A woman petrified of rats who had to spend nine days sleeping on her
sofa because one took up residence in her bedroom has blamed the council
for not coming to her aid sooner.
Mandy Swash was told by Bristol City Council to 'contain' the 'huge rat'
in one room and they would come and get rid of it as soon as they
could, but then told her that wouldn't be for another nine days.
So since the rat first ran into her bedroom through an open back door,
the 48-year-old slept on the sofa with only the clothes that she had in
the wash at the time.
The rat nipped into her bedroom last weekend, and Ms Swash called
Bristol City Council on Monday.
"They told me they wouldn't be able to come until the following
Wednesday. But then the man said that if I was to contain or trap it in
one room then they could come straight away.
I did that, I shut the bedroom door on it and called them back. A
different man said that I was lucky I was getting someone in a week and a half because sometimes people wait a month. I couldn't believe it," she added.
Attempts by friends and neighbors to get the rat out of the bedroom
failed, Ms Swash was too petrified to even open the bedroom door, and couldn't afford to hire a private pest control company to attend her
council flat in Horfield. "I'm a clean and tidy person, I'm not a
complainer at all because I'm grateful for what I've got and the support
I receive," she said. "But I became very unwell, it was the combination
of having no sleep, the smell coming out of the bedroom and the stress
of it all, it was just horrible.
I managed to grab two pillows out of the bedroom and ran. I'm diabetic
and disabled and my medication was in there but I wasn't able to go in
there and get it. If I opened the bedroom door I was worried it would
run into the rest of the flat."
A spokesperson for Bristol City Council explained that the council had
no obligation to help Ms Swash at all, and budget cuts had reduced the
number of staff working around the city dealing with rats.
"The council provides a pest control service for rats, mice and wasps
which is available to all residents in Bristol," she said.
"At busy times, particularly during the summer people might have to wait
up to four weeks before the pest control team is able to deal with the
problem.
The provision of pest control is not a statutory requirement and due to
budget cuts in recent years, the team has diminished in size.
This job was booked in for Wednesday 27 July with a follow up on
Wednesday 3 August," she added.
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