623. Can New York City Win Its War on Rats?

AI transcript
0:00:03 (dramatic music)
0:00:05 – Sometimes we go to war with our neighbors
0:00:09 and sometimes those neighbors are rats.
0:00:12 – Okay, so we’re outside in New York City
0:00:17 looking at what we call active rodent signs or ARS.
0:00:19 – That is Bobby Corrigan.
0:00:24 He is an urban rodentologist, a former rodent researcher
0:00:26 who now works for the city of New York.
0:00:29 – Everyone thinks there’s a rat world below our feet
0:00:32 and to some degree that’s true,
0:00:36 but rats have a very specific subterranean environment
0:00:37 they need.
0:00:40 – It is a cold and windy afternoon in Lower Manhattan,
0:00:41 one of the oldest parts of the city.
0:00:44 Most of the humans have scurried back
0:00:46 to their offices from lunch.
0:00:48 At the intersection of Murray and Church streets,
0:00:50 Corrigan points to a sidewalk curb
0:00:53 that has collapsed in on itself.
0:00:56 – And that’s because the rats nearby
0:00:59 got below the sidewalk, tunneled into this area,
0:01:03 dug out the soil so they could have a burrow in this area,
0:01:04 and now there’s nothing supporting
0:01:06 these heavy concrete pieces.
0:01:09 It’s expensive to put in a new curb.
0:01:11 – And where did these burrowing rats come from?
0:01:16 – Just five feet away, we have the proverbial catch basin
0:01:19 that the stormwater drains down
0:01:23 and sometimes you’ll see rats come right out of these sewers.
0:01:26 Their home is in the sewer in the middle of the street.
0:01:28 – So you’ve got rats in the sewers,
0:01:31 rats burrowing under the sidewalks?
0:01:32 What else can we see?
0:01:34 – I want to show you something much more interesting.
0:01:36 You’ll notice along this building perimeter,
0:01:40 if you let your eyes just continue along,
0:01:43 you will see the gray concrete that’s light,
0:01:44 but next to the building,
0:01:49 you’ll see this dark charcoal stain that’s linear, right?
0:01:53 The stain goes around, hugs the building,
0:01:54 that is from rats.
0:01:57 And that’s what’s called a sebum stain.
0:02:01 Rodents like to hug walls so they feel safe and secure.
0:02:03 So that’s a very clear sign.
0:02:06 And if you came here between 10 and two tonight,
0:02:09 chances are good, you might see a rat running along there.
0:02:11 – Bobby Corrigan, as you can tell,
0:02:14 is something of an enthusiast when it comes to rats.
0:02:18 Although his enthusiasm is a strange blend
0:02:21 of appreciator and exterminator.
0:02:24 – I want to be humane to this animal ’cause I respect it.
0:02:27 But if you put a rat on my airplane
0:02:30 when I’m flying over the seas to Paris,
0:02:33 I want that rat dead in any way possible.
0:02:36 – He acknowledges that his work has its disadvantages.
0:02:38 – My wife, when we go out to eat,
0:02:40 before we step into a new restaurant,
0:02:42 she’ll say, “Is it safe?”
0:02:45 These days, I wish I didn’t know what I know.
0:02:50 – When you walk around these old city streets with Corrigan,
0:02:52 it’s easy to feel that it’s a rat’s world
0:02:54 and we’re just living in it.
0:02:57 As we learned last week in part one of this series,
0:03:00 New York and other cities are struggling
0:03:02 to control their rat populations.
0:03:04 The problem here got so bad
0:03:07 that the city declared war on rats.
0:03:08 Today on Freakin’omics Radio,
0:03:12 how do you execute such a war?
0:03:14 This one began with a summit.
0:03:18 – Wow, you realize we’re gonna get so many people
0:03:20 showing up to talk about rats.
0:03:21 (audience laughing)
0:03:24 – We will hear about some battle tactics.
0:03:26 An ounce of prevention’s worth a pound of cure.
0:03:29 – But what if it’s too late for prevention?
0:03:30 – New York City is not going to be
0:03:32 the first city to do this.
0:03:36 In fact, we are definitely going to be one of the last.
0:03:39 – We’ll hear about rat traps, rat poisons,
0:03:40 rat birth control.
0:03:42 – You know, birth control on paper
0:03:45 sounds pretty darn smart, right?
0:03:48 – And we will consider some other ideas.
0:03:50 – If prepared well, sure, I’m open.
0:03:52 Is someone actually serving Norway rat?
0:03:54 You want fries with that rat?
0:03:58 Part two of “Sympathy for the Rat” begins now.
0:04:01 (upbeat music)
0:04:12 – This is Freakin’omics Radio,
0:04:15 the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything
0:04:18 with your host, Stephen Dubner.
0:04:20 (upbeat music)
0:04:24 (audience cheering)
0:04:28 – Bobby Corrigan was born in Brooklyn,
0:04:31 but his family moved out to the suburbs of Long Island
0:04:32 when he was a kid.
0:04:34 This suited Bobby well.
0:04:36 – I guess I’ve always been a nature nerd.
0:04:38 I was the kid that was in the backyard
0:04:40 frying the ants with the magnifying glass.
0:04:42 Well, my brother played football.
0:04:46 And so I’ve always followed that path of creepy crawlers
0:04:49 and animals that were mysterious, but cool,
0:04:52 and things we didn’t know much about.
0:04:56 – Still, he didn’t plan on a life devoted to extermination.
0:04:58 – You know, it’s kind of crazy.
0:05:00 I came from a poor family.
0:05:01 I had no money to go to college,
0:05:04 so I answered an ad in the newspaper
0:05:06 for an exterminator in New York City.
0:05:08 And the new guy gets the good job, right?
0:05:12 So they put me in the sewers to hang rat poison.
0:05:15 I was frightened to death, to be honest with you.
0:05:17 – But that fear only boosted his interest
0:05:20 after working as an exterminator for a few years.
0:05:21 Corrigan did go to college
0:05:24 and he studied under a prominent entomologist
0:05:25 named Austin Fishman,
0:05:28 a pest control pioneer Corrigan calls him.
0:05:31 After that, Corrigan joined a graduate program
0:05:34 at Purdue University in their School of Agriculture.
0:05:36 – So when I got into grad school
0:05:40 and I signed on to studying rats as my species,
0:05:44 I moved into barns that were full of rats.
0:05:45 This was in Indiana.
0:05:47 And farmers would tell me, you know,
0:05:49 we’re always fighting rats.
0:05:51 So I asked if I could just move into their barn.
0:05:53 I would camp literally on the floor
0:05:55 inside these rat infested barns.
0:06:00 And over time, it’s a whole crazy experience
0:06:04 that you get to realize just how amazing these mammals are.
0:06:05 I have to say, looking back,
0:06:07 it was some of the most exciting years of my life.
0:06:09 I say that with all seriousness.
0:06:12 – Corrigan wound up getting a PhD from Purdue
0:06:14 in rodent pest management.
0:06:17 And he stayed out there for a while as a professor.
0:06:21 But eventually he felt the siren call of his hometown.
0:06:23 And he took a job with the New York City Department
0:06:25 of Health and Mental Hygiene.
0:06:28 In a way, this was a very rat-like behavior
0:06:32 as rats experience that same pull toward home.
0:06:34 – I use the term long rodent.
0:06:36 We all know what long COVID means.
0:06:37 Well, long rodent is, you know,
0:06:40 once the colonies have become comfortable
0:06:41 and had many, many families,
0:06:43 they’re laying down all kinds of pheromones
0:06:47 with their bodies, they’ll call any new rats into that area.
0:06:49 They also have memories of their own neighborhoods,
0:06:51 just like we do.
0:06:54 So those neighborhoods, once they become really infested,
0:06:55 there’s a reason for that.
0:06:58 The rats have found this works for us.
0:07:00 And that’s gonna continue and be passed on
0:07:02 to generation after generation.
0:07:05 – From the rat perspective, that sounds lovely.
0:07:07 From generation to generation,
0:07:09 the kind of thing that humans cherish.
0:07:11 But from the human perspective,
0:07:14 rats are rarely a thing to cherish.
0:07:19 Most people see them as disgusting pests at the very least.
0:07:21 Some people think of them as mass murderers,
0:07:24 although as we heard in part one of this series,
0:07:27 some scientists have recently exonerated rats
0:07:30 on the charge of having spread the black death in Europe.
0:07:34 Still, the rats’ reputation is terrible.
0:07:38 So if you are facing the kind of multi-generational infestation
0:07:41 that Bobby Corrigan was just talking about,
0:07:42 what do you do?
0:07:46 The most obvious tool, in many cases, is poison.
0:07:49 – Poisons, they’re called redenticides,
0:07:52 meaning to kill rodents, are a primary tool
0:07:55 that everybody uses to try to kill any rats
0:07:57 that they see around their property.
0:07:59 – But Corrigan says this obvious choice
0:08:01 is often the wrong choice.
0:08:04 – You would want to start first with not attracting the rats
0:08:08 with food or clutter in the first place.
0:08:10 Poisons are probably the last resort
0:08:14 that should be approached when it comes to rat control.
0:08:16 It’s an environmental thing.
0:08:20 – A good example of the environmental threat of rat poison
0:08:22 is the story of Flocko the Owl,
0:08:24 a beautiful Eurasian eagle owl
0:08:27 who lived in Central Park Zoo in New York City.
0:08:30 Flocko became a celebrity when in 2023,
0:08:32 he escaped from the zoo
0:08:35 thanks to a vandal cutting a hole in the cage,
0:08:38 and he took up residence in Manhattan.
0:08:39 There were concerns at first
0:08:43 that he wouldn’t be able to survive outside of captivity,
0:08:45 but he seemed to be thriving.
0:08:46 – When I read that, I said,
0:08:49 well, I am worried about this owl
0:08:51 because I know the owls of the parks,
0:08:54 they are preying upon rats and mice out in the parks
0:08:56 and may be feeding on these poisons.
0:08:58 – After nine months on the outside,
0:09:01 Flocko was killed when he flew into a building
0:09:03 on the Upper West Side.
0:09:05 A postmortem showed that he had debilitating levels
0:09:08 of rat poison in his system.
0:09:11 But it’s not just escaped zoo animals
0:09:13 who are endangered by rat poison.
0:09:16 Dogs are, children are.
0:09:17 Like Bobby Corrigan said,
0:09:21 poison should probably be a last resort, not a first.
0:09:24 And how does Corrigan feel about rat traps?
0:09:29 – Traps, if they’re applied by someone who’s experienced
0:09:31 and it really does take experience,
0:09:34 the rat’s a very wily mammal and it’s very smart.
0:09:37 It’s not as simple as going to the hardware store,
0:09:37 buying a rat trap,
0:09:39 putting it out with a glob of peanut butter
0:09:41 and saying, that’s it.
0:09:45 So traps can be useful when done by experienced people,
0:09:47 but we have to acknowledge
0:09:50 that many of them are simply inhumane,
0:09:52 especially glue traps.
0:09:55 If you ever sit and watch a rat or a mouse
0:09:59 struggling on glue, it’s not a pretty sight whatsoever.
0:10:01 – We talked in part one of this series
0:10:04 about the thin line between animals we love
0:10:05 and treat kindly
0:10:09 and the animals we consider pests and treat violently.
0:10:13 It is true that some people do keep rats as pets.
0:10:14 And of course we’ve used them for years
0:10:17 as research subjects in medicine, psychology,
0:10:18 even space travel.
0:10:23 But we mostly think of them as a thing to be eliminated.
0:10:26 Even though they are like us mammals
0:10:30 and not so different from the mammals we celebrate and love,
0:10:33 so does it make sense to torture a rat
0:10:35 when you wouldn’t torture a cat or a dog?
0:10:38 Another rat mitigation solution
0:10:41 that’s been gaining traction is birth control.
0:10:43 – So it has great optics.
0:10:45 We don’t have to use those bad poisons
0:10:47 and the traps that are inhumane.
0:10:50 So why not just quote, give them the pill?
0:10:53 But you have to get the birth control materials
0:10:57 to large groups of mammals and in cities,
0:10:59 we have what’s called open populations of rats.
0:11:02 That means you can have colonies living in sewers,
0:11:04 rats living in parks, rats living in basements,
0:11:07 rats living in subways.
0:11:11 How do you get the birth control to all these colonies?
0:11:13 Are you bailing out the ocean with a teaspoon,
0:11:15 I guess is the best way to put it.
0:11:17 – So how do you keep down the rat population
0:11:20 in a place like New York?
0:11:21 The unfortunate answer seems to be
0:11:24 that there is no one clear solution.
0:11:28 Part of the problem is that rat data is usually unreliable.
0:11:31 This is frustrating for someone like Bobby Corrigan.
0:11:36 We haven’t addressed this issue in 300 years.
0:11:40 We’ve looked at these rats as just kill them,
0:11:42 just put out poison, just trap them.
0:11:45 No science has gone into this,
0:11:49 but the compass is finally pointing in the right direction.
0:11:50 – And what makes Corrigan say this
0:11:53 that the compass is pointing in the right direction?
0:11:56 Well, last fall, New York City hosted
0:11:59 the first ever National Urban Rat Summit.
0:12:03 You know, the credit here goes to Cathy Karatee.
0:12:06 – Karatee is the new city-wide director of rodent mitigation,
0:12:08 also known as the rat czar.
0:12:10 – Within our first couple of weeks of being
0:12:14 in the position of rat czar, we met for coffee.
0:12:17 And Cathy said, what if we bring in old scientists
0:12:20 from around the US and even maybe around the world
0:12:22 to talk about this issue?
0:12:25 And from there, it took off.
0:12:28 (gentle music)
0:12:32 – Lake Bobby Corrigan, Cathy Karatee,
0:12:35 is both exterminator and appreciator.
0:12:36 She knows the animal well.
0:12:38 I asked her if she could explain
0:12:41 the secret of the rat’s success in New York.
0:12:44 – Yes, their fecundity is their superpower.
0:12:47 Rat’s gestation period is about 21 days.
0:12:50 You know, three weeks to a litter,
0:12:52 you can have eight to 12 pups in that litter,
0:12:54 and then the females in that litter
0:12:57 are ready to breed at about three months of age again.
0:13:01 So we just are talking exponential growth,
0:13:03 and that’s by design, evolutionary.
0:13:05 They want to produce as much young as possible
0:13:07 because they’re a prey species.
0:13:11 The average life expectancy of a New York City rat,
0:13:14 a wild rat, as we’d call it, is eight to 12 months.
0:13:17 If you take that same species in the laboratory setting,
0:13:18 it’s about three years.
0:13:21 It’s a tough life out there in the wild,
0:13:22 so the more offspring you produce,
0:13:25 the better change you have of passing those genes on.
0:13:27 – I spoke with Karate shortly before
0:13:29 the inaugural rat summit last fall.
0:13:31 I asked her for a preview.
0:13:33 – We’ve put together this summit
0:13:37 to bring together the leading academic minds in this space,
0:13:40 the researchers studying urban rats,
0:13:42 and then different municipal leaders.
0:13:46 So we have folks joining us from Boston, DC, Seattle.
0:13:48 Everyone’s grappling with this?
0:13:50 No city is like, you know what?
0:13:52 We’re okay with what’s going on.
0:13:54 – The day of the rat summit arrived,
0:13:57 Mayor Eric Adams helped set the stage.
0:14:00 He began by praising Kathy Karate.
0:14:01 – I am so happy.
0:14:06 I have a four-star general who is working on
0:14:07 finally winning the war on rats.
0:14:10 We will make an impact.
0:14:13 And if we do so, we’re going to improve the health
0:14:18 and the mental stability of everyday people in this city.
0:14:19 So thank you for being here.
0:14:22 Let’s be energetic, let’s share our ideas.
0:14:25 Let’s figure out how we unified against
0:14:28 what I consider to be public enemy number one,
0:14:29 Mickey and his crew.
0:14:31 (audience applauding)
0:14:33 – And then the presentations got underway.
0:14:35 Our friend Bobby Corrigan gave a talk
0:14:38 called Remote Rat Sensor Technology,
0:14:41 Public Health Canaries in the coal mine.
0:14:43 – We can leave these sensors in place.
0:14:47 They’re going to work 24/7, 365, no benefits are needed,
0:14:48 you know, we’re not going to pay them over time.
0:14:51 None of that, but they’re giving us data.
0:14:53 – A rat researcher named Kaylee Byers
0:14:56 gave a talk called More Than Pests,
0:14:59 Rats as a Public and Mental Health Issue.
0:15:01 Byers teaches at Simon Fraser University
0:15:02 in British Columbia, Canada.
0:15:05 She opened her talk by showing a global map
0:15:07 of the rat’s reach.
0:15:09 Only a very few places are spared,
0:15:11 Antarctica, for instance,
0:15:15 and a big rectangle in the middle of Canada.
0:15:17 – You might be looking at this rat map and saying,
0:15:21 oh, what’s going on over here, this little blank space?
0:15:24 That’s Alberta, the rat-free province of Canada.
0:15:28 We do actually have rats, there’s many fewer of them,
0:15:32 but Alberta has marketed itself as the rat-free province.
0:15:33 – And here’s a person responsible
0:15:35 for keeping Alberta rat-free.
0:15:39 – Karen Wickerson, I’m the rat and pest specialist
0:15:41 for the province of Alberta.
0:15:43 – Wickerson was not able to make the rat summit,
0:15:46 although she did visit New York not long after.
0:15:48 We spoke with her in a studio.
0:15:50 – So I’m in charge of overseeing the program,
0:15:53 which is Provincial Lied.
0:15:58 I coordinate response to rat reports, rat infestations,
0:16:01 if we have them.
0:16:05 I work with people who are part of the rat patrol
0:16:07 at the Alberta Saskatchewan border.
0:16:10 They check along the border twice a year,
0:16:13 and they report back to me if they do find rats at all.
0:16:17 Alberta is just over 250,000 square miles.
0:16:19 That’s roughly the same size as Texas,
0:16:22 where there are many rats.
0:16:24 But Alberta says it does not have
0:16:28 a single breeding population of rats.
0:16:31 Karen Wickerson gives some credit to the public.
0:16:33 – Albertans are very proud.
0:16:35 I’ve had people go to great lengths
0:16:37 to figure out how to report a rat sighting,
0:16:39 and they get ahold of me and they say,
0:16:42 “Oh, I know, I’m supposed to report this.
0:16:44 I want you to know.
0:16:46 I saw a rat at this location.”
0:16:49 – Wickerson told us that she gets about 500 reports
0:16:51 of rat sightings a year,
0:16:55 but that only around 30 of them are legitimate.
0:16:57 How can this be?
0:17:00 Apparently when rats are rare,
0:17:02 a lot of people don’t even know what a rat looks like.
0:17:05 – If you’ve lived in Alberta your whole life,
0:17:08 you probably can’t identify one when you see it.
0:17:10 I can talk about the reports we receive
0:17:14 of people misidentifying them as musk rats.
0:17:17 They’re a larger rodent, have a waddle, long tail.
0:17:19 We receive a lot of reports of them
0:17:21 where people think they are rats.
0:17:25 – So what does it take to be essentially rat-free?
0:17:29 Alberta has run a strict anti-rat program since the 1950s.
0:17:31 The Norway rat was migrating then
0:17:34 in great numbers from the eastern part of Canada,
0:17:38 and farmers out west saw the potential for crop damage.
0:17:40 – Because of the damage they could cause,
0:17:42 they declared them a pest.
0:17:45 Being a pest, an agricultural pest in Alberta,
0:17:48 means that every Albertan is required to control them.
0:17:52 – Among rat people, Alberta is famous.
0:17:55 The way Pine Valley is famous among golf people
0:17:58 as a remote and sanctified place,
0:18:00 almost too good for this world.
0:18:02 – People are desperate and they want to know
0:18:04 what our secret is.
0:18:06 I always say like, we’re at such an advantage
0:18:09 because the program started right when
0:18:11 rats arrived to our boundary.
0:18:14 We prevented them from spreading into the province
0:18:15 and establishing.
0:18:19 So for me to comment on populations now that do exist,
0:18:23 you know, it’s hard for me to really give advice.
0:18:27 I would say that public education is always critical.
0:18:28 It’s challenging.
0:18:31 I do really feel for people in other jurisdictions.
0:18:34 – So how did Karen Wickerson enjoy her visit
0:18:38 to the super ratty jurisdiction of New York?
0:18:41 – I found it fascinating because I don’t see rats
0:18:43 on the street in Alberta.
0:18:47 So my first night I was walking out for dinner
0:18:50 and I have to say I was delighted when I saw a rat
0:18:53 munching on a bag of garbage.
0:18:58 – As a New Yorker, I am of course proud
0:19:02 that we keep coming up with new ways to entertain visitors,
0:19:04 but we should talk about the garbage.
0:19:06 – We dump all this trash in our curbs
0:19:10 and we sit around and we wonder why we have a rat problem.
0:19:11 – That’s coming up after the break.
0:19:14 I’m Stephen Dubner and this is Freakin’omics Radio.
0:19:20 (dramatic music)
0:19:26 When we first set out to make this series on rats,
0:19:29 we were inspired by what you might call
0:19:32 a foundational text, a book called Rats,
0:19:35 Observations on the History and Habitat
0:19:40 of the City’s Most Unwanted Inhabitants by Robert Sullivan.
0:19:42 I remembered reading an excerpt of the book
0:19:43 in the New York Times magazine
0:19:46 when it was published in 2004.
0:19:49 And then recently, a dear old friend of mine died
0:19:51 and I inherited some of his books.
0:19:53 Rats was one of them.
0:19:55 My friend, Ivan, was the kind of reader
0:19:57 who likes to underline interesting passages
0:19:59 of a book as he goes.
0:20:01 When I sat down to read his copy of Rats,
0:20:05 I found that roughly half of it was underlined.
0:20:08 And that’s what I told Robert Sullivan when I called him up.
0:20:10 – What a lovely thing to hear.
0:20:14 So yeah, it’s tough to be known as a rat guy,
0:20:16 but then right after that,
0:20:18 it’s good to be known as a rat guy.
0:20:22 – I asked Sullivan to introduce himself for the recording.
0:20:25 – My name’s Robert Sullivan and I write things.
0:20:27 – And I asked for a bit more detail.
0:20:28 – My name is Robert Sullivan
0:20:31 and I write books and magazine articles
0:20:33 and I write about places
0:20:36 that maybe people haven’t looked at
0:20:38 or I try to look at places differently
0:20:41 from maybe how they’ve been looked at.
0:20:45 – So you have written a lot of articles, several books.
0:20:48 Are you still best known for Rats, do you think?
0:20:50 – The idea that I’m best known for anything
0:20:52 is an idea I struggle with.
0:20:54 – Hey, you won a Guggenheim.
0:20:55 – I did, it’s not clear.
0:20:58 They could have been thinking of another Robert Sullivan.
0:21:04 I asked Sullivan to explain how he had come to write about rats.
0:21:07 – The concrete reason was I was on a reporting job.
0:21:11 I was covering a whale hunt for the New York Times magazine.
0:21:16 I was out on a reservation, the McCall Nations Reservation,
0:21:19 out at the very tip of the United States of America,
0:21:22 the continental United States, the Pacific Northwest,
0:21:25 and people were there to protest with the hunting of whales.
0:21:26 – And this was a Native American tribe
0:21:29 that had kind of a grandfathered in license to hunt them?
0:21:32 – They had it in their treaty rights.
0:21:35 There were people on the reservation who believed
0:21:38 that maybe we shouldn’t hunt whales right now.
0:21:40 There are also people who thought they should.
0:21:42 There were also people who thought
0:21:44 that whether they should or they shouldn’t was a moot point
0:21:47 because it’s a matter of tribal sovereignty.
0:21:50 And this was an incredible thing to be witness
0:21:53 of this debate and this action.
0:21:55 While I was there, I met a bunch of people
0:21:58 who were working for animal rights groups.
0:22:00 And one of them said,
0:22:02 “I’m not gonna be here tomorrow for the protest.
0:22:04 I’ve got to go back to Seattle.
0:22:06 Got to go back to our offices.”
0:22:07 I asked, “Why?”
0:22:09 And they said, “Because we have pest control people coming.”
0:22:12 And I said, “Well, what are you doing?”
0:22:14 And they said, “We have rats.”
0:22:17 I said, “Are you gonna trap and release them or what?”
0:22:20 ‘Cause I just figured, and they said, “No, they’re rats.
0:22:23 We’re going to have the exterminator take care of them.”
0:22:28 It just suddenly dawned on me in my abstract pursuit
0:22:31 of where is the division between what we think of
0:22:34 as natural and not natural,
0:22:37 that this was a line in the philosophical sand.
0:22:44 – So that’s what led Robert Sullivan to write about rats,
0:22:47 but it is the depth of the reporting
0:22:50 and the thinking and writing that makes his book spectacular.
0:22:54 It is brash and clever and interesting on every page.
0:22:57 I can see why Ivan couldn’t stop underlining.
0:22:58 The book feels like a cross
0:23:02 between punk anthropology or rodentology, I guess,
0:23:04 but there is a lot of anthro in there,
0:23:07 and cheeky encyclopedia.
0:23:10 Rat control programs, Sullivan writes,
0:23:14 are like diets in that cities are always trying a new one.
0:23:18 In the city, rats and men live in conflict,
0:23:20 one side scurrying from the other
0:23:23 or destroying the other’s habitat,
0:23:25 an unending and brutish war.
0:23:28 Rat stories are war stories,
0:23:31 and they are told in conversation and on the news
0:23:35 in dispatches from the front that is all around us.
0:23:38 I asked Sullivan what he thought of New York mayor,
0:23:42 Eric Adams’ war on rats and the recent rat summit.
0:23:46 – Typically, I try to ignore what mayors say about rats.
0:23:48 – He was indicted not long after.
0:23:50 Do you think that was a coincidence or no?
0:23:53 Do you think the rats have the pull to make that happen?
0:23:56 I think that the history of rat control
0:23:59 in New York City and many cities is aligned
0:24:01 with the history of mayors wanting to get attention
0:24:04 for being great and taking care of things.
0:24:06 Just starting way back,
0:24:09 Mayor Lindsey gave out metal garbage cans.
0:24:12 Mayor Dinkins built housing,
0:24:17 very effective way to help with rat problems.
0:24:21 Mayor Giuliani took trash cans off the streets in Harlem.
0:24:23 It’s a kind of tributary, I guess,
0:24:25 of the broken windows theory that says that
0:24:28 if you take the trash cans off the street,
0:24:30 people won’t throw trash on the streets.
0:24:34 Mayor Bloomberg is the rat data guy.
0:24:37 He was all about where the data is for rats,
0:24:40 like where rat bite reports are,
0:24:42 which is a complicated statistic.
0:24:43 – Why?
0:24:46 – Because people who are getting bitten by rats
0:24:48 might not report them,
0:24:52 might not have the wherewithal or the, frankly, resources
0:24:54 to go about doing that.
0:24:57 And so Adams is gonna kill them
0:24:59 by drowning them in beer or whatever he does.
0:25:02 Like, it’s just brutal war on rats
0:25:04 and take no prisoner style.
0:25:09 – When Sullivan talks about Eric Adams
0:25:11 drowning rats in beer,
0:25:14 he is referring to an idea that Adams promoted in 2019
0:25:17 when he was borough president of Brooklyn.
0:25:21 This involved an Italian rat trap called an echo meal.
0:25:23 It is baited with nuts or seeds.
0:25:27 A rat upon entering drops through a trap door
0:25:31 into a vat filled with a green alcohol-based solution.
0:25:34 Say what you will about Eric Adams as an elected official.
0:25:36 He’s got a lot of problems at the moment,
0:25:37 and by the time you hear this,
0:25:39 he may have been shoved out of office,
0:25:43 but he could never be accused of flip-flopping on rats.
0:25:46 Shortly after he was elected mayor in 2022,
0:25:49 he signed into law a rat action plan.
0:25:51 It included four key components.
0:25:54 Rat-resistant trash containers,
0:25:56 more timely trash pickups,
0:25:58 the creation of rat mitigation zones,
0:26:02 and a crackdown on rats around construction sites.
0:26:05 Here’s what one city council member said at the time.
0:26:08 Today, we declare that rats will no longer be
0:26:12 the unofficial mascot of New York City.
0:26:13 This rat action plan, of course,
0:26:17 required a rat czar in the person of Kathy Karate,
0:26:19 and she explained that a major focus of the plan
0:26:22 is to cut down the rats’ food supply.
0:26:24 – What we’re effectively doing
0:26:26 is making their lives more stressful
0:26:29 and cutting off their superpower to breed.
0:26:32 There’s a whole 99-page report
0:26:34 about how we’re going to do that,
0:26:35 ’cause again, simple things are complex
0:26:38 when we talk about the density of New York
0:26:40 for a long time, New York City.
0:26:42 Before we were known for our black bags on the curb,
0:26:44 we were known for our steel trash cans on the curb,
0:26:47 as made famous by Oscar the Grouch.
0:26:50 ♪ Oh, I love trash ♪
0:26:51 ♪ Anything ♪
0:26:54 – So the can he sits in was ubiquitous to New York
0:26:55 before the plastic bag.
0:26:57 – If you have never visited New York City,
0:26:59 it may surprise you to learn that most trash
0:27:02 is simply left out for pickup on the sidewalk
0:27:04 in big plastic bags.
0:27:06 As Karate says, trash used to be put
0:27:08 in metal cans with lids.
0:27:11 During a sanitation strike in 1968,
0:27:15 those cans overflowed with tons of loose trash
0:27:20 and newly invented plastic bags came to the rescue.
0:27:23 Plastic was also quieter and much lighter,
0:27:26 which made the returning sanitation workers happy.
0:27:27 There was just one problem.
0:27:31 Rats had an easy time chewing through the plastic.
0:27:34 So what’s the new plan?
0:27:36 – We’re moving towards containers,
0:27:39 which means basically a garbage can with a secure lid.
0:27:41 – These new containers are also made of plastic,
0:27:44 but a much thicker grade than the flimsy bags.
0:27:48 – And as of November this year, 2024,
0:27:50 there’ll be different administrative code
0:27:54 and legislation in place that 70% of New York City waste
0:27:56 will be back in containers.
0:27:59 – And here’s the person who can tell us more about that.
0:28:01 – My name is Jessica Tish.
0:28:03 I am the New York City Sanitation Commissioner.
0:28:06 – That’s what Tish was when we spoke a few months ago.
0:28:09 She has since become Commissioner
0:28:11 of the New York City Police Department.
0:28:12 The previous one resigned
0:28:15 in the midst of a federal investigation.
0:28:17 The one before that resigned
0:28:19 after clashing with the mayor.
0:28:23 Like I said, the Adams administration has been a mess.
0:28:27 In any case, when Jessica Tish was running sanitation,
0:28:30 she understood just how important that job is.
0:28:34 – Sanitation is the essential service in any city,
0:28:37 but particularly in New York City.
0:28:41 Every day, we leave 44 million pounds of trash
0:28:43 out on our curbs.
0:28:47 And from my perspective as a lifelong New Yorker,
0:28:48 New York City hasn’t really changed
0:28:52 the way we manage that trash in decades.
0:28:55 For the past 50 years,
0:28:58 we have been leaving our trash out on our curbs
0:29:00 in black trash bags.
0:29:02 It looks gross.
0:29:05 In the summer, it smells gross.
0:29:09 One third of the material in those black bags is human food.
0:29:13 And unfortunately, human food is also rat food.
0:29:15 So we dump all this trash in our curbs
0:29:18 and we sit around and we wonder why we have a rat problem.
0:29:21 The single biggest swing that you can take
0:29:24 at the rat problem in New York City
0:29:27 is getting the trash bags off of the streets.
0:29:31 And that is what we have set out to do.
0:29:32 We don’t want the bags on the streets.
0:29:36 Instead, we want our trash in containers.
0:29:39 Most cities around the world
0:29:43 have been containerizing their trash for decades.
0:29:47 New York City is not going to be the first city to do this.
0:29:51 In fact, we are definitely going to be one of the last.
0:29:55 This is long overdue and it works everywhere else.
0:29:58 – Okay, so let’s get into the details.
0:30:00 Smaller buildings and single family homes
0:30:02 will have their own bins.
0:30:05 – We have developed, I would say, a gorgeous new,
0:30:09 standardized New York City official wheelie bin.
0:30:11 A lot of people laugh at us
0:30:13 because they think we sound like
0:30:16 we have discovered the wheelie bin.
0:30:18 We acknowledge that we have not.
0:30:21 Nonetheless, we have a standardized wheelie bin now
0:30:24 in New York City that all one to nine unit residential buildings
0:30:26 will be required to use.
0:30:28 – And how about bigger buildings?
0:30:29 – You would need in those buildings
0:30:31 too many of those wheelie bins.
0:30:33 It would become unwieldy.
0:30:36 So instead, for those large buildings,
0:30:41 we are going to put large fixed on-street containers.
0:30:45 These containers are about four cubic yards.
0:30:47 The bins do take up parking spaces,
0:30:50 but because they are being used
0:30:54 just for the large buildings of 30 units or more,
0:30:58 it’s not as big a hit to parking citywide.
0:31:01 As you may otherwise expect,
0:31:04 we estimate that it’s about 3% citywide.
0:31:07 – These new large on-street containers
0:31:10 will also require new garbage trucks.
0:31:12 – Sanitation workers cannot lift
0:31:14 these four cubic yard containers.
0:31:16 In the United States,
0:31:20 we didn’t have a large automated side loading truck
0:31:22 that worked in cities.
0:31:26 And so we developed that truck
0:31:29 with some vendors who do work in Europe.
0:31:32 And we rolled out the first
0:31:35 of these automated side loading trucks
0:31:39 that are gonna hoist these four cubic yard containers.
0:31:42 – If you’ve ever seen garbage trucks in Germany
0:31:46 or Singapore or, well, a lot of places,
0:31:48 the site of a New York City garbage truck
0:31:52 extending its claws to lift and dump a big trash can
0:31:55 may not impress you, but here it’s a big deal.
0:31:57 The program is currently being piloted
0:32:00 in a few uptown neighborhoods, including Harlem.
0:32:03 When someone posted a video of the truck in action
0:32:06 on social media, the sanitation department
0:32:08 retweeted the video with a message.
0:32:10 This was our moon landing.
0:32:14 Now, before we go making fun of New York City
0:32:17 for what some people might consider an overstatement,
0:32:19 let’s consider this.
0:32:22 Trash tech is one thing to get right.
0:32:24 Trash behavior is another.
0:32:27 Jessica Tisch realizes this.
0:32:28 – Change is hard.
0:32:30 I think generally having worked my whole career
0:32:33 in city government, I see that.
0:32:38 It’s a change that affects all 3.5 million residences
0:32:42 in New York City, all 8.3 million New Yorkers,
0:32:44 and all 200,000 businesses.
0:32:47 Taking out your trash is something you do every day.
0:32:49 So now, by containerizing it,
0:32:51 we’re asking everyone in the city
0:32:53 to change the way they do something.
0:32:58 – And that’s not the only behavior change to worry about.
0:33:00 Back on the street with Bobby Corrigan,
0:33:03 we still haven’t seen a rat, but on a nearby park bench,
0:33:07 we do come across signs of recent human activity,
0:33:09 a discarded wrapper from a raisin cake.
0:33:13 – This is classic right here.
0:33:14 Someone just came recently.
0:33:17 They sat down to have their little snack.
0:33:20 Human beings, I don’t know that what I’ve read
0:33:23 is 20 to 25% of us as a species,
0:33:24 we do that behavior.
0:33:28 That 20 to 25% is all the rats need.
0:33:30 Probably it’s triple what they need.
0:33:33 The rats that live here will come out and say,
0:33:35 “Well, how much was left in that wrapper?”
0:33:38 And the answer is enough for them tonight.
0:33:41 We can’t have this behavior, but we can’t get away from it.
0:33:45 No matter what postage you put up, please don’t litter.
0:33:46 Please do your trash right.
0:33:50 Human beings, some don’t care, leave me alone.
0:33:51 – Further down the street,
0:33:54 we come across a bank of the new trash containers
0:33:55 for big buildings.
0:33:57 Corrigan is impressed.
0:34:00 – So this is a very smart thing for a city to do,
0:34:04 is what we see here with this new bank of containerization
0:34:07 that instead of leaving bags on a curb,
0:34:09 they get put into a bank.
0:34:13 The key thing is to make sure that if a car hits this
0:34:17 or dents it or breaks it, that’s gonna be expensive, right?
0:34:20 So everything’s gonna have its pluses and minuses.
0:34:23 Actually, everything about New York’s new trash plan
0:34:24 is expensive.
0:34:28 The new bins, the new trucks, the new vigilance.
0:34:29 – Long-term sustainability,
0:34:32 this is gonna save hundreds of millions of dollars
0:34:33 for a city.
0:34:35 This is the most environmentally smart thing you could do,
0:34:37 the most humane thing you could do.
0:34:41 If the rats wanna move on to some other place, go for it.
0:34:46 – That’s a nice thought, in theory at least,
0:34:48 that New York City’s rats will just move on
0:34:52 to some other place if their food supply is constrained.
0:34:54 But first, there needs to be evidence
0:34:58 that the new containerization plan is actually working.
0:34:59 The other day, walking down the street,
0:35:02 I came across a few of the new wheelie bins
0:35:04 that Jessica Tish is so excited about.
0:35:07 They were lying on their sides,
0:35:10 the lids broken off the hinges.
0:35:13 And if I were a rat, I would be excited.
0:35:14 What do we have here?
0:35:19 Shake Shack, Luke’s Lobster, maybe even per se?
0:35:22 There have also been reports of rats chewing through
0:35:26 these supposedly rat-proof trash bins.
0:35:27 In a recent interview,
0:35:30 the president of New York’s Sanitation Workers Union
0:35:33 said things that work throughout the country
0:35:35 don’t work in New York.
0:35:39 New York is New York, it’s its own thing.
0:35:43 Now, given his position, he may be sending a message
0:35:46 because the more you automate trash pickup,
0:35:50 the fewer jobs there will be for sanitation workers.
0:35:51 Coming up after the break,
0:35:55 is a rat-free city even possible?
0:35:56 It’s clearly possible that you can have
0:36:00 an urban area without rats, but they do love it there.
0:36:02 I’m Stephen Dovner, this is Free Economics Radio.
0:36:03 We’ll be right back.
0:36:06 (dramatic music)
0:36:15 Before the break, we heard New York City rat czar
0:36:19 Kathy Karate say that by the end of 2024,
0:36:22 some 70% of the city’s trash was no longer
0:36:24 being placed in flimsy plastic bags,
0:36:27 but rather in sturdy plastic bins.
0:36:30 – The goal is 100%.
0:36:32 – What’s the timeline for that?
0:36:34 We’re waiting to kind of play out these pilots
0:36:35 and see what the feedback is,
0:36:38 what’s the best technology that works.
0:36:40 Rats do not care about jurisdiction,
0:36:43 so we need to think about how we do this work
0:36:45 as a whole-of-city approach.
0:36:48 – That whole-of-city approach will still include
0:36:52 some poisons or treatments, as Karate calls them.
0:36:54 – Some of our, quote, more sexy treatments,
0:36:57 rat ice is one of them, that is dry ice,
0:37:00 it off gases carbon dioxide,
0:37:04 and that asphyxiates the rats right in their burrows.
0:37:06 We also use a technology called BurrowRx,
0:37:10 similar idea, it off gases carbon monoxide.
0:37:12 The rats asphyxiate in their burrow,
0:37:14 and a new technology that’s come out
0:37:15 in the last couple years is a canister
0:37:19 of carbon dioxide, same application.
0:37:21 The difference with that is we can measure
0:37:23 how much gas is flowing out of the tank.
0:37:26 We can actually use that in closer proximity to buildings,
0:37:29 which is really important in a dense city like New York.
0:37:31 – And how about the rat birth control?
0:37:33 We discussed earlier with Bobby Corrigan.
0:37:36 – Most of the birth control contraceptive
0:37:39 that’s on the market for rats requires a constant feed,
0:37:42 meaning they have to feed on it over and over again,
0:37:46 and if we have food competition, that becomes a challenge.
0:37:49 – So the mayor who appointed you, Eric Adams,
0:37:52 this administration is turning out,
0:37:54 especially in recent weeks as we speak,
0:37:56 to be one of the most problematic,
0:37:58 potentially corrupt administrations recently.
0:38:01 All sorts of investigations, seizures of cell phones,
0:38:04 the resignation of the police chief and so on.
0:38:08 What’s it like to be representing a city agency
0:38:12 like you are now with all that storm going on around?
0:38:14 I’m just curious from the personal perspective
0:38:17 of how hard it makes your job.
0:38:18 – You know, we have a job to do,
0:38:22 and I come to work every day committed to doing that.
0:38:26 The immense responsibility to do this well
0:38:27 for the city that I love,
0:38:29 for all the people who live in this city
0:38:32 and feel such a heavy impact from that, that’s the focus.
0:38:34 – I could also see that because of your job
0:38:37 and because of how much people care about rats.
0:38:39 I could imagine if you do this well,
0:38:41 that you are a mayoral material.
0:38:42 Is that an ambition?
0:38:45 – No, I’m just focusing on serving the public.
0:38:48 I was out twice this week, once in Brooklyn,
0:38:50 once in downtown Manhattan,
0:38:52 walking with groups talking about rats.
0:38:55 I’ve held folks hands as they’re tearing up
0:38:57 about rats that are in their homes.
0:38:58 And then on the other side, you know,
0:39:01 folks who are inventing their own devices
0:39:03 to keep rats out of their property.
0:39:04 That’s what I love.
0:39:06 I love the city, I love our ingenuity,
0:39:09 our human ingenuity and our rat ingenuity.
0:39:11 And that’s what keeps me fired up about this work.
0:39:18 – So how are Karate and her colleagues performing
0:39:21 in the early days of this war on rats?
0:39:24 As she told us in part one,
0:39:27 the science of rat measurement is not very sophisticated.
0:39:29 There is no reliable rat headcount.
0:39:33 So the metrics she uses are a bit removed.
0:39:36 Rat complaints called into the city’s 311 line,
0:39:41 for instance, and rat sightings in the new mitigation zones.
0:39:45 Those numbers are down, but much more data is needed.
0:39:49 And there is a potential countervailing force.
0:39:52 A new research paper by a large team of biologists
0:39:56 and pest control experts argues that climate change
0:39:58 is contributing to the rise of the rat population
0:40:00 in New York and other big cities.
0:40:05 So maybe the rat will remain our unofficial mascot.
0:40:07 – It’s clearly possible that you can have
0:40:10 an urban area without rats, but they do love it there.
0:40:13 – That is the Harvard economist Ed Glazer.
0:40:15 We heard from him in part one of this series as well.
0:40:20 He is an expert in and huge fan of cities.
0:40:22 And he grew up in Manhattan.
0:40:26 I asked Glazer what he thinks of the city’s rat action plan.
0:40:28 – Impacting the food supplies seems sensible,
0:40:32 though that requires New Yorkers to be very attentive
0:40:33 about their trash, which is not something
0:40:35 I remember all New Yorkers being,
0:40:37 but perhaps that can be managed.
0:40:39 – I don’t know how much time you’ve been spending
0:40:42 in New York lately, but there has been a wholesale change,
0:40:47 which is the conversion from plastic bags of trash
0:40:49 that you just throw out onto the sidewalk
0:40:50 and wait for sanitation to come pick up,
0:40:53 which plainly doesn’t seem very rat-proof.
0:40:56 In fact, it’s not at all, to a requirement
0:40:59 that trash be contained in plastic bins with a top.
0:41:03 It seems pretty darn sensible and indeed easy.
0:41:04 – I agree with that.
0:41:05 That sounds perfectly reasonable,
0:41:07 although you’re still depending upon the New Yorker
0:41:09 actively like shutting the plastic bin
0:41:11 and keeping it effectively closed.
0:41:12 – Now, what about you, Ed?
0:41:15 If you were rat czar, in addition to changing the way
0:41:18 food is disposed of, what other solutions
0:41:19 might you think about?
0:41:20 – Well, I would of course start
0:41:22 with something like measurement.
0:41:24 One article I saw was that Hong Kong seems
0:41:26 to be doing a lot with heat-vision things,
0:41:29 so they’re looking at the rats moving around at night.
0:41:30 I imagine you could do that
0:41:32 with some combination of drones and satellite
0:41:34 in a way that would give you an effective idea
0:41:36 of where the rat hotspots are.
0:41:38 – Why would measurement be important for you?
0:41:39 – Because I want to know
0:41:40 whether whatever I’m doing is working.
0:41:41 These things might be right,
0:41:43 but without measurement, who knows?
0:41:46 And I think in everything where there’s a problem
0:41:48 and you don’t feel like you’ve seen a solution
0:41:50 that’s been tried 50 times and it always works,
0:41:53 the first thing is to start with the humility to learn.
0:41:56 Trash cancel, let’s see if the rat density
0:41:58 goes down sufficiently in this region.
0:42:00 Presumably, this should be compared
0:42:01 with the traditional poisoning method.
0:42:02 – As far as we can tell,
0:42:06 there’s not really been any kind of decent rat census.
0:42:07 Why do you think that is?
0:42:09 Is it that hard?
0:42:10 – I think it’s pretty hard,
0:42:12 because a lot of them are indoors.
0:42:14 Even if you could have drones full-time
0:42:17 on every alleyway in the city at night,
0:42:18 that’s not gonna give you a full measure.
0:42:21 And you don’t even know if you’re seeing a rat at 1 a.m.
0:42:22 and a rat at 3 a.m.
0:42:23 Are these the same rats or not?
0:42:24 Are you actually gonna know that?
0:42:26 – You know, there was one solution
0:42:27 we didn’t touch on, one potential solution,
0:42:28 which has been tried before,
0:42:31 I believe in Egyptian cities in the old days use this,
0:42:33 which is just armies of cats.
0:42:34 Do you like that idea?
0:42:37 – So Sullivan claims that cats can’t take down
0:42:41 a fully grown rat, in which case you need terriers.
0:42:42 Having enough terriers to take on,
0:42:45 if you thought, let’s say we were at 2 million rats
0:42:47 in New York, that’s a lot of terriers.
0:42:48 And it’s not like dogs
0:42:50 don’t potentially carry diseases as well.
0:42:52 I’m always worried about introducing large numbers
0:42:55 of some other species to get rid of one species.
0:42:57 One thing we haven’t talked about is the eating of rats.
0:43:00 There’s at least some tradition in parts of China
0:43:02 for eating rats.
0:43:04 That strikes me as being an enormously sensible thing,
0:43:07 somewhat similar to the East Asian practice
0:43:08 of selling night soil.
0:43:12 So both Chinese and Japanese cities engaged
0:43:15 in the practice of basically selling their human excrement
0:43:17 to farmers in nearby areas.
0:43:19 And that created a very virtuous circle
0:43:21 where the farmers had better land
0:43:23 and the excrement got removed.
0:43:25 Dealing with the prompt by turning it into something
0:43:28 that’s desirable, like food, that seems kind of good.
0:43:29 Now most of the time in the West,
0:43:31 we haven’t been able to stomach it,
0:43:33 but that strikes me as a thing to potentially think about.
0:43:37 – Yeah, I read now the rats that are currently eaten
0:43:39 in China are often the bamboo rat,
0:43:42 says they’re specifically bred for consumption,
0:43:45 an estimated 66 million raised annually in China.
0:43:48 You don’t happen to know how a bamboo rat tastes
0:43:50 versus a Norway rat, do you?
0:43:51 – I do not know.
0:43:53 I have never eaten either kinds of rat,
0:43:55 but I would happily eat a bamboo rat in Fujian
0:43:56 if I were there.
0:43:59 – What about eating a Norway rat in New York,
0:44:01 if prepared well?
0:44:03 – If prepared well, sure, I’m open.
0:44:05 Is someone actually serving Norway rat?
0:44:09 – We did look around to see if anyone
0:44:10 in New York is serving rat.
0:44:13 We checked in with a restaurant where for another episode,
0:44:16 I once ate a bunch of insects, which were delicious,
0:44:18 but they had shut down.
0:44:22 We could not find rat on a single restaurant menu
0:44:23 in New York City.
0:44:25 We also wrote to some private chefs.
0:44:28 I figured they get unusual requests all the time,
0:44:30 but no luck there either.
0:44:32 Here’s how one chef replied.
0:44:35 Unfortunately, I am not able to source this for you.
0:44:36 However, I would be happy to cook for you
0:44:38 and your guests a beautifully constructed
0:44:40 dinner using squab.
0:44:43 We passed on that, squab is too easy.
0:44:48 – I have eaten rat, but I’m gonna tell you that I cheated.
0:44:50 – That again is Bobby Corrigan,
0:44:52 the urban rodentologist.
0:44:55 We’re still huddled with him outside in an alleyway.
0:44:58 – And the way I cheated is I have a friend
0:45:02 who works in a laboratory studying drugs and pharmaceuticals
0:45:04 and they use it on rats.
0:45:06 So I just said, can you bring me a rat?
0:45:10 So I ate a laboratory rat, but it’s the same species.
0:45:12 It’s the same muscle tissue, it’s the same everything.
0:45:15 So technically, did I eat rat?
0:45:16 Yes.
0:45:17 Did I eat nori rat?
0:45:18 Yes.
0:45:20 But did I eat wild nori rat off the streets
0:45:22 that may have come out of a sewer?
0:45:24 I would be very dumb to do that.
0:45:29 It’s full of internal worms, viral, you know, it’s disgusting.
0:45:32 I would not, you’d be dumb to do such a thing.
0:45:34 – Our next question for Corrigan was,
0:45:36 well, you know the next question.
0:45:38 Did his rat taste like chicken?
0:45:39 – Yes.
0:45:42 But here’s the thing, all man with muscle tissue, right?
0:45:44 It’s not that different.
0:45:47 – Standing in the cold with Corrigan today,
0:45:48 we aren’t hoping to eat rats,
0:45:50 we’re still just trying to spot one.
0:45:54 So far on this tour, we have seen plenty of ARS,
0:45:57 active rodent signs, but no active rodents.
0:46:00 Corrigan still has faith.
0:46:03 – I would put it at about 50, 50 that we’re gonna see
0:46:05 at least a couple of rats.
0:46:08 – We head over to a small park in Tribeca.
0:46:12 Rats love parks because the noy rat
0:46:14 is actually from Mongolia.
0:46:18 And in Mongolia, their life was to burrow into the soil
0:46:19 of the fields of Mongolia.
0:46:22 So their brain says, get into the earth, right?
0:46:25 Geotropic positive, get towards the earth.
0:46:27 Squirrels are geotropic, negative,
0:46:29 climb trees away from the earth.
0:46:33 So it’s a situation where parks, if the soil is healthy,
0:46:37 which it has to be for a park to keep the plants growing,
0:46:39 the rats get down, they’ll dig a hole,
0:46:42 you’ll see a hole probably, we’ll find one here shortly.
0:46:44 – We do find a hole and then another,
0:46:48 then four more, six burrow holes in one small area
0:46:50 of one small park.
0:46:53 – Rodents are really great examples of work hard
0:46:55 and you’ll be successful, right?
0:46:58 So these animals, they’re constantly digging in soil,
0:47:02 constantly constructing burrows, constantly seeking food.
0:47:03 You know, they get it done.
0:47:06 And so when people say it’s so hard to get rid of rats,
0:47:09 it’s like, that’s right, because you’re up against
0:47:12 a hard-working, intelligent, small rodent
0:47:13 that we don’t appreciate enough.
0:47:16 I’m constantly thinking, you know,
0:47:20 we could actually do things like rats a little bit more
0:47:23 as crazy as it sounds, and our species,
0:47:26 Homo sapiens, would be better for it.
0:47:29 – It’s late afternoon by now, starting to get dark,
0:47:32 and we give up without having spotted a rat.
0:47:35 Does this mean New York City’s rat problem is getting better?
0:47:37 – Maybe, but maybe not.
0:47:40 The Norway rat is primarily nocturnal.
0:47:43 – When this city goes quiet, that’s rat time.
0:47:46 It’s like when you’re inside buildings
0:47:49 and you’re in the walls, how do they time their time
0:47:51 to come out when the plumbing stops?
0:47:54 So when people get ready for bed and they brush their teeth
0:47:57 and they use the showers, and then all of that stops
0:47:59 in the building, that’s their time.
0:48:02 When it starts up again in the morning, it’s back to bed.
0:48:04 – It does make you wonder.
0:48:06 Just how much of our war on rats
0:48:10 is a war against some part of ourselves.
0:48:12 – Animal behaviorists will say, you know,
0:48:15 when we do study rat colonies, we’re studying ourselves.
0:48:16 It’s very true.
0:48:21 When you put rats under stress, they get aggressive.
0:48:23 We get aggressive under stress.
0:48:26 What causes people to, you know, be happy, be sad,
0:48:30 be anxious, all of those things play out in the rats as well.
0:48:36 – So, should we be leaning into our shared experience?
0:48:40 Coming up next time in the third and final episode
0:48:42 of “Sympathy for the Rat,”
0:48:45 we will hear about rats as pets.
0:48:48 – If you wanna love them, you have to know about them.
0:48:51 – Rats as research subjects.
0:48:54 – In my experience, rats are better
0:48:56 for self-administration of drugs.
0:48:59 – And rats as movie stars.
0:49:01 Can I just say Ratatouille is an idea?
0:49:03 As a story, it’s an allegory.
0:49:05 – That’s next time on the show.
0:49:07 Until then, take care of yourself.
0:49:09 And if you can, someone else to.
0:49:12 Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
0:49:16 You can find our entire archive on any podcast app,
0:49:18 also at Freakonomics.com,
0:49:20 where we publish transcripts and show notes.
0:49:22 This series is being produced by Zach Lipinski
0:49:25 with help from Dalvin Abouaji.
0:49:27 We had recording help this week
0:49:29 from me, Vian, and Digital Island Studios.
0:49:31 The Freakonomics Radio network staff
0:49:33 also includes Alina Cullman, Augusta Chapman,
0:49:36 Eleanor Osborn, Ellen Frankman, Elsa Hernandez,
0:49:38 Gabriel Roth, Greg Rippon, Jasmine Klinger,
0:49:41 Jeremy Johnston, John Schnarras, Morgan Levy,
0:49:43 Neil Coruth, Sarah Lilly, and Theo Jacobs.
0:49:46 Our theme song is “Mr. Fortune” by the Hitchhikers
0:49:49 and our composer is “Louise Guerra.”
0:49:51 As always, thanks for listening.
0:49:59 I haven’t read the Freud “Ratman” stuff.
0:50:01 I’ve put it off all these years
0:50:03 because, you know, I can only take so much therapy
0:50:06 and frankly, therapists can only take so much of me.
0:50:13 The Freakonomics Radio Network,
0:50:15 the hidden side of everything.
0:50:19 Stitcher.
0:50:21 you
0:50:23 you

Even with a new rat czar, an arsenal of poisons, and a fleet of new garbage trucks, it won’t be easy — because, at root, the enemy is us. (Part two of a three-part series, “Sympathy for the Rat.”)

 

  • SOURCES:
    • Kathy Corradi, director of rodent mitigation for New York City.
    • Robert Corrigan, urban rodentologist and pest consultant for New York City.
    • Ed Glaeser, professor of economics at Harvard University.
    • Robert Sullivan, author of Rats: Observations on the History and Habitat of the City’s Most Unwanted Inhabitant.
    • Jessica Tisch, New York City police commissioner.

 

 

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