Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know your kids friends don't bring bedbugs or roaches in their stuff during sleep overs?
I suppose in they could, however, they are not frequently sleeping at homeless shelters and poorly maintained apartment complexes like many library patrons of large cities. But I realize anyone can get them anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:How do you know your kids friends don't bring bedbugs or roaches in their stuff during sleep overs?
Anonymous wrote:I put my library books in sealed plastic for 48 hours before I read them.
Anonymous wrote:I had bed bugs when I was a grad student. I quarantined my library books in my work office for a year and then returned them. One was an inter library loan that was recalled. I tried to explain to a librarian about the bed bugs and why I had put the book in my work office on campus for so long. She didn't care and I was charged a lot of money. While I did the right thing for the university library (my home one and the lending one), if i had known a bonehead university librarian would have been such a jerk about me keeping bed bugs out of the library, I would have saved my self hundreds in library fines and returned the darn book. I don't trust library books after this because while I did the right thing, it is up the library to take care of their books.
Anonymous wrote:I had bed bugs when I was a grad student. I quarantined my library books in my work office for a year and then returned them. One was an inter library loan that was recalled. I tried to explain to a librarian about the bed bugs and why I had put the book in my work office on campus for so long. She didn't care and I was charged a lot of money. While I did the right thing for the university library (my home one and the lending one), if i had known a bonehead university librarian would have been such a jerk about me keeping bed bugs out of the library, I would have saved my self hundreds in library fines and returned the darn book. I don't trust library books after this because while I did the right thing, it is up the library to take care of their books.
Anonymous wrote:I had bed bugs when I was a grad student. I quarantined my library books in my work office for a year and then returned them. One was an inter library loan that was recalled. I tried to explain to a librarian about the bed bugs and why I had put the book in my work office on campus for so long. She didn't care and I was charged a lot of money. While I did the right thing for the university library (my home one and the lending one), if i had known a bonehead university librarian would have been such a jerk about me keeping bed bugs out of the library, I would have saved my self hundreds in library fines and returned the darn book. I don't trust library books after this because while I did the right thing, it is up the library to take care of their books.
Anonymous wrote:I leave the library books in a hot car for a day. In the sun it gets up to sth like 140 deg, which should be enough to kill anything