Glenn

About Glenn Waldorf

Glenn Waldorf is the Managing Director of Bell Environmental Services. Bell Environmental is a leading pest control company servicing the New York Metro Area. Bell also provides bird clean up and exclusion work throughout the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions. Bell Environmental has solved pest problems for commercial customers using innovative technology and environmentally sound methods since 1963. Pest control and protection from insect, rodent, and bird problems are important contributors to tenants’ and employees’ health, safety, and quality of life. Bell is well known for its famous canine detective, Roscoe the Bed Bug Dog and its InstantFreeze treatments that keep offices open without interruptions. Bell also provides bird exclusion services that keep buildings from becoming homes to pigeons and victim to all the troubles that pest birds leave behind. Glenn develops the company’s strategy, marketing and communications materials, and ensures that client demands are met to their satisfaction. He maintains relationships with clients and answers calls on all pest topics especially from itchy residents seeking bed bug assistance and wondering when they need bed bug inspections from Roscoe and other canine detectives. He also oversees the company’s licensing and credentials, including employee education and training. Glenn is licensed in his Core, 7A - General and Household pests, and 7D - Food Processing categories. Glenn holds pest control licenses in New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and Indiana. He has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, NBC-4, News 12 and other media. Glenn also answers to the name Roscoe because like his famous canine, "He’s (Always) Workin!" Prior to joining Bell Environmental in 2009, Glenn worked as a Wall Street equity analyst for 11 years. Glenn holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from the University of Chicago. Glenn is a participant in BOMA-NY and BOMA-NJ industry groups and is an active supporter of property managers and asset managers as they address and anticipate facilities challenges for their tenants. He was awarded the 2024 BOMA-NY Pinnacle Award (TOBY) for Outstanding Local Member. Glenn is co-chair of BOMA-NY’s Business and Market Strategy Committee. This committee facilitates a discourse on property and asset management priorities and market trends. Recent committee discussions include the role of Artificial Intelligence in Property Management; Building Your Building’s Brand; and Office To Residential Conversions. Glenn also serves on the BOMA-NY Codes & Regulations Committee as its Transportation Subcommittee chair. He writes monthly transportation reports that have become a informative and humorous “must read” for BOMA members. So much of the NY-Metro region’s attractiveness as a market to work, live, and invest is affected by our transportation system, so updates on the changing infrastructure and costs of how we get around are important. Glenn’s pest control expertise touches on numerous other Codes & Regulations committee topics and discussions including hotels, waste management, outdoor dining, fleet management, parking and more. His family believes that he consumed and retained far too much pop culture. Watch for references to Star Wars, DC and Marvel comic superheroes, Indiana Jones, 80s comedies, 90s music, and James Bond movies from all eras in all of his blog entries and reports.

Love & The February 2026 BOMA NY & NJ Transportation Reports Are In The Air

By |2026-02-16T16:32:41-05:00February 17th, 2026|BOMA, Transportation|

❤️ February 2026 BOMA NY & NJ Transportation Report: New Elected Leadership, Winter Storm Frustrations, and The Future of Gateway Tunnel + Penn Station  Madison Square Garden February’s BOMA-NY Transportation Report and BOMA NJ Transportation Report arrive with a lot on their minds. This month, the message starts right on the cover. For February, we created

2026 National Pest Management Eastern Conference Recap: Pest Control Fundamentals and New Technology in Action

By |2026-02-16T16:56:00-05:00January 22nd, 2026|bed bugs, mice, pest control, Public Health, rats, rodents, Transportation, travel|

📍 I just got back from the 2026 National Pest Management Association's (NPMA) Eastern Conference in Atlantic City. A good chance to go back to basics on tactics and learn new things At Bell Environmental, we invest in real education that matters: keeping skills sharp, maintaining recertification credits, and staying ahead of what impacts our

36 Miles to the Client, a Clean Desk, and the Cost of Inertia

By |2026-01-18T13:09:13-05:00January 12th, 2026|commercial real estate, movies, pest control, Public Health, rodents|

36 Miles to the Client, a Clean Desk, and the Cost of Inertia 🚗☕🕶️ “It’s 36 miles to the client. We’ve got a full tank of gas. Half a cup of coffee. It’s dark. And yes… I’m wearing sunglasses.” 😎 We are not on a mission from God like Jake and Elwood in The Blues

12/31: The Day the Music Channel Died

By |2026-01-01T10:46:54-05:00January 1st, 2026|BOMA, commercial real estate, music, Transportation, travel|

Editor's Note: Most posts on this blog are about practical pest control approaches and topics so your building is a welcoming and hospitable place that's free of problems. That’s the work Bell Environmental does every day, and it’s what most readers come here for. We also work to help our BOMA NY and BOMA NJ Commercial

Enjoy Our December 2025 BOMA NJ Transportation Report! Happy Holidays!

By |2025-12-19T13:17:19-05:00December 19th, 2025|BOMA, commercial real estate, Transportation|

Holiday Reading: Our December 2025 BOMA NJ Transportation Report The holidays arrived in New Jersey, which means three things are guaranteed: traffic, delays, and a celebrity wondering out loud why he/she is in New Jersey in the first place. The December 2025 BOMA NJ Transportation Report delivers our blend of serious transportation news, seasonal chaos,

Holiday Reading! Our December 2025 BOMA-NY Transportation Report Is Here!

By |2025-12-19T13:18:17-05:00December 18th, 2025|BOMA, commercial real estate, Transportation|

December 2025 BOMA NY Transportation Report Holiday Gridlock, Fare Hikes, and Cardi B on the Subway! If November’s transportation story was about turkeys clogging the system, December is a full-blown holiday snow globe shaken way too hard. Our latest BOMA-NY Transportation Report is out. It delivers a mix of transit disruption, political maneuvering, fare increases,

Why Property Managers Must Oversee Building-Wide Pest Control. What Happens In Tenant Spaces Can Affect A Whole Property.

By |2025-12-10T17:10:57-05:00December 11th, 2025|and rats, and rodents, commercial real estate, mice, mice, pest control, Public Health, rats, rodents|

Why Property Managers Must Oversee Building-Wide Pest Control A Very Public Rodent Incident From A NYC Restaurant Shows The Risks Buildings Face Too. The recent Chipotle rodent incident, (NYC Chipotle customer allegedly 'bit into a rodent' inside burrito bowl: lawsuit | New York Post) regardless of disputed details, demonstrates something property managers already know: When

How Restaurants Can Prevent Rodent Incidents Before They Become Business Crises

By |2025-12-10T13:13:09-05:00December 10th, 2025|and rats, and rodents, commercial real estate, mice, pest control, Public Health, rats, rodents|

A New Reminder for Restaurants: 2025 NYC Chipotle Report & Lawsuit Of An Alleged Rodent Encounter In A Customer's Food The recent report of a mouse allegedly found inside a Chipotle burrito bowl (See: NYC Chipotle customer allegedly 'bit into a rodent' inside burrito bowl: lawsuit | New York Post and Lawsuit claims woman is

The History of Rodent Issues in NYC Restaurants — And Why They Always Hurt the Business

By |2025-12-10T12:28:21-05:00December 9th, 2025|and rats, and rodents, commercial real estate, mice, mice, pest control, Public Health, rats, rodents|

The History of Rodent Issues in NYC Restaurants — And Why They Always Hurt the Business Rodent issues in New York City restaurants are not new—and every decade repeats the same pattern. A single incident, caught on video or posted online, quickly becomes a media event that hurts a restaurant’s brand, revenue, and regulatory standing.

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