Residents take action against bed bugs in AL

Published 6:50 pm Saturday, June 23, 2012

A group of residents living in the Albert Lea Downtown Homes are taking matters into their own hands after bedbugs have reportedly spread to every floor of the complex.

Resident Melinda Duncan, who lives on the second floor, said she and others in about six apartments have retained a lawyer through Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services.

“I’m covered from head to toe in bites,” Duncan said. “My face has them, my neck has them, my back has them.”

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If no action has been taken by the owner of the Downtown Homes before the end of the month, she and the others will file a lawsuit, she said.

“I’m tired,” she said. “I just want some sleep.”

Duncan said she moved into the complex, 133 W. William St., in October.

 

When contacted Friday, Matt Lebartnant, spokesman with Pro 1 Property Management, that runs the facility, said representatives with American Pest Control of Albert Lea will be coming to the complex at 4 p.m. Monday.

The manager will be at the complex at 1 p.m. to notify people about the exterminator.

“They are going to come back until the problem is resolved,” Lebartnant said. “We need the help of the tenants to maintain and clean their apartments.”

In the meantime, some residents are doing all they can to cleanse their apartments of the bugs.

Don and Gina Hernes, who live in the basement of the building, threw out their bed and have bombed their apartment — which has helped — and they plan to do it again in two weeks.

Duncan first started noticing the bloodsucking bugs, which like to hide in crevices or among clothing during the day, in November.

A single mother living with two of her children, she said it has become “one big huge chaos” in the apartment.

“We’re tired of living like this,” she said. “We shouldn’t have to.”

Duncan and Tina Larson, who live on the third floor above Duncan, said the management of the building sprayed for the bugs on their own, and the problem got worse.

Albert Lea Fire Capt. Mark Roche said he was notified about the situation after a renter at the complex contacted him. When he went to the building to investigate, additional renters complained of the same problem.