Sunday, December 11, 2022

Climate change project turns housing projects into rodent nature preserve

Trash and construction debris contribute to the infestation of rodents in Brooklyn's Red Hook Houses. https://www.nydailynews.com/resizer/F7o5zXZoR0Y5vP0uOo0Jdx5OQQs=/1440x0/filters:format(jpg):quality(70)/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/tronc/QS5TPFGTY5CCPOUBQVHODXK3WI.jpg

NY Daily News

 

The invasion of raccoons, possums, rats and roaches began after the New York City Housing Authority launched its $550 million overhaul of the Red Hook houses infrastructure in 2017, residents said. The work is part of the agency’s $3.2 billion Recovery and Resilience Program, prompted by the ravages of Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

“They’re building and digging tunnels, and [rodents] are able to travel underground,” said Alberto Calderon, a New York licensed commercial nuisance wildlife control operator. “So, what they’re doing is giving them ways of entry.”

Sandy hit the Red Hook waterfront public housing development hard, leaving the complex without power and utilities for weeks and in some cases months.

The subsequent environmental overhaul, initially scheduled for completion in mid-2021, remains only 60% done while morphing into an urban wildlife preserve with a 40-acre network of underground tunnels filled with creeping creatures and a plethora of above-ground invaders, residents said.

The plan was to upgrade and harden the complex’s water, heating and piping systems against the effects of climate change. The reality is something totally different.

“We’ve seen an increase of vermin like rats, skunks, and possums, which is something we’ve never seen in the neighborhood before,” said Tavina Willis, a 16-year resident of Red Hook’s West Towers and a community organizing manager at non-profit Red Hook Initiative.

Calderon said that under New York law, only a licensed wildlife operator can remove wildlife like raccoons and possums. And while NYCHA has extermination staff operating in Red Hook Houses, they don’t treat areas that are under construction, according to the agency.

The project’s contractor also uses a private pest control company that specializes mainly in small vermin like rats, roaches, and bed bugs, according to its website. But fed-up residents charge the current efforts are insufficient.

 

 

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Where is crazy NRA Ned with his gun that don’t shoot too good, when ya need him?

Anonymous said...

Have you heard about the cockamouse?

https://www.deviantart.com/unicornjana/art/The-return-of-the-Cockamouse-406358912

Joe said...

Bullshit, the illegals are bringing that shit and disease here!
Combined with lack of sanitation these pests will fan like wildfire
According to Hemphill bros who does the servicing for long range tour buses at its HUGE Nashville facility how is only these same buses delivering them 1/4 mile out the tunnel are having the same problem, and worse?

Are the poor huddled & cuddled masses of rats & roaches seeking warmth & asylum by jumping on the south Texas bound buses at the single NYC dump off stop?.
I don't think so.

-Joe

Anonymous said...

They could open up their own zoo.

Anonymous said...

Recently an american laboratory unlocked the holy grail of fusion energy when for the first time they actually had a net gain in energy output as opposed to what was the catalyst for it. It’s huge, fusion energy, has no radioactive waste, and we have an inexhaustible amount of fuel. One pundit said fusion reactors could be a reality in 10 years. I gaurantee the left will fight this, they need the issue, not the solution.

Anonymous said...

But wait... Is there a political party which benefits from suppressing the truth ?
Asking for a friend...

Anonymous said...

These huge roaches and weird looking tropical bugs were never native to the northeast. Not from China neither, these are tough hearty evasive central american bugs.
I seen one so big it tipped the side of paper bag of garbage and hissed at some kids playing with it. Big long thick antennas in its head, like a lobster
The kids catch and keep them as pets, paint colored dots on the backs, drop them in large chalk circles with numbers in the basement. Its some kind of game with quarters and dollar bills.

Anonymous said...

Good to see lots of wildlife. Better than listening to the local Trumpanzees .

Anonymous said...

Is this Green Deal cause by Mass Formation Psychosis ?

Anonymous said...

Suddenly QC cares about people in the projects in Red Hook? Pull the other one.