City officials are acknowledging Boston’s failure to stymie rampant rodent infestations, but actual solutions are proving harder to come by.
A public committee held on August 1 by several City Councilors aimed to pinpoint why exactly officials are having such difficulty addressing the rodent problem. The city budget has included increasing funding in recent years for pest control with little practical improvement for residents.
Councilors have held public meetings each year for three years running to address the issue, but officials say they’re still struggling to find effective ways to get at the root causes due to federal regulations and toothless penalties for repeat offenders.
“This
is an issue we’ve brought attention to again and again, but there are
still reports of increased rodent infestations,” said Ed Flynn, City
Council president. “These quality-of-life issues are critical. They’re
not sexy, but if you don’t solve them people will just leave the city.
In and around Andrew Square, I see so much trash and so many pests that I
think we need to declare it a public health emergency.”
Boston
was once a model city for pest control. Public servants used to use dry
ice to render warrens uninhabitable, but that’s been rendered
impractical by national regulations forcing the city to use name-brand
dry ice that’s hard to acquire and harder to get on-site before it
evaporates.
There’s no
chemical difference between standard dry ice and dry ice specifically
designated for pest control, but once someone patents the use federal
guidelines demand the city use product earmarked for flushing warrens.
The city has since bought two machines that use carbon monoxide to
produce similar effects somewhat less efficiently.
“Dry
ice was a very good tool, but because of federal regulations it’s
become very difficult to use. Currently regulations say we have to buy
the labeled product, called ‘Rat Ice,’ about 60 miles outside the city.
It starts to evaporate as soon as you pick it up.” said John Ulrich,
assistant commissioner of the Environmental Services Department. “It
just became too challenging. If we had a supplier inside the city it
would be more available, but our solution now is these machines.”
Enforcement
is another factor. Rat infestations are exacerbated by open dumpsters,
and several councilors said that repeat offenders see current fines as
simply the cost of doing business.
The
city’s environmental services department is now interviewing for a 14th
pest control investigator, but that might not have much of an effect if
those caught simply pay the fines and continue to violate city
statutes. Councilor Ruthzee Louijeune characterized it as a violation of
the basic dignity of residents.
“There
are dumpsters that have been violation after violation. We need to ask
about the capacity to do more than just a once-ayear check, especially
on repeat offenders. A lot of these unsightly dumpsters are in
neighborhoods that have been traditionally ignored, and would not fly in
other areas,” she said.
“These
are in front of people’s homes. There’s something that smacks in your
face, ‘We don’t care about people in this neighborhood, we don’t care
about the street, and we can put the dumpsters anywhere we want.’”