Hidden Pest Risks of Vacant Homes

6/10/2010

(ARA) - That vacant home next door isn't just bringing down your neighborhood's property values. It may also be a haven for pests that can threaten the health and safety of neighbors, children and pets.

Weeds, tall grasses, overgrown shrubs, clogged gutters and unmanaged pools offer a perfect habitat for a variety of problematic pests. In the interest of preserving public health, it is imperative that vacant structures, pools and properties be treated with pest control products to keep roaches, rats, spiders, stinging insects, weeds and poisonous plants from moving in.

"Pests thrive in the conditions offered by a foreclosed property with nobody home," says Allen James, president of RISE (Responsible Industry for a Sound Environment), a national organization representing the manufacturers, formulators and distributors of pesticide and fertilizer products used in and around homes and businesses.

"Rodents, roaches, mosquitoes and poison ivy are often thought of as merely nuisances, but they can pose serious health risks for people and pets if they are left unchecked," James adds.

Exposure to weed and pollen allergies can trigger respiratory problems and illnesses like hay fever, especially among young children and toddlers who breathe in the airborne allergens circulating near the ground. Natural areas and landscapes left abandoned for substantial periods of time can become home to poison ivy and poison oak, which cause skin irritations, blisters and other forms of infection often severe enough to warrant hospitalization.

Pools, bird baths and other structures that hold water around vacant homes serve as perfect breeding grounds for mosquitoes. Mosquitoes are known to transmit potentially deadly diseases like West Nile virus and encephalitis, which infect thousands of Americans each year according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


Ticks, fleas and stinging insects find refuge in overgrown weeds, natural areas and unmown lawns introducing the risks of Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and infections resulting from bites and stings that cause itching, swelling and more dangerous allergic reactions in victims each year.

Poisonous and deadly spiders like the black widow and the brown recluse seek out dark, warm environments like those found under eaves, porches and inside unoccupied residences.

Rats and roaches can thrive in empty houses and other structures like tool sheds left unused and untreated. Roaches have been proven to carry and spread E. coli, streptococcus and Salmonella along with other diseases and allergens, while rats are responsible for thousands of doctor and hospital visits each year due to bites and human contact with their feces and urine.

The threats each of these pests pose are very real and can become serious health and safety hazards if they are permitted to thrive. The challenge with foreclosed homes is finding the proper authorities to take responsibility for pest control measures that will keep neighborhoods safe and pest-free. Courtesy of ARAcontent