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	<title>Comments on: Roach Exterm &#8211; How To Stop Roaches</title>
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	<description>Cockroach Extermination Tips</description>
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		<title>By: Cockroaches Defence</title>
		<link>http://www.gettingridofroaches.org/roach-exterm-how-to-stop-roaches/comment-page-1#comment-11</link>
		<dc:creator>Cockroaches Defence</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Aug 2009 12:50:15 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] Roach exterm - how to stop roaches? Given the exponential increase in bed bug infestations nationwide, landlords are leery of the possible financial repercussions of such legislation. In New York City, bed bug complaints jumped from 1,839 in 2005 to 8,830 in 2008. Violations issued by the Department of Housing Preservation and Development rose from 366 to 2,757 over the same period. New York and New Jersey apartment owners are legally tasked with providing pest control for tenants. It&#8217;s the apartment owner&#8217;s responsibility to provide tenants with a pest-free living environment. That wasn&#8217;t always true. Since the 1908 case of Jacobs v. Morand, tenants had been legally obligated to pay their rent even if bed bugs had made their apartment inhabitable. That changed in 2004 with Ludlow Properties, LLC v. Young when Judge Cyril Bedford ruled in favor of a frustrated tenant who had refused to pay rent for six months because of a persistent bed bug problem, writing: [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] Roach exterm &#8211; how to stop roaches? Given the exponential increase in bed bug infestations nationwide, landlords are leery of the possible financial repercussions of such legislation. In New York City, bed bug complaints jumped from 1,839 in 2005 to 8,830 in 2008. Violations issued by the Department of Housing Preservation and Development rose from 366 to 2,757 over the same period. New York and New Jersey apartment owners are legally tasked with providing pest control for tenants. It&#8217;s the apartment owner&#8217;s responsibility to provide tenants with a pest-free living environment. That wasn&#8217;t always true. Since the 1908 case of Jacobs v. Morand, tenants had been legally obligated to pay their rent even if bed bugs had made their apartment inhabitable. That changed in 2004 with Ludlow Properties, LLC v. Young when Judge Cyril Bedford ruled in favor of a frustrated tenant who had refused to pay rent for six months because of a persistent bed bug problem, writing: [...]</p>
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