Block captain
Handbook
Choose your own adventure.
Only neighborly spirit is required.
Introduction
Welcome, and thank you for stepping up. Block captains are the backbone of this whole effort. Mosquito control only works at scale, and that scale starts at the block level.
Being a block captain is a choose-your-own-adventure role. The bare minimum — being a friendly point of contact on your block — is genuinely valuable on its own. Everything else is optional, stackable, and doable at whatever pace works for you.
You don't have to go it alone. If the role feels like a lot, recruit a neighbor to co-lead, or hand off specific tasks (catch basin patrol, trap coordination, block comms) to someone with the time and interest. A block can have more than one captain.
The goal is coverage, not perfection.
Phase 1: Get set up
When you sign up, you'll get a welcome email with everything you need: ordering discount, community chat invite, and access to the resource library.
1. Check your map listing
Find your block on the block captain map and confirm it's correctly shown and your contact form works. Something off? Email us.
2. Connect with neighboring block captains
Check the map to see who's covering nearby blocks and reach out. Splitting trap packs, pooling orders for free shipping, and teaming up on catch basin reporting are all easier with a neighbor.
Phase 2: Launch your block
1. Introduce yourself to neighbors
Use this intro letter template (restricted to block captains) — personalize it, print it, drop it in mailboxes. If your block has a group chat or listserv, share it there too.
2. Set up a block communication channel
If there's no group yet, start one. A WhatsApp group goes a long way. You don't need everyone — even a partial group is useful.
3. Help neighbors order traps
Traps work best distributed across the block rather than clustered in one yard. Coordinate a group order using the discount code in your welcome email — neighboring captains may want to split neighborhood packs too.
- Aim for 4–8 Mosquitaires spread across the block, plus GATs for properties in between.
- Order extra sticky cards and lure — you'll go through them faster than you expect.
- Not everyone will want a trap, and that's fine. Tossing and treating are the most important part. If neighbors skip traps, encourage a Bucket of Doom — but make sure they know it needs regular maintenance or it becomes a breeding ground.
4. Rally neighbors around trash cans
Damaged lids, cracked bins, open cans before a storm — trash cans are one of the most overlooked breeding sites on the block. More on what to do →
- Keep lids closed before rain.
- After a storm, walk the block and dump any standing water in bins.
- Can't face dumping garbage water? Drop some Bits in the bottom instead.
- Damaged bin or lid? The owner needs to submit a 311 request — DPW will replace it, but the request has to come from them.
5. Report public standing water
Catch basins, telecom vaults, and sidewalk grates are some of the highest-volume breeding sites on the Hill — and most go unreported. Walk your block and check for standing water. Hear a splash when you drop a pebble? See your reflection through a grate? Report it →
DC Health treats these with larvicides when they receive complaints. Every report builds the case for properly resourcing this work.
Phase 3: Build momentum
1. Follow up with neighbors who haven't responded
A second touch goes a long way. People are busy — a friendly reminder isn't annoying. "Hey, did you see my note about the mosquito thing?" is enough. If you have a trap set up, offer to show them in person.
2. Check for gaps in trap coverage
Take a mental inventory of where traps are on your block. Nudge neighbors who haven't ordered yet, and remind anyone skipping traps to set up a Bucket of Doom instead. Coverage spread across the block beats a cluster in one yard every time.
Phase 4: Maintain
1. Keep up with trap maintenance
A monthly group chat message is enough: sticky cards need replacing every 2–4 weeks, lure lasts about 8 weeks, GAT traps need water topped up and checked for larvae. Easy to set and forget without a nudge.
2. Keep reporting public standing water
Do a periodic sweep and submit new reports for basins you haven't flagged yet or that look untreated. DC Health only acts on submitted complaints, so reporting throughout the season matters. Report standing water →
3. Keep after trash cans
After significant rain, nudge the group to dump any standing water in bins. A pre-storm reminder to close lids takes 30 seconds.
4. Watch for new neighbors and gaps
People move in, traps break, life happens. A quick scan every few weeks keeps coverage from quietly slipping. New neighbors are often the most receptive — they're still in getting-to-know-the-block mode.
5. Share updates
Pass along newsletter updates and events to your block group. Low effort, and it keeps neighbors feeling part of something bigger.
Phase 5: Expand
1. Recruit captains for uncovered neighboring blocks
Check the map for gaps near you. The best recruits are often the neighbors who've already been most engaged — people who jumped on traps early or asked the most questions.
2. Tackle shared and communal spaces
Alleys, dumpster areas, community gardens, shared green spaces — often overlooked, often significant. They just need someone to take informal ownership.
3. Reach out to apartments, churches, and public buildings
We haven't cracked this one yet. If you've had a productive conversation with a building manager, church facilities contact, or business owner — we want to hear how you did it. Help us build out this playbook: hello@ittybittymosquitocommittee.org
4. Volunteer for committee-level work
Data, comms, outreach, logistics — if you have skills or bandwidth beyond your block, we'd love to hear from you. Get in touch →
Glossary
TrapsA passive trap that uses a SweetScent lure to attract and capture adult mosquitoes. Optionally runs on CO₂ for stronger pull. Replace the lure every ~8 weeks and empty the catch bag every 6–8 weeks. More on trapping →
A water-filled trap that lures egg-laying female Aedes mosquitoes onto a sticky card. Comes in 2-packs and 12-packs. Top up the water and swap the sticky card every ~2 weeks. More on trapping →
A DIY trap: a dark bucket filled with water, organic material, and BTi. Effective but maintenance-dependent — a neglected one becomes a breeding ground. Make sure neighbors who set one up know what they're committing to. More on trapping →
A naturally occurring soil bacteria that kills mosquito larvae and nothing else. Harmless to people, pets, birds, fish, and beneficial insects. The active ingredient in Dunks and Bits. More on treating →
Donut-shaped BTi discs. Drop one into a catch basin, rain barrel, or any standing water feature. Effective for ~30 days. Available at Jenks, Ace, Lowe's, and Home Depot (~$10–15). More on treating →
BTi in granule form. Use where a Dunk won't fit — gutters, drains, telecom vaults, planter saucers, the bottom of trash cans. Need more frequent reapplication than Dunks. More on treating →
A lure sachet used with Mosquitaires. Mimics the scent cues host-seeking female mosquitoes look for. Lasts about 8 weeks.
The yellow fever mosquito. Present in DC but less common than albopictus. An invasive species and one of the primary targets of our trapping effort — an established, overwintering population has been documented in DC since at least 2011, one of the only known populations north of its typical Gulf Coast range. Potential vector for dengue, chikungunya, and Zika. Daytime biter, container breeder.
The Asian tiger mosquito (look for the white stripe down its back). The most common biting mosquito in our area and the one you're most likely to encounter. An invasive species and primary target of our trapping effort. Daytime biter, container breeder, with a short flight range of a few hundred meters from where it hatched — which is why block-level action works.
The common house mosquito. Breeds in larger standing water — catch basins, storm drains, neglected bird baths. Primary vector for West Nile virus in DC. Active at dusk and overnight.
Underground structures that collect and hold standing water, often for weeks at a time. Some of the highest-volume breeding sites on the Hill and easy to walk past without noticing. See what to look for and how to report →
Troubleshooting
A neighbor is resistant or hostile
Don't push. Acknowledge their concern, leave the door open, and move on. Coverage doesn't require unanimity. A skeptical neighbor who sees results next season often comes around on their own.
A neighbor wants to spray
Don't argue — just redirect. "I get it, I wanted to do that too, but I read something that changed my mind" is enough of an opening. The Why not spray? page does the heavy lifting. If they're set on it, let it go. A spraying neighbor is still a neighbor.
A neighbor's yard is a mosquito habitat
Overgrown planters, neglected water features, tarps that collect water, a birdbath that never gets emptied — any of these can undermine a lot of the work happening on the block. Framing it around shared suffering tends to work better than anything that sounds like an inspection. "Hey, I've been trying to figure out why we're still getting so many bites — I think the water in that planter might be part of it" is a reasonable opener. Offer to help if you have a friendly relationship. Sometimes people just don't know.
If a direct conversation isn't an option — difficult relationship, absentee owner, rental property — report it to DC Health. They can't treat private property, but they can inspect and issue a citation to the owner. Report it →
A vacant or abandoned property is a breeding ground
Report it to DC Health with the address, a description, and photos if you can get them. They can inspect and, if conditions warrant, issue a citation to the property owner. Email DC Health → CC us if you'd like a paper trail on our end.
A neighbor set up a Bucket of Doom but isn't maintaining it
A proactive mention to anyone setting one up goes a long way: "These work great but they need attention every couple of weeks or they backfire." A periodic group chat reminder — "time to check your Buckets of Doom!" — normalizes the maintenance without singling anyone out. If one has already turned, offer to help reset it with fresh BTi.
Traps aren't catching much — but biting is also low
Good news: it's probably working. Traps catch adult mosquitoes, but tossing and treating are cutting off the next generation before it hatches. Low catches alongside low biting is the goal, not a problem.
Traps aren't catching much — and biting is bad
Check placement first: shaded spots with some airflow, ideally under vegetation, not in full sun. Make sure the lure is still active and the sticky card isn't full. Then look for competing breeding sources nearby — a single neglected catch basin, an overflowing planter, or a water feature that hasn't been treated can sustain a surprising number of mosquitoes. If everything looks right, check in with neighboring captains. If they're seeing results and you're not, a fresh set of eyes on your block might reveal something obvious.
Nobody is responding
It happens — some blocks are harder to activate than others. Focus on what you can control: your own property, the catch basins on your block, and the one or two neighbors who did engage. A block with a few motivated households is still meaningfully better than one with none.
Keep the door open. A bad weekend of biting, a news story, or a neighbor mentioning it unprompted can shift things. If the role isn't working out, consider passing it on rather than letting it lapse — drop us a note and we can help find a replacement.
You're picking up a block mid-season
Introduce yourself to neighbors who were already engaged, find out what's working, and don't reinvent the wheel. The main thing is continuity — a week or two of silence during a handoff can quietly unravel momentum.
If you're starting fresh on a block that had a captain but no real traction, treat it like Phase 1. You're not behind — you're just starting.
You're burning out or the role feels like too much
Recruit a co-captain or hand off specific tasks. Any coverage is better than none. Drop us a note — we've been there.
Press & Media
Great to share with neighbors as an icebreaker: