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Sat 31 Jul 2010
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Takeaway operators prosecuted for rodent infestation

The operators of a Ton Pentre takeaway that was so badly infested with rodents and dirty that it was closed on the spot by Environmental Health officers have been prosecuted.

Rhondda Cynon Taf Council officers, working on behalf of the community, were shocked when they attended the Red Rose in Church Road for a routine inspection.

There was evidence of rat infestation, including droppings fresh and old, damage to fixtures and fittings, food packaging that had been gnawed and a strong smell associated with rodent activity.
As well as this, there were also other food hygiene offences uncovered, including poor cleanliness, pest-proofing problems, structural and equipment defects and no disinfectant to kill bacteria in the kitchen.

There were also concerns about the level of food hygiene training staff had undertaken and also the implementation of procedures to meet the standards expected of premises that prepare and sell food.
The findings during this inspection in May 2009 led to a decision to immediately close the premise and ban it from operating until pest treatment, pest proofing and disinfection works had taken place.
The premises resumed trading following the necessary works being undertaken in June 2009.

However, the Environmental Health investigation continued and, later the same year, operators Kaptan Miah and Shalim Ullah were charged with 10 offences under Food Hygiene Legislation. They appeared before Rhondda Magistrates’ Court this month, where they admitted nine of the offences and the 10th charge was duly withdrawn. As a result, each was fined £150 for each of the nine offences and also ordered to pay £226.56 costs and a £15 victim surcharge – a total of £1591.56 each. David Jones, Head of Community Protection at Rhondda Cynon Taf Council, said: “We have a team of expert Environmental Health officers who work across the county borough on behalf of our communities, ensuring premises are meeting their legal obligations and the hygiene standards we expect. “It is as a result of these regular, proactive investigations that we are able to identify issues and take action immediately, in order to protect customers and the wider community. “In this case, the offences were extremely serious and we had no option but to close the takeaway with immediate effect. The offences have also cost the owners dearly in terms of the fines issued in court and the harm such a case does to the reputation of their business.“However, I hope this serves as strong reassurance to our communities that we do work proactively and use our legal powers to protect the public.“I also hope it serves as a reminder to all food premises that we do take our responsibilities seriously and urge them to do so also.

Our Business Advice Team is on hand to offer advice, support and even training opportunities to ensure our businesses maintain the highest-possible standards.”

http://www.rhondda-cynon-taf.gov.uk/

 
Woman's anger at rat infestation

A MUM-of-four has spoken of her misery at living in a rat-infested house for six weeks, which she says the council is doing nothing about.

Tani Jones, 29, said she is sick of finding dead or dying rats and their droppings all over the kitchen in her council house.

The single mum, who lives in Copperfield Gardens, in Brentwood, said her children are so scared of encountering the vermin, they won’t go into the kitchen alone, and the family is having trouble sleeping due to the noisy night-time pests.

Ms Jones said she first reported the problem to Brentwood Council six weeks ago, and has been calling every day, only to be told the pest control team is snowed under.

Soon after she first complained, an officer did visit the family and laid down two rat traps, but nothing has been done since and the problem is getting worse.

Things came to a head on Saturday when the family’s cooker caught fire, with Ms Jones blaming the rats who she said chewed through the wiring.

The council is yet to replace the oven, leaving Ms Jones without a way of cooking for her family.

The distraught mum said: “There is rats’ mess everywhere, in cupboards and in drawers, on cutlery and cups.

“It’s disgusting and so unhealthy. One of my daughters has been off sick for two weeks and the doctor doesn’t know why, I can’t help thinking it’s linked.”

Ms Jones’ problem comes just weeks after Brentwood Council controversially announced it was scrapping its subsidised pest-control service. This means residents will have to fork out hundreds of pounds to hire private extermination services, although it doesn’t apply to council tenants such as Ms Jones.

The council confirmed only one pest control officer had been working for the last few months, instead of the usual two, although that was due to sick leave and not redundancies.

Conservative Russell Quirk, councillor for Brentwood North, has been putting pressure on council officers to prioritise Ms Jones’ case.

He said: “I am aghast at how long this saga has been going on.

“She’s got four young children and she’s been having to share her kitchen with rats for six weeks.

“The delay is unacceptable, especially when there are health concerns.”

Mr Quirk added: “This highlights the pest control service should never have been scrapped, a decision I never voted for.”

Brentwood Council said it was looking into the problem and an officer will be visiting the house to assess the damage to the cooker soon.

Louise McKinlay, leader of Brentwood Council said she could not comment on specific cases, but said: “In setting this year’s budget we had to make some very challenging decisions in respect of efficiency savings.”

She added: “The pest control service was not identified as a key priority.”

from http://www.brentwoodweeklynews.co.uk

 
Bedbugs and other pests: The ugly side of city life

London, England (CNN) -- After a night in a San Francisco motel three years ago, Maciej Ceglowski awoke covered in bedbug bites.

The experience, which he says gave him around 20 large itchy bites and weeks of paranoia, had such a psychological impact on him that he was moved to start a Web site to warn others of the bugs lurking in hotels and apartment blocks across the United States and Canada.

Ceglowski, 34, a computer programmer who now lives in Romania, told CNN: "I realized that there was no effective treatment for bedbugs except avoidance. I thought I could help people by warning them about the dangers and where there are bedbug infestations."

He says his Web site, The Bedbug Registry, now receives between 10,000 and 15,000 visitors daily and up to 100 reports a day of infestations in hotels and apartment blocks, mainly in New York, San Francisco, Toronto and Vancouver.

Ceglowski's battle against bedbugs is part of a wider problem facing urban areas: the rise of pests.

With more than half of the world's population now living in cities, it's a problem that's affecting city dwellers globally and which can pose significant health challenges.

"Fifteen years ago, bedbugs were thought to be history in most developed countries. But they have now bounced back across the world," Clive Boase, a pest management consultant, said.

Bedbug expert David Cain estimates that reports of infestations tripled in UK cities between 2003 and 2007.

The problem has become a global one as bedbugs cross international borders on people and their belongings.

Stephen Doggett, an entomologist at Westmead Hospital, Sydney, reported a 400 percent increase in the number of bedbug samples submitted between 2001 and 2004.

"The data presented here probably only represent the 'tip of the iceberg,'" he wrote in a paper published in the journal Environmental Health Australia.

Cain told CNN that he believes this increase was down to tourists coming to see the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

It's not just bedbugs that are causing headaches. Pests from foxes and mosquitoes to rats, pigeons and cockroaches are thriving in rapidly expanding metropolises.

See how urban populations have exploded

Increasing urbanization, along with global travel and climate change, are providing rich pickings for these pests.

"Modern city living conditions are pretty attractive to most pests," Boase told CNN. "We produce waste, heat our homes and flush waste into our drains and sewers."

Some pests, such as bedbugs, are an irritation. Others, like rats and mosquitoes, carry disease and pose a major public health risk.

There has been a 33 percent increase in calls to pest companies about rat problems in the last year alone in London, according to Peter Crowden, chairman of the UK's National Pest Technicians Association.

"Since we stopped feeding human food waste to animals, a tremendous amount has ended up in our sewers through waste disposal units," he said.

"I have seen whole chicken carcasses on people's compost heaps, and of course, that attracts rats," Crowden added.

Pigeons and foxes, too, are widespread and can cause public health concerns.

Crowden said: "Pigeons carry the same diseases as rats. Their droppings can also cause respiratory problems."

Foxes have increasingly moved into cities with the availability of food. Their fleas and ticks can be passed to domestic pets.

Crowden told CNN that most pest controllers he knew were reluctant to tackle them, fearing objections from animal rights campaigners. "I stopped dealing with foxes about 10 years ago," he said, "when I started getting death threats."

In areas where there is poor infrastructure, the health risks can be even greater, according to Boase, who advises public bodies, as well as food and waste companies.

"In developing countries, cities are growing very fast as people pour in from the country, and there is often very little urban planning," he said.

With urban populations forecast to swell over the next few decades, the problem doesn't appear to be going away anytime soon.

The proportion of the world's population living in cities will rise to 70 percent by 2050, according to the World Health Organization. By comparison, that figure was 40 percent in 1980.

Each particular urban pest and each particular city has its own individual causes and solutions, Boase said.

In tropical cities, for instance, the biggest -- and fastest growing -- pest is mosquitoes carrying dengue fever, a disease that can be fatal if it's not treated properly.

"Anything that carries so much as a cup of water can provide a habitat for these mosquitoes, and they cause millions of cases of dengue fever," he said.

But the problems across the globe have more similarities than differences, according to Boase.

"Public health and environmental health are seen as rather dirty subjects that people don't really want to think about," he said.

"But it is vital that city authorities pay more attention to public health and pest control, rather than leaving it to private companies who can only deal with each case on its own."


http://edition.cnn.com

 
KFC now serves cockroaches, mice and flies!

London, April 9 (ANI): Fast food major KFC may have to pay a hefty fine after cockroaches, mice and flies were found at one of its restaurants in the UK.

KFC accepted responsibility for violating food hygiene regulations by failing to keep its Leicester Square outlet clean.

The international fried chicken chain admitted having ignored proper procedures for pest control, no soap in a hand basin and no proper hygiene practices.

Environmental health officers kicked off an investigation in August 2008 after visiting the KFC in Coventry Street.

According to the officials, a cockroach scurried across a counter and a mouse ran across the floor while they were at the outlet.

KFC has now entered guilty pleas to five charges of breaching food hygiene regulations.

Eight others are still on the file.

David Whiting, representing the company, said KFC accepted its mistakes and ‘the company has gone a long way to try and prevent these things from happening again,’ reports the Sun.

The hearing has been adjourned for sentence on May 10.

from http://www.sindhtoday.net/

 


 
Blood-sucking bed bugs on the rise

Cases of bed bug infestations in Lincoln have doubled in the past few years, according to experts.

And it's not just hotels and hospitals that are calling in the experts. Cases of infestation in Lincoln homes have also rocketed, with more people than ever needing the help of specialist firms to get rid of the nibbling monsters.

Experts say one of the main issues is that bed bugs are very resilient, living not just in mattresses, but furniture, clothing and even between cracks in skirting boards.

Pest control specialist Ian Spraggins from Eradicate Pest Control Specialists, based in Doddinton Park, said: "Bed bugs are most certainly on the increase in Lincoln – we saw a 50 to 55 per cent increase last year and who knows what this year will bring?

"One of the contributing factors is that more people are heading overseas on cut-price holidays where cleanliness might not be given as much attention. All it takes is a few to crawl into a suitcase, be carried back to the UK, then get nice and settled in your own home."

As well as private firms in the city, the City of Lincoln Council also has a dedicated pest control section. There were 19 cases reported to the council in 2009. But seven call outs have already taken place this year – which if continued at that level, could mean 28 plus cases by the end of the year.

The City of Lincoln Council's environmental team say the problem can't be tackled by residents.

Simon Colburn from the team said: "To eradicate the problem completely people must get professional help - bed bugs must be treated with a suitable insecticide."

 
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