Letter in support of the Community Integrated Pest Management Program at Cornell

Below is our letter in support of the Community IPM Program — links added in this online version. Please take a moment to review the appeal (PDF) by Dr. Donald Rutz, director of the NYS IPM Program, and please consider writing a supportive letter to save the program. As always, many thanks…

February 3, 2010

The Honorable Antoine Thompson
Chairman
Senate Environmental Conservation Committee
Legislative Office Building, Room 902
Albany, New York 12247

Dear Senator Thompson,

I am writing to you in support of the Community Integrated Pest Management Program at Cornell University.

As a co-founder of New York vs Bed Bugs, a policy advocacy organization in New York City, I have worked closely with an IPM Specialist at the Community Integrated Pest Management Program, Dr. Jody Gangloff-Kaufmann, most recently on the New York City Bed Bug Advisory Board which Dr. Gangloff-Kaufmann chairs.

Bed bugs are rapidly spreading in New York City, as in other North American cities, causing extraordinary physical, psychological and financial distress wherever they appear; and severely straining the budgets and resources of families, property owners, social and health services providers, business owners and government agencies.

Current bed bug control methods and practices are variously difficult, ineffective and, crucially, unaffordable. There are no programs or resources available to the majority of New York residents who are affected by bed bug infestations. It is particularly troubling that the most vulnerable populations are at higher risk for suffering entrenched bed bug infestations.

In a period of deepening economic austerity, the prospects for bed bug control in New York City are realistically bleak. In this challenging landscape, therefore, the work of the Community Integrated Pest Management Program at Cornell University is vital. The Community Integrated Pest Management Program at Cornell University has worked to develop and deliver educational resources to combat bed bug infestations in New York City and New York State. In 2008 it produced Guidelines for Prevention and Management of Bed Bugs in Shelters and Group Living Facilities, a publication that has had a significant impact far beyond its intended audience, becoming an extremely valuable resource for all affected New Yorkers. The Program has a comprehensive website about bed bugs and delivers bed bug management education and advice through various channels, including innovative tools such as informational wallet cards [PDF] targeting the needs of travelers and college students. This combination of attention to an emergent public health pest problem and concerted effort at producing useful guidance and educational materials, especially for underserved populations, is a critical response that is singular in the state, with no other organizations taking on this task.

I urge you to restore the Community Integrated Pest Management Program at Cornell University to its historic funding level of $400,000. Please take steps to preserve one of the few pest management education resources available to New York residents at a time when they are ill-equipped to cope with an unprecedented resurgence of bed bug infestations.

Respectfully,

Renee Corea
New York vs Bed Bugs

cc: Donald A. Rutz, Director, NYS IPM Program

These pages may be of related interest:

  1. Details of the projected budget needs for Cincinnati’s Bed Bug Inspection Program
  2. Bed bugs and public health at the 6th International IPM Symposium
  3. NYC Health Code, Pest Prevention and Management
  4. Bed bugs as vehicle for change
  5. A bed bug management plan for a Chelsea co-op

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