

Posted by Joseph Coupal

More Rodents Carrying Hantavirus Found

More Rodents Carrying Hantavirus Found

Six more rodents trapped by County Vector Control technicians last week have tested positive for the sometimes-deadly hantavirus, County officials said this week.

The rodents, four Harvest mice and two California Meadow Voles, were trapped in Fairbanks Ranch and northern Escondido near the San Luis Rey River bringing this year’s total to 16 rodents testing positive for hantavirus, a news release stated. In 2010, a total of 21 rodents tested positive for hantavirus.

Recent rains have created an abundance of food for rodents, which can increase the rodent population,” said County Environmental Health Director Jack Miller. “More rodents can lead to more hantavirus.” People should never sweep up or vacuum rodent droppings and nesting materials. Instead, ventilate closed areas and use wet cleaning methods with a 10 percent bleach solution or other full strength disinfectant. The best way to prevent the disease is to keep mice out of houses, garages and sheds by sealing all holes larger than the size of a dime, the news release stated.

Wild rodents, primarily deer mice, carry hantavirus. People can contract it by inhaling dust particles from rodent droppings and nesting materials that contain the virus. The virus can cause hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS), which begins with flu-like symptoms, but can graduate to severe breathing difficulties and even death, according to the news release. There is no vaccine or specific treatment for hantavirus and the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that HPS has killed 36 percent of all the people known to have contracted the disease.

How to Avoid Exposure:

  • Eliminate rodent infestations immediately.
  • Avoid rodent infested areas. Do not stir up dust or materials that may be contaminated with feces and urine.
  • Clean up rodent droppings and urine using the wet cleaning method described below.

Use “wet-cleaning” methods to prevent inhaling the virus:

  • DO NOT SWEEP OR VACUUM INFESTED AREAS.
  • Ventilate affected area by opening doors and windows for at least 30 minutes.
  • Use rubber gloves. Spray a 10 percent bleach solution (2 tablespoons bleach to 1 cup of water), or other full strength disinfectant onto dead rodents, rodent droppings, nests, contaminated traps, and surrounding areas and let the disinfectant stand for at least 15 minutes before cleaning. Clean with a sponge or a mop.
  • Place disinfected rodents and debris into two plastic bags, seal them and discard in the trash.
  • Wash gloves in a bleach solution, then soap and water, and dispose of them using the same double-bag method. Thoroughly wash your bare hands with soap and water.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA

Restaurant Pests are Serious Risks

17 Mar 2010

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Location: Boston, MA

If you do not think pests inside a food handling establishment warrants serious attention just see the law on this. It does not matter what type of food handling establishment you have (restaurant, manufacturing, processing, warehousing, etc.) as long as you serve the public you are open to inspection & investigation. Aside from the serious damage to your reputation you could be looking at fines, closure, or even worse. Bottom line is that if you do not take pests seriously then you are facing tremendous financial risk. You should be striving for zero tolerance with pests and our specialists will help you achieve this. Trust EHS to protect your brand & reputation.

http://www.fda.gov/ICECI/ComplianceManuals/CompliancePolicyGuidanceManual/ucm074559.htm

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