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File #: 19-0037    Name: Retroactive Cooperative Agreement for the Bee Safe Program
In control: Agriculture
On agenda: 2/26/2019 Final action: 2/26/2019
Enactment date: Enactment #: Agreement No. 19-088
Title: Approve and authorize the Chairman to execute a retroactive Cooperative Agreement with the California Department of Food and Agriculture for the Bee Safe Program, effective November 15, 2018 through June 30, 2019, with a total reimbursement amount of $122,481.
Attachments: 1. Agenda Item, 2. Agreement A-19-088 with CA Department of Food and Ag
DATE: February 26, 2019

TO: Board of Supervisors

SUBMITTED BY: Melissa Cregan, Interim Agricultural Commissioner/Sealer of Weights and Measures

SUBJECT: Retroactive Cooperative Agreement for the Bee Safe Program

RECOMMENDED ACTION(S):
TITLE
Approve and authorize the Chairman to execute a retroactive Cooperative Agreement with the California Department of Food and Agriculture for the Bee Safe Program, effective November 15, 2018 through June 30, 2019, with a total reimbursement amount of $122,481.
REPORT
Approval of the recommended action will allow the County to enter into an agreement with the California Department of Food and Agriculture to reimburse the Department's costs for Bee Safe Program activities.

This item is countywide.

ALTERNATIVE ACTION(S):

Should your Board not approve the recommended action, the Department will not receive funding from the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) for the Bee Safe Program.

RETROACTIVE AGREEMENT:

This revenue agreement is retroactive to November 15, 2018. The Department received the agreement from the CDFA on December 28, 2018.

FISCAL IMPACT:

There is no increase in net County cost associated with the recommended action. Fresno County will receive approximately $122,481 in revenue from CDFA to fund this mandated program. The estimated revenues and appropriations to fund the full cost of the program are included in the FY2018-19 Adopted Budget for Department of Agriculture Org. 40101010.

DISCUSSION:

The health of managed honey bees gained national attention in 2006 following a 50 percent overwinter loss rate of commercial honey bees, then attributed to "Colony Collapse Disorder". In 2012, a report from the United States Department of Agriculture concluded that on-going honey bee losses were the result of the combined effects of four key honey bee stressors: pests and parasites, nutrition and lack of forage, pesticide exposure, and genetics.

Managed honey bees play a critical role in the pr...

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