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posted by janrinok on Friday October 16 2015, @04:57AM   Printer-friendly
from the helpful-critters-are-welcome dept.

MyNewsLA reports

The Los Angeles City Council voted [October 14] to allow backyard beekeeping, joining cities like Santa Monica, New York, Denver, and other cities where the hobby is legal.

[...] Councilman Paul Koretz [....] said bees "do especially well in Los Angeles" and Wednesday's move could help address bee colony collapse disorder which has claimed about a third of the global bee population.

[...] City leaders and members of HoneyLove, a nonprofit that promotes beekeeping, said the activity aids urban farming efforts such as community gardens. They also said urban areas offer a pesticide-free environment for insects that are critical to the health of agriculture and plants.

[...] The ordinance allows no more than one hive per 2,500 square feet per lot area to be kept in the backyards of single-family homes citywide. Front yard beekeeping is barred by the ordinance.

It also sets buffer zones and areas on a property where hives can be kept and requires that beekeepers raise walls or hedges high enough to ensure bees need to fly up before leaving the backyard.

A water source also needs to be maintained near the hives so the bees would not need to venture outside of the beekeeper's backyard to get hydrated, under the rules.

The backyard beekeepers also need to register with the County of Los Angeles Agricultural Commission.

The commission has 129 beekeepers registered with 219 locations countywide, according to commission spokesman Ken Pellman. Of those registered, 39 are commercial beekeepers, which means they have eight or more hives.

[...] Los Angeles already averages about eight to 10 feral bee hives per square mile.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 16 2015, @08:25PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 16 2015, @08:25PM (#250830)

    European honeybees are mostly docile.
    Yes, if they perceive a threat to their hive, they will protect it (if you don't pacify them with smoke).
    Otherwise, they're too busy to notice you.

    You've been consuming too much Lamestream Media and too much bad fiction (one and the same, IMO).
    Africanized honeybees weren't a threat anywhere in the Western Hemisphere until 1956 when a chief beekeeper in a South American country went on vacation and his incompetent replacement removed from some hives the screens that had holes that were too small to allow the queens to get out.

    -- gewg_