Take that, rat! New York turns to alcohol in rodent fight |AA NEWS NETWORK | #AANEWSNETWORK
Take that, rat! New York turns to alcohol in rodent fight
NEW YORK: New York unveiled its latest weapon Thursday in the
city's long-running war against rats -- alcohol.
Rodents are one of the more unappealing aspects of life in
America's largest metropolis, often seen scurrying between subway tracks and
sniffing around garbage bags.
City officials have spent millions of dollars trying to cull the
rat population over the years, deploying everything from rodent birth control
to vermin-proof trash cans.
Now they say they have finally found a solution: a machine that
attracts rats with bait and then triggers a trap door that drops them into a
pool of alcohol-based liquid.
"It knocks them out and they drown eventually," Anthony
Giaquinto, the president of Rat Trap Inc., which imports the devices from
Italy, told reporters.
The machine -- called Ekomille -- is battery operated and
resembles a cabinet around two-feet high.
Rats climb a ladder to eat the bait. A sensor deploys a trip lever
which plunges them into a tray that can hold 80 rat carcasses.
A total of 107 furry rodents met their end this way during a
month-long trial around the grounds of the borough hall in Brooklyn, officials
said.
During a rather macabre demonstration for journalists outside the
building Thursday, sanitation workers opened the container to reveal several
dead rats floating in a green liquid.
"It's humane and environmentally friendly," said Borough
President Eric Adams.
He declared the trial a success and said it would be rolled out in
some of Brooklyn's most rat-infected districts.
New York's rats are notorious and legend has it that there are as
many rats as humans -- more than eight million -- although that figure has been
debunked as a myth by a local statistician.
Thousands of New Yorkers ring a health department help line every
year with rat-complaints. Adams said New York was gripped by a rat
"crisis," adding that families were being "traumatized" by
the vermin.
In July 2017, the city announced a $32 million program to cull
thousands of rodents by installing rat-resistant trash cans tightening garbage
rules. It also trialed a liquid bait that made rats infertile.
English novelist Charles Dickens complained about rodents when he
visited in 1842. A rat shot to internet stardom in 2015 when it was filmed
walking down the stairs of a subway station with a slice of pizza in its mouth.

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