The second Ontario Non-Profit Housing Association (ONPHA) video is up:
See previously: Ontario Non-Profit Housing Association bed bug awareness video.
ONPHA also has a bed bug resources page.
I was surprised to find that it links to a section on Landlord and Tenant Board cases, some of which are more interesting than they should be, like this one (PDF) concerning a tenant claim against a landlord:
I find on a balance of probabilities that the female Tenant brought the bedbugs into the unit by bringing a bedbug infested headboard into the unit. This headboard was discarded by the resident of unit 807, which was treated for bedbugs on January 18, 2008. The Tenant salvaged the headboard from the garbage collection area. The Tenant did not dispute that she brought the headboard into the unit, but contended that it was not the source of the bedbugs because she cleaned the headboard and used it on the balcony of the unit. I find the Tenants’ theory of causation wanting.
Nonetheless:
Although the Tenants brought the bedbugs into the unit, the Landlord is still responsible for treating the unit as part of its maintenance obligations and to prevent other units from infestation. In this regard, the Tenants alleged that Ms. H informed the Landlord’s agents, the superintendent and assistant superintendent, of the bedbug problem on March 18, 2008, and that they told her to deal with the problem herself.