Vocable (Anglais)

Can a Mystery Bucket Stop New York’s Rats?

La lutte acharnée de la métropole pour se débarrasse­r de ses rongeurs.

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Comme de nombreux maires new-yorkais avant lui, Bill de Blasio a déclaré la guerre aux rats, avec des résultats plutôt mitigés. La cohabitati­on ne date pas d’hier : les rats et les hommes se partagent la Grande Pomme depuis toujours et la situation ne cesse de s’aggraver. La gentrifica­tion, le réchauffem­ent climatique et le tourisme contribuer­aient à l’augmentati­on exponentie­lle de la population de rongeurs dans les grandes villes. Une nouvelle invention - un seau - réussira-t-elle enfin à en venir à bout ?

NEW YORK — Traps. Poison. Birth control. Dry ice. And now, what city officials are touting as a high-tech solution: drowning. New York has attempted to eradicate its teeming rat population for 355 years and counting. Early September, the latest tactic in the Sisyphean effort was unveiled, with great fanfare, by Eric Adams, the Brooklyn borough president. It was, in effect, a bucket that would lure the rodents and send them plunging to their deaths in a mysterious vinegary concoction. The toxic potion, according to its maker, Rat Trap Inc., prevents them from rotting too quickly and emitting a stink.

2. A dozen reporters were gathered around Adams when he gleefully displayed a plastic bin containing blobs of rat floating around in a mouse-gray stew; it was a ghastly spectacle and the odor was stomach-churning. “Sometimes you need to see for yourselves to get the shock effect,” Adams said. “Are you serious?” said one of the reporters present, while another turned his face away. “That’s disgusting.”

FIGHTING A LOSING BATTLE

3. The pilot program has already hit one snag. Adams’ office initially placed five boxes in and around Brooklyn Borough Hall, but one was disabled by a very large rat. “It was so big it broke the spring mech

anism in the box so that it was no longer functionin­g,” said Jonah Allon, Adams’ spokesman. Adams said he wants to install the newfangled traps, which cost between $300 and $400, in several other locations in Brooklyn. If successful, he said he would look to expand the methodolog­y citywide.

4. Though New York’s “War on Rats” is as old as the city itself, the methods keep changing. Back in 1865, an exasperate­d reporter for The New York Times wrote that “traps are of no use whatsoever,” and that the solution would be to “engage a Pied Piper to charm the vermin to their destructio­n.” More recently, after the Giuliani administra­tion escalated the anti-rat campaign — using three kinds of rat poison — an exterminat­or in Manhattan and Brooklyn told The Times that the rodent population had been “astronomic­al for the last two years,” and added: “They are healthier than ever. You see them all bloated, either fat or pregnant.”

FERTILITY MANAGEMENT

5. There was an attempt at rat birth control, first tested in 2011 and then rolled out by the Department of Health as a pilot program in 2017; it is still used in parts of the city. Then the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority ran a six-month $1 million trial of the “fertility management bait” in subways in 2013, and said in 2017 that it would

expand to additional stations following “promising results.” But rodent and pest control experts said that while the plan may have slowed down breeding somewhat, it has not had a quantifiab­le effect.

ACCEPTING RESPONSIBI­LTY

6. In 2017, the de Blasio administra­tion offered a $32 million plan, part of which involved killing rats by stuffing their burrows with dry ice, a method approved by the EPA. (In one Chinatown park, packing burrows with dry ice resulted in the deaths of 1,200 rats — suffocated by the release of carbon dioxide — and a reduction of rat burrows from 60 to two, officials said.) That plan is generally effective, said Jason Munshi-South, a professor of biology at Fordham University who has studied New York City’s rats. But it requires a lot of labor and energy; someone has to stuff the dry ice in thousands of burrows and then monitor the nests. 7. Munshi-South described Adams’ solution as a “dunk tank at a carnival where the rat falls in and drowns.” Still, he added, “It’s beneficial in that you’re not spreading poison.” But he said it will ultimately prove futile until New York solves underlying issues like proper garbage etiquette. Even if 90% of the city’s rats were killed, the survivors could potentiall­y breed faster because of less competitio­n for food, he said. “You may be harvesting rats like grains,” he said.

8. Adams did say that the city’s human residents bear much of the responsibi­lity for curbing the rat population in New York City. “New Yorkers need to understand that they have a role in stopping this,” he said. “I don’t believe we have built in a right culture of how to dispose of our garbage. People have not made the connection between what your neighbors are doing with their garbage, and how this feeds the problem.”

9. A news release for the event said that Adams would “display 90 rats caught during new pilot program,” but there were actually only about 20 in the new trap. Rat sightings reported to the city’s 311 hotline have soared nearly 38%, to 17,353 last year, up from 12,617 in 2014, according to an analysis of city data by OpenTheBoo­ks.com, a nonprofit watchdog group, and The Times. In the same period, the number of times that city health inspection­s found active signs of rats nearly doubled.

Rat sightings reported to the city’s 311 hotline have soared nearly 38%.

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 ?? (John Taggart/The New York Times) ?? (Left) Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, right, shows off a new rat trap that lures the rodents and sends them plunging to their deaths in a mysterious vinegary concoction, Sept. 5, 2019.
(John Taggart/The New York Times) (Left) Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, right, shows off a new rat trap that lures the rodents and sends them plunging to their deaths in a mysterious vinegary concoction, Sept. 5, 2019.
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