ACR 51, as introduced, Wood. West Nile Virus and Mosquito and Vector Control Awareness Week.
This measure would declare the week of April 19, 2015, through April 25, 2015, as West Nile Virus and Mosquito and Vector Control Awareness Week.
Fiscal committee: no.
P1 1WHEREAS, West Nile virus is a mosquito-borne disease that
2can result in debilitating cases of meningitis and encephalitis and
3death to humans, horses, avian species, and other wildlife; and
4WHEREAS, In 2014, West Nile virus resulted in 29 human
5deaths in California, a 93 percent increase over 2013, and 798
6individual cases in 31 counties, nearly doubling the number of
7cases during 2013, of which 543 developed neuroinvasive disease;
8and
9WHEREAS, The State Department of Public Health and the
10federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention predict West
11Nile virus will again pose a public health threat in California in
122015; and
13WHEREAS, Adequately funded mosquito and vector control,
14disease surveillance, and public awareness programs, coupled with
P2 1best management practices on public and private lands, are the
2best ways to prevent outbreaks of West Nile virus and other
3diseases borne by mosquitoes and other vectors; and
4WHEREAS, Mosquitoes and other vectors, including, but not
5limited to, ticks, Africanized honeybees, rats, fleas, and flies,
6continue to be a source of human suffering, illness, and death, and
7a public nuisance in California and around the world; and
8WHEREAS, Excess numbers of mosquitoes and other vectors
9spread diseases, reduce enjoyment of both public and private
10outdoor living spaces, reduce property values, hinder outdoor work,
11reduce livestock productivity, and have a negative impact on the
12environment; and
13WHEREAS, As a result of the threat mosquitos posed to
14California’s economic development and the health of its citizens,
15the Legislature enacted, in 1915, 100 years ago, the Mosquito
16Abatement Districts Act; and
17WHEREAS, Professional mosquito and vector control based
18on scientific research has made great advances in safely reducing
19mosquito and vector populations and the diseases they transmit;
20and
21WHEREAS, Established mosquito- and vector-borne diseases,
22such as plague, Lyme disease, flea-borne typhus, and encephalitis,
23and new and emerging vector-borne diseases, such as hantavirus,
24arenavirus, babesiosis, and ehrlichiosis, cause illness and
25sometimes death every year in California; and
26WHEREAS, Two invasive mosquito species in California, Aedes
27albopictus, the Asian tiger mosquito, which was detected in
28southern California in 2011, and Aedes aegypti, the yellow fever
29mosquito, which was detected in central and northern California
30in 2013, and in southern California in 2014, are posing new public
31health threats due to their capability to transmit potentially deadly
32or debilitating diseases, such as dengue, yellow fever, and
33chikungunya, diseases that are not currently transmitted in
34California, as well as other encephalitis-causing viruses; and
35WHEREAS, Mosquito and vector control districts throughout
36the State of California work closely with the United States
37Environmental Protection Agency and the State Department of
38Public Health to reduce pesticide risks to humans, animals, and
39the environment while protecting human health from mosquito-
40and vector-borne diseases and nuisance attacks; and
P3 1WHEREAS, Best management practices, emphasizing
2nonchemical approaches, have been developed to guide mosquito
3control that can significantly reduce mosquito populations for new
4development and on state and private lands; and
5WHEREAS, The State Department of Public Health maintains
6information on how to eliminate risks from vectors at both
7www.cdph.ca.gov and www.westnile.ca.gov, which the public is
8encouraged to review; and
9WHEREAS, The public’s awareness of the health benefits
10associated with safe, professionally applied mosquito and vector
11control methods will support these efforts, as well as motivate the
12state and the public to eliminate mosquito and vector breeding
13sites on public and private property; and
14WHEREAS, Educational programs have been developed to
15include schools, civic groups, private industry, and government
16agencies, in order to meet the public’s need for information about
17West Nile virus, other diseases, and mosquito and vector biology
18and control; and
19WHEREAS, Public awareness can result in reduced production
20of mosquitoes and other vectors on residential, commercial, and
21public lands by responsible parties, avoidance of the bites of
22mosquitoes and other vectors when the risk of West Nile virus and
23other disease transmission is high, detection of human cases of
24mosquito- and vector-borne diseases that may otherwise be
25misdiagnosed for lack of appropriate laboratory testing, and the
26formation of mosquito or vector control agencies where needed;
27and
28WHEREAS, Public awareness can result in action to provide
29adequate funding for existing mosquito and vector control agencies
30or to create control agencies in areas where there are no existing
31controls; and
32WHEREAS, West Nile Virus and Mosquito and Vector Control
33Awareness Week will increase the public’s awareness of the threat
34of West Nile virus and other diseases and the activities of the
35various mosquito and vector research and control agencies working
36to minimize the health threat within California, and will highlight
37the educational programs currently available; and
38WHEREAS, The Mosquito and Vector Control Association of
39California has designated the week of April 19 to April 25, 2015,
P4 1inclusive, as West Nile Virus and Mosquito and Vector Control
2Awareness Week in the State of California; now, therefore, be it
3Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate
4thereof concurring, That the Legislature hereby declares that the
5week of April 19 to April 25, 2015, inclusive, be designated as
6West Nile Virus and Mosquito and Vector Control Awareness
7Week; and be it further
8Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit a copy
9of this resolution to the Governor, the State Public Health Officer,
10and the author for appropriate distribution.
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