Texas 2019 - 86th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2670 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/27/2019

                            86R13941 BEF-F
 By: Guillen H.B. No. 2670


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the regulation of beekeeping; authorizing fees.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 131.001, Agriculture Code, is amended by
 amending Subdivisions (3), (5), and (6) and adding Subdivision
 (12-a) to read as follows:
 (3)  "Beekeeper" means a person who owns, leases,
 possesses, controls, or manages one or more colonies of bees for any
 [pollination or the production of honey, beeswax, or other
 by-products, either for] personal or commercial purpose [use].
 (5)  "Colony" means a distinguishable localized
 population of bees in which one or more life stages may be present
 [the hive and its equipment and appurtenances including bees, comb,
 honey, pollen, and brood].
 (6)  "Director" means the director of [the] Texas A&M
 AgriLife Research [Agricultural Experiment Station].
 (12-a)  "Package bees" means live bees in cages without
 combs or honey used in forming a new colony.
 SECTION 2.  Section 131.041, Agriculture Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 131.041.  PERMIT FOR INTERSTATE MOVEMENT
 [IMPORTATION].  (a)  A person may not ship or cause to be shipped
 bees or equipment into or out of this state unless the person has a
 permit issued by the chief apiary inspector authorizing the
 shipment.
 (b)  A permit issued under this section applies to all
 shipments made by the beekeeper and expires on August 31 following
 the date the permit is issued.  The term of a permit may not exceed
 one year.
 (c)  A person may apply for a permit under this section by
 filing an application with the inspector.  A person may apply for a
 permit at any time, but a person must apply for a permit before the
 10th day preceding the date of a [the] shipment if the person does
 not hold a permit on the 10th day preceding the date of the
 shipment. An application for a permit must include all information
 required by the chief apiary inspector.
 (d)  A shipment originating outside this state requires:
 (1)  [a complete description of the shipment;
 [(2)  the destination of the shipment;
 [(3)  the approximate date of the shipment;
 [(4)     the names and addresses of the consignor and
 consignee; and
 [(5)]  a certificate of inspection signed by the
 official apiary inspector or entomologist of the state, territory,
 or country from which the bees are to be shipped before the shipment
 may enter the state; or
 (2)  an inspection of the shipment by the chief apiary
 inspector of Texas not more than 12 months before the date of the
 shipment.
 (e)  [(c)]  A certificate of inspection for a permit
 required by Subsection (d)(1) [(b)(5) of this section] must certify
 that the bees or equipment are apparently free from disease  based
 on an actual inspection conducted not more than 12 months before the
 date of the shipment. If the bees or equipment are to be shipped
 into this state from a state, territory, or country that does not
 have an official apiary inspector or entomologist:
 (1)  [,] the person shipping the bees or equipment may
 provide other suitable evidence that the bees and equipment are
 free from disease; or
 (2)  the bees may be shipped into this state under
 quarantine and the person receiving the shipment shall have the
 bees inspected not later than the 30th day after the date the bees
 enter this state.
 (f)  [(d)]  If a person files an application in accordance
 with Subsection (c) [(b) of this section] and the inspector is
 satisfied that the shipment or shipments to which the permit
 applies do [does] not pose a threat to disease control in the
 beekeeping industry, the inspector shall issue a permit
 [authorizing the shipment].
 (g)  [(e)]  This section does not apply to a shipment of
 package [live] bees [in wire cages without combs or honey].
 (h)  The inspector shall charge a fee for each permit issued
 under this section. The inspector shall set the fee at an amount
 that is reasonable in relation to the costs of administering this
 section.
 SECTION 3.  Section 131.045, Agriculture Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 131.045.  BEEKEEPER [APIARY] REGISTRATION. (a) Each
 beekeeper in this state may register on an annual basis with the
 [The] chief apiary inspector [may provide for the periodic
 registration of all apiaries in this state]. A registration under
 this section expires August 31.
 (b)  A registration must include:
 (1)  information required by the chief apiary
 inspector [the beekeeper's name, address, and telephone number];
 and
 (2)  the county or counties in which the beekeeper
 operates [apiary will be located; and
 [(3)     the approximate dates that the apiary will be
 located in each county].
 (c)  The inspector may require a beekeeper to submit with the
 registration information a map showing the exact location of each
 of the beekeeper's apiaries. A map submitted under this section is
 a trade secret under Chapter 552, Government Code, and may not be
 disclosed.
 (d)  The chief apiary inspector may charge a fee for each
 registration issued under this section. The inspector shall set
 the fee at an amount that is reasonable in relation to the costs of
 administering this section.  The chief apiary inspector may
 establish separate registration categories for purposes of setting
 and collecting fees under this section.
 SECTION 4.  Section 131.046(a), Agriculture Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  Fees collected under this subchapter shall be deposited
 in the State Treasury [to the credit of a special fund to be known as
 the bee disease control fund to be used only to defray the costs of
 administering and enforcing this chapter].
 SECTION 5.  Section 131.121(a), Agriculture Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  A person commits an offense if the person:
 (1)  violates a provision of Section 131.022 or 131.023
 [of this code];
 (2)  fails to report diseased bees in accordance with
 Section 131.025 [of this code];
 (3)  ships or causes bees or equipment to be shipped
 into this state [or between counties in this state] without the
 permit required by Section 131.041 [or 131.043 of this chapter];
 (4)  violates a rule, order, or quarantine of the chief
 apiary inspector adopted under this chapter;
 (5)  prevents or attempts to prevent an inspection of
 bees, equipment, pollen, or honey under the direction of the
 inspector under this chapter;
 (6)  prevents or attempts to prevent the discovery or
 treatment of diseased bees;
 (7)  interferes with or attempts to interfere with the
 inspector in the discharge of the duties under this chapter;
 (8)  as the owner or keeper of a diseased colony of
 bees, barters, gives away, sells, ships, or moves diseased bees,
 equipment, pollen, or honey or exposes other bees to the disease;
 (9)  exposes honey, pollen, hives, frames, combs, bees,
 or appliances known to be diseased in a manner that provides access
 to bees; or
 (10)  sells, offers for sale, barters, gives away,
 ships, or distributes honey or pollen taken from a colony of
 diseased bees.
 SECTION 6.  The following provisions of the Agriculture Code
 are repealed:
 (1)  Section 131.042; and
 (2)  Section 131.043.
 SECTION 7.  The changes in law made by this Act apply only to
 an offense committed on or after the effective date of this Act.  An
 offense committed before the effective date of this Act is governed
 by the law in effect on the date the offense was committed, and the
 former law is continued in effect for that purpose. For purposes of
 this section, an offense was committed before the effective date of
 this Act if any element of the offense occurred before that date.
 SECTION 8.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2019.