Fears over closure of council pest control departments

Some 29 councils across the UK have shut down their pest control services over the past two years as part of a drive to save money, according to a TV investigation to be aired this evening.

Local authorities carried out more than 700,000 jobs relating to pests like rats and cockroaches in the UK last year but they are not legally obliged to provide the service, making it a candidate for cuts as councils seek to absorb 28 per cent reductions in central government funding over four years.

The BBC’s Panorama found evidence that the removal of publicly-funded pest control has led to some people seeking to handle the problem themselves, rather than pay private companies fees of as much as £100 for an initial call-out.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Simon Forrester, chief executive of the British Pest Control Association, said that councils provide a “safety net for society” and that if services were withdrawn, the most vulnerable people will be hit.

“Many people who can’t afford pest control need to find some sort of support,” he said. “They’re often the ones who have the worst pest problems where they live.”

Unless dealt with, infestations can create a health risk to humans, said Mr Forrester.

“We’re talking about illnesses like with rat infestations, Weil’s disease, which is Leptospirosis, a particularly nasty illness,” he told the programme. “We’re looking at the transfer of disease through rats coming up through sewers and into people’s houses.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Cheryl Riseden and her husband, both registered disabled, told the programme that they had resorted to setting traps themselves because they were unable to pay for private pest controllers.

“If the council can’t do anything about it and we can’t afford it, we’re just going to have to live with it,” said Mrs Riseden. “We’re just going to have to go out and bait our traps every night, and remove the rats every morning.”

The mother-of-two, of St Austell, Cornwall, told Panorama that she had to check the garden for rats before allowing her children to play there.

Pest controller Chris Woodard said that people were putting themselves and wild animals at risk by laying poison for rats.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He told the programme: “Most people I see putting it down put it down in a totally inappropriate manner – thereby poisoning wildlife and doing themselves some harm.”

A Government spokesman said: “Regular rubbish collections help reduce instances of pests, and the Government is working to support comprehensive weekly rubbish and recycling collections with a new £250m fund.”

A Local Government Association spokesman said: “There is no evidence to suggest that the number of rats found inside or outside properties has significantly increased in the past decade.”

Related topics: