BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                  AB 896
                                                                  Page  1

          Date of Hearing:   May 24, 2013

                        ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS
                                  Mike Gatto, Chair

                 AB 896 (Eggman) - As Introduced:  February 22, 2013 

          Policy Committee:                              Water, Parks and  
          Wildlife     Vote:                            15-0

          Urgency:     No                   State Mandated Local Program:  
          yes    Reimbursable:              No

           SUMMARY

           This bill re-enacts expired provisions of law requiring best  
          management practices (BMPs) for mosquito control in wildlife  
          management areas.  (These provisions sunset in 2010.)   
          Specifically, this bill:

          1)Requires a mosquito abatement and vector control district  
            whose boundaries include one or more wildlife management areas  
            to periodically, at least semiannually, notify the Department  
            of Fish and Wildlife (DFW) of those areas that exceed locally  
            established mosquito population thresholds and the associated  
            costs as specified.   This bill authorizes the Department of  
            Public Health to review the thresholds and costs for  
            conformity to generally acceptable mosquito control standards.

          2)Requires DFW, in any wildlife management areas identified as  
            exceeding the specified thresholds, to identify best  
            management practices, work with the local district to develop  
            and implement an abatement plan, and seek funding as  
            appropriate. 

          3)Authorizes DFW to consult with the Department of Public  
            Health, if the wetland occupies land outside the jurisdiction  
            of district, to determine which best management practices can  
            be implemented.

          4)Requires a mosquito abatement and vector control district  
            whose boundaries include a wildlife management area, in  
            consultation with DFW, to monitor wildlife management areas as  
            specified and report abatement efforts to DFW annually as  
            specified.








                                                                  AB 896
                                                                  Page  2


           FISCAL EFFECT  

          The current annual cost for mosquito abatement on DFW lands is  
          estimated to be $750,000 less than the implementation of best  
          management practices required in this bill.

          Increased costs, potentially in the millions of dollars, to DFW  
          for developing best management practices on 221 managed  
          properties.

           COMMENTS  

           1)Purpose.   According to the author, this bill is intended to  
            reenact provisions of prior law regarding best management  
            practices for mosquito control in managed wetland wildlife  
            habitat areas that sunset in 2010.  


            Mosquito abatement and vector control districts found that  
            implementation of the BMPs in cooperation with DFW produced  
            significant benefits, including but not limited to, better  
            control of mosquito populations and a reduction in necessary  
            pesticide applications.  

           2)Background.   AB 1982 (Wolk), Chapter 553, Statutes of 2004,  
            required the development and 
            implementation of ecological controls, known as best  
            management practices (BMPs), in wildlife areas that can reduce  
            the need for chemical treatment while also controlling  
            mosquito populations below established thresholds.  The BMPs  
            include management strategies that rely more on the timing of  
            flooding, vegetation control work, and other habitat  
            practices, rather than on spraying alone.  
             
           

           Analysis Prepared by  :    Jennifer Galehouse / APPR. / (916)  
          319-2081