Selecting a Pest Control Company
If you have a problem with unwanted pests in your home, and
you've exhausted all the self-help remedies you know, you may be
considering hiring a commercial pest control company to deal
with the problem. Hiring a professional might be exactly the
right solution for you; but you need to do your homework.
First, how do you locate a company? Checking the yellow pages of
your local phone book might be a good start; doing a keyword
search on the Internet for your area could also work, and you
have the added benefit of seeing what information the company
provides, on itself and on pest control generally. Ask friends
and coworkers for recommendations
After you've developed a list of pest control services, and
before you call these companies, start asking more questions of
your friends and coworkers. Have any of them used these
companies? What was their experience? Did the company in
question solve their pest infestation issues? Were there any
problems dealing with the company? Any problems in the home
after the company performed their services?
Once you've narrowed down your list to a few potential
providers, call them on the phone, and ask some more questions:
does the company offer a free home evaluation and estimate of
costs? Does it give you advice on what you can do to deal with
the problem yourself? Is the company willing to answer questions
readily?
Specific questions to ask: what kinds of chemicals are used? (If
possible, have them provide written information on the
chemicals.) What sorts of side effects or potential dangers do
these chemicals have on family members, adults and children, and
on pets? Do your family and household pets need to vacate the
premises during the pest control treatment?
Make sure you ask whether the company offers nontoxic, natural
pest control. The company should be willing to at least discuss
the options; if its representative just dismisses the notion of
nontoxic pest control without intelligently discussing the pros
and cons of the natural remedies available, but just wants to
get into your house and spray, beware!
With written information (or your own notes) in hand, do your
own research on any chemicals that will be used - their
effectiveness, their possible side effects, their potential
toxicity. (The Internet is a great place to start for this.) If
you have family members with serious health issues, particularly
asthma or other respiratory ailments, make sure you know what
the potential effect of sprayed compounds could have on them.
Finally, if you have any questions about the company's
reliability, and you can't find anyone you know and whose
judgment you trust to vouch for them, contact your local or
state Better Business Bureau or Consumer Fraud Division, to find
out whether there have been any complaints lodged against them.
Once you've hired a company, make sure you know who is going to
be showing up at your home and when. Make sure they have proper
I.D., and ask if you can be there to supervise the process or if
you have to leave, and for how long. And while you've got access
to the professional treating your home, ask what you can do to
avoid pest control problems in the future, particularly those
involving destructive
carpenter ants and termites. The guy (or gal) who actually
does the work probably has insights into the subject that the
office staff doesn't have.