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Pest Control Technology Magazine, March 2021

By Anne Nagro

BED BUG MINISTRY

A good bed bug service doesn’t come cheap. It’s time-consuming, labor-intensive work that often requires follow-up visits. Services that offer a guarantee may cost even more.

According to the PCT 2020 State of the Bed Bug Control Market survey, which was sponsored by Bayer and compiled by Readex Research, a privately held research firm in Stillwater, Minn., the average cost for a typical residential bed bug treatment was $892. Prices of course can be higher. In the PCT survey, 43 percent of pest management professionals said the price of bed bug services increased in the past three years in their markets.

So it’s no surprise that the people who need bed bug control the most often can’t afford it.

TAKING ACTION. This motivated Brian Metzger to step up. Metzger has owned rental properties in Salina, Kan., for more than 20 years. A “very hands-on landlord,” he learned all kinds of trades, from laying carpet to do-it-yourself pest control.

“Naturally I learned an awful lot over the years about roaches, fleas and termites and then I started having to deal with bed bugs in my own properties. That’s a whole different animal right there,” said Metzger.

He began researching the pest’s biology, treatment protocols and products. “I became obsessed with learning everything that I possibly could about bed bugs,” he said.

It wasn’t until he learned about silica desiccant dust and a bio-pesticide that uses fungal spores to control the pests that he had his a-ha moment: A treatment program using these two products could control bed bugs at his own properities, as well as help his entire community.

At the time, the community needed help: The pests were spreading in the library, hotels and residences. “I got pretty sick and tired of basically Salina, Kan., being called the bed bug capital of central Kansas,” he said.

So, he earned his certification and pest control license in late 2017 and started GP Home Defense in January 2018.

“It wasn’t a business idea; it was a personal mission,” he said of this decision. He even turned over his property management work to his son “so I could focus on being a vampire slayer.”

A FOUNDATION IS BORN. “I went into this in large part with a desire to help serve the underserved. People couldn’t afford the $3,500 treatment that they were being quoted by other companies,” recalled Metzger.

But even with little overhead and the ability to charge much less, he found some people still couldn’t afford bed bug treatments.

As such, he began cultivating relationships with area social service agencies to try to get people help. Some agencies can provide assistance if people fit specific criteria, like having children under a certain age or if they’re a single parent. Metzger is now connecting those dots between agencies to get people help.

He also started a non-profit organization called Gopherwood Community Foundation.

Metzger’s property rental company is called Gopherwood Properties, which the GP in the name of his pest control company references. Gopherwood comes from the Bible’s Book of Genesis (6:14), where God tells Noah to build the ark of gopher wood. “When I started buying and remodeling rental properties that’s what I felt like I was doing; building an ark board by board,” he said.

Initially, the foundation focused on creating personal protective equipment like masks to help protect the community from COVID-19. “Now that supplies of PPE are catching up, I’m going to steer that foundation towards helping people with infestation issues,” said Metzger.

He plans to solicit donations and apply for grants to provide pest control services to the people who don’t meet social service agency criteria and who fall through the cracks as a result.

Besides bed bug control, he plans to help people with cockroach and other pest issues. “I’ll need to network with other companies as well because if somebody has a serious rodent infestation, I’d like to be able to help with that but I don’t do rodents,” he said.

SUPERHERO WITH HEART. In the meantime, Metzger continues to help those who need him.

He said it’s not uncommon for people to say, “I don’t even know why I called you because I can’t afford to do this,” while bugs are crawling the walls and ceiling. Metzger learns about their situation and asks them to contact people at the social service agencies, telling clients, “Have them get ahold of me and we’ll see what we can get done.”

“That makes me feel like a superhero going to work when I can help those people,” said Metzger.

These jobs aren’t for every pest control company since they’re often difficult to service. It takes a special person to care about those less fortunate than they are. But for Metzger, “That’s kind of where my heart’s been,” he said.

UPDATE- Trying to run the business AND the Foundation became too overwhelming, and the Gopherwood Community Foundation is no longer active. I still actively work with any social service agency, charity, church, or any other entity that is willing to help in this mission. -Brian

Pest Control Technology Magazine, June 2020

PCO Metzger Shifts Focus to Mask-Making
Brian Metzger, owner of GP Home Defense, Salina, Kan., is taking a break from pest control to make and distribute masks in his community.
June, 2020

 Brad Harbison


SALINA, Kan. — Brian Metzger, owner of GP Home Defense, Salina, Kan., has shifted his focus from controlling pests to helping keep others safe by making face masks.
Metzger, who founded GP Home Defense in 2018, said March was off to a great start for him, but as COVID-19 turned into a pandemic and began impacting his community, he decided it was time “to put on the brakes.” So, he turned to mask-making and soon established the Gopherwood Community Foundation, a non-profit organization that makes and distributes (free of cost) personal protective equipment (PPE).
I have underlying health issues that make me one of those high-risk people,” Metzger said. “I figured I could sit out a couple months and survive, and if someone really needed me, I’d suit up and be there.  I was reading about the many facilities that couldn’t get PPE, and I started researching mask guidelines, kind of the way I did with bed bugs.”
Through the foundation, Metzger has been able to recruit volunteer seamstresses throughout Central Kansas.
Metzger decided to sacrifice some of his company’s mattress encasements (used as part of its bed bug program), which he believes are excellent for stopping particulates and droplets. “They have a tight enough weave to make them water resistant without lamination or other treatment.”
The mask’s outside layer is a decorative cotton, an inner layer is material from the top of the encasement; the masks also include a pocket for replaceable filter material, and the inside layer next to the face is stretch knit material from the sides and bottom of the encasements. “One of my volunteers discovered that if she neatly cut along the seams when taking the encasements apart, those stitched seams made good material for mask ties,” he said.
In addition to the masks Metzger’s team has made, he has received donated masks from Andrea Hancock and P.E.S.T. Relief International. Thus far, Metzger said he has distributed about 2,500 masks with a goal to make and distribute 15,000 masks.
Metzger said that doing bed bug work in nursing homes and assisted living facilities has left “a special place in his heart for” these residents. “When COVID gets into these facilities it’s devastating,” he said. “I realized that I was in a position, with enough help, to do something about it.”
Metzger initially began funding the mask-making by himself. As the scope of the project grew, so too did the need for funding, so he set up the non-profit Gopherwood Community Foundation to collect donations. To donate, visit ————————– (UPDATE- No longer accepting donations)