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Listed below are the four critical points of a school IPM program and who is responsible for each.
- Prevention: Responsibility of the schools
- Sanitation:
Indoor cleanliness, elimination of clutter, removal of outdoor debris,
and dumpster location all contribute to pest prevention and control.
- Exclusion:
Building Maintenance and Repairs. Some pest control companies may do
caulking, screening, and other small repairs. However, proper
maintenance by school personnel will prevent pest entry and survival
year round.
- Monitoring: Responsibility of the pest management company or in-house pest management professional
- Sticky traps for cockroaches, etc. should be established in
specific locations that are conducive to pests. Traps must be checked
every month for pest evidence. Pests found in monitors should be
recorded in a log-book. Monitoring is used in place of "preventative"
pesticide applications.
- Food monitors are used prior to baiting for ants. Food
monitoring is used to determine pest ant feeding preferences. Any pest
ants found, and their feeding preferences, should be recorded in the
log-book.
- Least toxic control methods: Responsibility of pest management company or in-house pest management professional.
- A "least toxic control" method may simply be the use of
hardware cloth to block a rodent entrance rather than the use of rodent
bait. However, "least toxic" will generally include control methods like
baits, boric acid dust, and IGRs (Insect Growth Regulators).
- Chemical control methods (baits, dusts, IGRs) are used only on an "as needed" basis in response to documented pest problems.
- Chemical products should be selected from, or comparable to, those listed on the IPM Suggested Products List
(PDF). Pesticides should be placed in locations where they are
accessible to pests but are inaccessible to people or pets (precision
targeting).
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Record keeping: Responsibility of both schools and pest management company or in-house pest management professional
- A log-book should be kept on the property to record pest sightings
and any action taken in response to these sightings. The log-book
records should also include:
- Pests found in monitors and any action taken.
- Pesticide application records. The record should include the
product name, the formulation, date, and location of the application.
- Any pesticide application record should be identified as a response to a specific pest sighting or pest in monitor record.
- Copies of the pest management company's license and contact information.
- Copies of the MSDS sheets for all "IPM Pesticides".
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