New York is rife with bedbugs, but it’s not alone. Infestations in Ohio have gotten so bad that the state’s Department of Agriculture petitioned the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to allow it to combat the problem with propoxur, a pesticide banned in the 1990s, Time reports.
Although the EPA rejected that request, the agency is meeting with state and local leaders to help figure out a solution. It also invited representatives from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and even the Department of Defense to, attend.
“Quite frankly, something needs to happen, and it needs to happen quickly,” Ohio’s agriculture secretary, Robert Boggs, told Time.
Bedbugs do not carry diseases, but they bite and can be very difficult to exterminate. In New York, the high-end retailer Bergdorf Goodman recently hired bug-sniffing beagles to sniff out the pests, while the AMC Empire 25 movie theater in Time Square shut down to spray for the bugs. The Time Warner Center and the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office have also reported infestations. In Canada, Calgary and Toronto have been invaded by the pests.
Decades ago, drug stores used to sell DDT bug bombs that would take care of the problem, but the insects developed a resistance to the DDT. Propoxur can eliminate the pests within 24 hours, but was banned because of the potential harm to human health. Officials say that long-term exposure can lead to vomiting, headaches and other symptoms.
In addition, some scientists believe that the bugs eventually would develop a resistance to propoxur.
To deal with the pests, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommends drying infested clothes at high heat, using special mattress covers, vacuuming often, and inspecting hotel mattresses for traces of the bugs.


