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MODESTO BEE
ORIGINAL
ARTICLE
By KEN CARLSON
BEE STAFF WRITER
Last Updated: August 10, 2005, 06:40:22 AM PDT
Poorly maintained or abandoned residential swimming pools are a big problem
in efforts to control mosquitoes that carry the West Nile virus, officials
said.
One notable example is the pool at Tony Daniloo's former Turlock home.
Daniloo, the former head of DreamLife Financial, and his wife, Nansi Masihi
Daniloo, lived in the $949,000 home before their arrest in December on
real estate fraud charges.
Turlock Mosquito Abatement District officials said they have gone to
the vacant home in east Turlock five or six times since March, after receiving
complaints of mosquitoes breeding in the abandoned pool and spa.
Personnel have treated the pool's green, murky water with pellets and
an oil-based pesticide. They expect to treat it again after finding more
larvae Tuesday, said Roger Jorge, a district foreman.
The district has the authority to declare a health and safety nuisance
and impose fines to compel the owner to maintain the property. So far,
it has taken no action against the Daniloo property.
"The neighbors wanted to pitch in and put power to the house to
keep the pool pump running," Jorge said.
The Turlock district and the East Side Mosquito Abatement District are
the two agencies in Stanislaus battling West Nile virus, which has killed
three people in California this year.
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