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About 20 dead mosquitoes encircle a dime. Amy Fraser set out the bugs to help illustrate how bad the infestation in Bandon has been this summer.
(Amy Fraser)
One afternoon in mid-June, Amy Fraser pulled up to her home in Bandon and saw her dog Lily outside. The dog's legs looked muddy, her normally white fur coated black.
Unlike many mosquitoes that are active at dusk and dawn, salt marsh mosquitoes bite during the day.
After hearing from angry constituents, Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., pressed U.S. Fish and Wildlife officials for a solution.
"They told me they were looking into the problem," he said in a news release in July. "Three months later and well into the tourist season, the mosquito problem has gotten worse."
He called for immediate relief and long-term action.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife launched a study with Oregon State University scientists to seek a mosquito management strategy but that effort will go on for a year. In the short term, the agency drained a few ponds in the refuge about two weeks ago. Residents report that the problem has lessened in recent days but not gone away.
A full solution has been entangled in red tape.
Fish and Wildlife doesn't deal with mosquitoes.
"We're not experts in mosquito abatement," said Megan Nagel, an agency spokeswoman. "There's no precedent for FWS to pay for and do the spraying."
Cash-strapped Coos County doesn't have a vector control agency, and any way, the refuge is under federal protection. The agency has to issue a permit before sprays can be used.
For that to happen, the feds said they needed Coos County to declare a health emergency.
Zogg said that would amount to an abuse of her power.
So on Thursday, she issued a health advisory, warning residents about the mosquito problem.
That got the federal wheels turning, said John Sweet, chairman of the Coos County Board of Commissioners.
"The U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife accepted that as a trigger to start their process towards permitting control measures," Sweet said Friday. "I'm hopeful that will happen next week."
Once the county has permits, it will have a new problem: How to pay for abatement. U.S. Fish and Wildlife has said it won't dish up the dollars, DeFazio said.
He's working on authorities in Washington D.C. and gone to the governor's office in Salem looking for help.
In the meantime, Bandon residents have to cope. They're just hoping they don't have to suffer through another explosive breeding cycle this summer.
-- Lynne Terry