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SUBSTITUTE BILL NO. 22-13 <br />ORDINANCE NO. t 0 �— q � — Q <br />AN ORDINANCE OF THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SOUTH BEND, <br />INDIANA, AMENDING CHAPTER 5, ARTICLE 3, SECTION 5 -15 (a) AND (d) OF THE <br />SOUTHBEND MUNICIPAL CODE BY THE INCLUSION OF NEW ARTICLE 10 ENTITLED <br />HONEY BEE KEEPING REGULATIONS AND AMENDING SECTION <br />2 -123 SCHEDULE OF ORDINANCE AND CODE VIOLATIONS <br />STATEMENT OF PURPOSE AND INTENT <br />The South Bend Common Council notes that the current regulations addressing honey bee <br />keeping within the city limits have not been updated in recent decades. <br />It is acknowledged that the State of Indiana aids and assists in the "development and protection <br />of the bee and honey industry..." as further addressed in Indiana Code 14 -24 -2. It is further <br />acknowledged that the Indiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Division of Entomology and <br />Plant Pathology maintains a government website posts and maintains information on honey bees at <br />www.in.gov /dnr /entomolo /5746.html and also at www.in.gov /dnr /entomolo /2893.htm1 <br />On January 7, 2010, the Congressional Research Service provided to Congress a report on the <br />"Honey Bee Colony Collapse Disorder ". This 17 -page document noted among other things that the <br />State of Indiana was one of thirty -five states affected by the colony collapse disorder (CCD) where an <br />"alarming number of bee colony losses and die - offs" began in late 2006. Symptoms of CCD include: <br />rapid loss of adult worker bees; few or no dead bees found in the hive; presence of immature bee; small <br />cluster bees with live queen present; and pollen and honey stores in hives which may be caused by <br />pathogens, parasites, environmental stresses and poor nutrition. Part of the U.S. Department of <br />Agriculture's Action Plan to address CCD include increased educational and outreach programs aimed <br />at improving the "general bee health and reduce susceptibility to colony collapses and other <br />disorders..." Current reports for 2013 show the highest level of commercial colony losses at an average <br />of 55 %. <br />Much has changed in recent years with regard to municipal honey bee keeping regulations. Many <br />municipalities have established honey bee keeping regulations, some of which include Evanston, <br />Illinois; Cleveland, Ohio; Salt Lake City since 2009; Provo, Utah since 2011; Madison, Wisconsin since <br />2012; Minneapolis, Minnesota since 2009; Milwaukee, Wisconsin since 2010; Spokane, Washington — <br />just to name a few. In 2010, New York City lifted its ban on bee keeping within its city limits. New <br />York City permits the honey - producing Apis mellifera bee, which can produce as much as 100 pounds <br />or more of honey annually. <br />This ordinance is believed to be in the best interests of the citizens of the City of South Bend, <br />Indiana, by setting forth reasonable honey bee keeping regulations. <br />