Create a Community Bee Haven - Honey Bee Haven
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Create a Community Bee Haven

Protest for bees

Urge your community to protect pollinators!

Help build the movement and create more pesticide-free spaces for bees, with access to fresh water, ample food and shelter. Urge your municipal government, school or park district to pass a resolution to protect bees by creating healthy pollinator environments free of bee-harming pesticides. The steps below will get you started:

  1. Build a group: If you are not already part of an organization that wants to protect bees, then reach out to other people in your community and form a group. People often use Facebook, email lists and neighborhood meetings to recruit people to their effort. 
     
  2. Do your homework: Review materials PAN has put together, including the organizing toolkit, and figure out what resonates in your community and with your local government or school board. 
     
  3. Broaden your coalition: In order to effectively pass the resolution, you should figure out who else will help advance your efforts. Consider reaching out to local beekeepers, gardener groups or neighborhood associations and ask for their endorsements. 
     
  4. Meet with decisionmakers: Meet with your decisionmakers (e.g. city councilmembers, county supervisors, school board officials) and identify a champion to introduce the resolution. Also, bring people from your new coalition to express a range of perspectives and backgrounds and show the strength of your effort. 
     
  5. Show up for the vote: Recruit people through your core group and through your coalition to show up when the resolution is up for a vote. Numbers matter to most officials and can help sway them. And don’t forget to celebrate after you win. 

Most importantly, don’t give up!

Thanks to strong community advocates, many cities have already adopted pollinator-friendly policies, including: Minneapolis, MN; Portland, OR; Sacramento, CA; and Seattle, WA. Your town could be next!

If you’d like more information, contact Paul Towers at Pesticide Action Network (ptowers@panna.org or 510-788-9020).

[Sample] Community Honey Bee Haven Resolution:

WHEREAS, Bees and other pollinators are essential to the majority of the flowering plants on our planet; and

WHEREAS, Pollinators are responsible for one out of every three bites of food we eat; and

WHEREAS, Each year since 2006, commercial beekeepers in the U.S. have reported annual losses of bees in excess of what would be considered normal; and

WHEREAS, There are [this many] beekeepers in [City, County or School] relying on beekeeping for hobby or commercial purposes; and

WHEREAS, [stats on local losses] reported losses of bees in excess of what would be considered normal; and

WHEREAS, Multiple, interacting causes are likely contributors to the decline of pollinator populations, including pathogens, habitat loss, and exposure to pesticides; and

WHEREAS, Scientific evidence around neonicotinoid pesticides, including clothianidin, thiamethoxam and imidacloprid is especially compelling and deserves action; and

WHEREAS, threats to pollinators concern the entire food system, where pollination services provided by honey bees and other essential pollinators account for one in every three bites of food, responsible for the pollination of key crops, including almonds, apples, blueberries, cherries and many others, and contributing over $19 billion worth of services to U.S. agriculture; and  

WHEREAS, Honeybees are a keystone indicator species and their decline points to broader environmental degradation; and

WHEREAS, Pollinator population declines may be a disproportionately significant piece of the current collapse in biodiversity that some biologists believe poses an even greater threat to humanity than climate change, which contributes to it; now, therefore, be it

THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by the [City, County or School] become a Honey Bee Haven and map its location on HoneyBeeHaven.org; and be it further

Resolved, That the [City, County or School] officially recognizes the critical importance of pollinators to our food supply and to our environment; and be it further

Resolved, That the [City, County or School] promote healthy environments — including food sources, clean water and shelter — for pollinators through existing programs and new funding opportunities; and be it further

Resolved, That the [City, County or School] will not procure or use neonicotinoid products of products containing neonicotinoid active ingredients; and be it further

Resolved, That the [City, County or School] will support efforts to educate the broader community about the action it has taken and encourage other entities and households to adopt a similar policy; and be it further

Resolved, that the [City, County or School] will transmit copies of this resolution to the [appropriate local agencies], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and US Department of Agriculture.

Category
Advocacy