Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The city should pay a cash bounty on dead rats.
Enterprising folks would pocket some serious $$$, and the rat population would be reduced. Not eliminated, but definitely reduced.
Right now there’s no incentive for anyone to do anything about getting rid of them. So incentivize it. Use economics to fight the problem. Assign a value to rats, and pay the people who turn them in.
This. A dollar a rat! Once they are more scarce and it's harder to find them, raise the price to $5 a rat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The city should pay a cash bounty on dead rats.
Enterprising folks would pocket some serious $$$, and the rat population would be reduced. Not eliminated, but definitely reduced.
Right now there’s no incentive for anyone to do anything about getting rid of them. So incentivize it. Use economics to fight the problem. Assign a value to rats, and pay the people who turn them in.
This is a good idea. OP here - back in the rats in the sandbox days, we called city rat control twice. They came.in space suits, poked around for nests and left without doing anything. This was years ago... What are other cities doing? Any new methods? Sterilization??? I like the idea of leading them across the highway - very Pied Piper of Hamelin, but not super fair to our neighbors.
Pay $10 for each dead rat turned in to any designated collection site in the city. Homeless people would be catching and killing rats all day long.
. I'd start way lower. Maybe by the pound? I just threw up a little thinking about that...Anonymous wrote:The city should pay a cash bounty on dead rats.
Enterprising folks would pocket some serious $$$, and the rat population would be reduced. Not eliminated, but definitely reduced.
Right now there’s no incentive for anyone to do anything about getting rid of them. So incentivize it. Use economics to fight the problem. Assign a value to rats, and pay the people who turn them in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The city should pay a cash bounty on dead rats.
Enterprising folks would pocket some serious $$$, and the rat population would be reduced. Not eliminated, but definitely reduced.
Right now there’s no incentive for anyone to do anything about getting rid of them. So incentivize it. Use economics to fight the problem. Assign a value to rats, and pay the people who turn them in.
This is a good idea. OP here - back in the rats in the sandbox days, we called city rat control twice. They came.in space suits, poked around for nests and left without doing anything. This was years ago... What are other cities doing? Any new methods? Sterilization??? I like the idea of leading them across the highway - very Pied Piper of Hamelin, but not super fair to our neighbors.
Anonymous wrote:The city should pay a cash bounty on dead rats.
Enterprising folks would pocket some serious $$$, and the rat population would be reduced. Not eliminated, but definitely reduced.
Right now there’s no incentive for anyone to do anything about getting rid of them. So incentivize it. Use economics to fight the problem. Assign a value to rats, and pay the people who turn them in.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone remember ratgate: when DC wanted to "humanely" solve its rat problem by trapping all the rats, drive them across the river and release them along the GW Parkway in Virginia.
And Virginia was like "no f-ing way"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG, I'm going to have nightmares tonight. Add this to reason 1,483,719 why we no longer go to DC. How disgusting.
I remember the days when DCUM was actually populated by people who live in DC. Now we get this dribble on the daily.
Anonymous wrote:OMG, I'm going to have nightmares tonight. Add this to reason 1,483,719 why we no longer go to DC. How disgusting.

Anonymous wrote:I'm just so revolted by them. They used to play on my child's small backyard sandbox when we lived in Adams Morgan. Needless to say we could not eradicate the rats so we eradicated the sandbox. I don't see them around my current house, but have been to two fancy/"fine dining" DC streeteries (Conn Ave and 14th st) where they were practically running over diners' feet in this past years. It just makes me wonder about the kitchens at night, bleccchh. I was by an apartment building on Upper Conn avenue today (near the currently notorious Says Inn) that had a line of bushes for landscaping, riddled with rat holes underneath like the rose bush in Mrs. Frisby and the Rats or NIHM!, and rats playing by the dumpsters. Why is this not a thing? To be addressed? It's so medieval.
. I don't see them around my current house, but have been to two fancy/"fine dining" DC streeteries (Conn Ave and 14th st) where they were practically running over diners' feet in this past years. It just makes me wonder about the kitchens at night, bleccchh. I was by an apartment building on Upper Conn avenue today (near the currently notorious Says Inn) that had a line of bushes for landscaping, riddled with rat holes underneath like the rose bush in Mrs. Frisby and the Rats or NIHM!, and rats playing by the dumpsters. Why is this not a thing? To be addressed? It's so medieval.