With Proposed Glue Trap Ban, San Francisco Sides With the Pests
Glue traps are a cheap and effective pest control tool. Naturally, San Francisco is considering banning them.

The "abundance" discourse, sparked by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson's book of the same name, has directed a lot of attention to liberal America's failure to build.
Blue cities and blue states can't deliver projects on time and on budget, which is dragging down economic growth and sending people fleeing to red states that can.
As much truth as there is to that complaint, it ignores the other reason people hate progressive governance: the complete inability of politicians and bureaucrats to keep their noses out of individuals' private business.
Earlier this week, the San Francisco Chronicle reported on an in-the-works proposal from the city's Commission of Animal Control and Welfare to ban the sale, and potentially even the use, of glue traps.
Per the Chronicle's reporting, the commission—an advisory body that makes policy recommendations to the San Francisco government—is considering such a ban because of the allegedly cruel nature of glue traps.
Animals left in the traps can end up dying a slow death and will often hurt themselves trying to escape. Wildlife can be unintentionally caught in the traps. The live animals caught in glue traps can also leave behind urine and feces, which can pose a health hazard.
These criticisms are not new. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends against the use of glue traps because of their potential to spread disease. Rep. Ted Lieu (D–Calif.) introduced unsuccessful legislation criminalizing the sale and use of glue traps last year.
On purely utilitarian grounds, these criticisms of glue traps have to be balanced against their obvious benefit as a cheap and effective means of pest control.
Ever since we've moved inside, man has been locked in a never-ending struggle with various creepy, crawly pests of the Earth trying to follow us there.
Glue traps are an essential weapon in this war.
They block entry points into homes and businesses much more effectively than snap traps. They're a lot cheaper than poison, which also poses a hazard to human health. They really have no substitute when your pest problem is large bugs that come in from outside the home.
The Chronicle cites the advice of pest control experts who say that plugging holes that pests use to get inside homes is the most effective way of ending infestations.
As true as that might be, finding and blocking every entry point can be very difficult in older homes and multifamily buildings. Given how little San Francisco builds, much of the city's housing stock is made up of porous, aging buildings.
Renters may well also have a hard time convincing their landlords to do everything necessary to pest-proof their units.
For all these reasons and more, glue traps are indispensable.
They're, of course, not the best option for everyone. People who might not have the fortitude to quickly kill rodents they catch with glue traps shouldn't use them. If one has pets or small children, they can also cause more problems than they solve.
I, too, would recommend people in those situations avoid the use of glue traps. Freedom enables people to make decisions that best suit their own individual circumstances.
San Francisco's government attracts endless, well-deserved scorn for all the petty restrictions it imposes on its residents. People who want to drink out of a plastic straw or put a table and chair in front of their business risk any number of sanctions from city hall.
A glue trap ban might seem like another petty, risible government intrusion. In fact, it's much more serious.
There are few things more fundamental to the exercise of individual liberty than the right to defend the integrity of one's home.
As I wrote when Lieu first proposed a national glue trap ban, "So long as people have the option of humanely dispatching mice with poison, electrocution, or neck-snapping metal bars, I'd also like to have the right to use traps that work."
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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People who might not have the fortitude to quickly kill rodents they catch with glue traps shouldn't use them.
So, if you've been putting the rodent, in the trap, in the microwave for 5 min. at 50% power, stick with that. Don't give in to temptation to try and see what happens at 10 min. at 25% power.
I’ve been wanting to try my new air fryer out. Got any recipes?
A whole rat takes like 3 hours in the air fryer to cook. Not worth it. Deep fry is the way to cook rat.
Oh hell yes. Glue traps are awful. The animals struggle until they die a painful death. Some even tear their skin trying to escape. Removing animals from glue traps is a slow and stressful process. They should absolutely be banned. If you have pests, either put out a live trap (and checking it often) or put out a snap trap that does not cause the animal to suffer.
Sorry, but I don't care about the feelings of rats.
I do, Glue traps also snag birds.
Flying rats.
Inside my house? Why put glue traps outside? I have never heard of anyone doing that.
If I had pets or crawling infants, I wouldn't use either glue traps or snap traps. Duh.
Live traps? Those things breed fast enough to feed coyotes and snakes. There is no shortage of vermin and pests. No Endangered Pests and Vermin Act.
Don't put them outside. If you have a rat infestation you have to do what works. It's no fucking joke trying to get rid of rats. Glue traps are very effective. Rats are smart and glue traps apparently are harder for them to figure out.
Ignorant idjut.
I had a mice infestation problem for a month or so. One morning I found two separate glue traps which had each caught two mice. I do not recall a single glue trap victim which was still alive. Even if there were, I am short of sympathy for mice invading my home, and there is a simple recommended procedure for killing a live mouse: you fold the glue trap together and stomp on it.
I have a snap trap in my basement. It catches about one mouse a month. Half the time it does not kill the mouse, who drags it off somewhere 10-20 feet away and dies that slow painful starving death.
You're not setting the snap traps correctly. They kill instantly when used right.
They work fine. There's food in the right place, they're flat on the floor next to a wall.
Tell me, please, what is the proper method to use a snap trap?
In my experience, some are much more effective at killing quickly than others.
Yes, stick with good old Victor traps. Knock-offs don't work as well.
How about you care about what you want too and leave the rest of us the F'Alone.
So - I see you don't have pets, or children, or a family, or people who love you.
Hey, pests have due process rights!
Of course democrats identify with rats.
I own rats and they're cool. They don't vote, live in a cage, and that makes them even cooler.
Are any of them named Ben?
Maybe too many CA politicians were getting caught in glue traps. They are effective against pests.
Nothing better than making excuses to 'Gun' down 'the people' for insects feelings.
This is the problem with the faulty beliefs in this country. Everyone thinks government is just a joke and treats it like one until someone defies it and gets shot in the head with a law-enforcement gun.
Reason finally found a pest they don't want to coddle and support in a dozen ranting articles.
Could we set glue traps along the border?
Retards.
Stick it to the man!
Anther way to get rid of insects that find a way into one's home: I also get local lizards finding a way to sneak in. When one does, the bugs disappear. Perhaps some politician will feel a need -- if one has not done so, yet -- to forbid wildlife from entering one's home. If one does, I don't think that the lizards will choose to obey.
Just put up a pest free zone sign. It works for drugs and guns.
Glue traps are insanely inhumane, but there is a better alternative than poison or snap traps. Just look for no-see, no-touch electronic mouse traps that instantly kill the rodent. They may seem expensive, but they're re-usable. Just put a dollop of peanut butter inside, the rodent goes in, gets zapped and dies instantly, then you empty it into the garbage can. No blood, no mess. Then put the trap back out. You can find them on Amazon or any of the big-box stores.