BILL NUMBER: SB 1480 AMENDED
BILL TEXT
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY JUNE 15, 2012
AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 29, 2012
AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 2, 2012
AMENDED IN SENATE APRIL 9, 2012
INTRODUCED BY Senator Corbett
(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Hill)
( Coauthors: Senators
Hancock and Lieu )
FEBRUARY 24, 2012
An act to amend Sections 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, and 4008 of, and
to add Sections 4013 and 4014 to, the Fish and Game Code, relating to
trapping.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 1480, as amended, Corbett. Trapping.
(1) Existing law, except as specified, requires every person,
other than a fur dealer, who traps fur-bearing mammals or nongame
mammals, designated by the Fish and Game Commission, or who sells raw
furs of those mammals, to have a trapping license from the
Department of Fish and Game. Certain persons taking mammals injurious
to growing crops or other property are exempted from the trapping
license requirement, except those persons providing trapping services
for profit are required to obtain a trapping license from the
department.
This bill would establish 2 classes of trapping licenses. The bill
would authorize a person who has complied with all applicable
licensing and license renewal requirements to trap wildlife for
recreation or fur to be issued a class I trapping license. The bill
would authorize specified persons trapping wildlife for a profit be
issued a class II trapping license. The bill would require the
department to publish a list of class II trapping licensees on its
Internet Web site. The bill would authorize the commission to issue a
formal warning or suspend a license when a licensee is found, after
a duly noticed hearing, to have published inconsistent information on
wildlife diseases, as specified.
The bill would require the commission to establish a base fee for
a class II trapping license, in an amount sufficient to recover all
reasonable administrative and implementation costs of the department
and commission relating to the license. Revenues of those class II
trapping license fees would be available, upon appropriation by the
Legislature, to fund reimbursement of the department and commission
for the reasonable costs of the administration, implementation, and
enforcement of provisions of law relating to class II trapping
licenses and of regulations adopted pursuant to those provisions.
The bill would require a class II trapping licensee to make a
reasonable effort, as defined, not to leave dependent young
animals, that are orphaned as a consequence of the trapping and
killing of their mother, to die within an area of a home or business
that is inaccessible to the licensee to determine
whether dependent young are present within a home or business premise
and to prevent orphaning young animals as a consequence of trapping
and killing the mother . The bill would further require class
II trapping licensees to provide clients with a written contract,
containing prescribed information, prior to setting traps.
(2) Existing law, except as expressly provided, makes any
violation of the Fish and Game Code, or any rule, regulation, or
order made or adopted under that code, a misdemeanor. Existing law
makes certain actions relating to trapping unlawful.
The bill also would make it unlawful to kill any trapped mammal by
listed methods or to solicit trapping services business from the
public for reasons of health or safety pursuant to specified laws.
The bill also would prohibit the trapping of bats, as specified. By
specifying these new Fish and Game Code violations, thereby defining
new crimes, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(3) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse
local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the
state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that
reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this
act for a specified reason.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: yes.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. Section 4004 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to
read:
4004. It is unlawful to do any of the following:
(a) Use a trap with saw-toothed or spiked jaws.
(b) Use or sell leghold steel-jawed traps with a spread of 51/2
inches or larger without offset jaws.
(c) Use steel-jawed traps larger than size 11/2 or with a spread
larger than 47/8 inches for taking muskrat.
(d) Set or maintain traps which do not bear a number or other
identifying mark registered to the department or, in the case of a
federal, state, county, or city agency, bear the name of that agency,
except that traps set pursuant to Section 4152 or 4180 shall bear an
identifying mark in a manner specified by the department. No
registration fee shall be charged pursuant to this subdivision.
(e) Fail to visit and remove all animals from traps at least once
daily. If the trapping is done pursuant to Section 4152 or 4180, the
inspection and removal shall be done by the person who sets the trap
or the owner of the land where the trap is set or an agent of either.
(f) Use a steel leghold trap with a spread exceeding 71/2 inches
or killer-type trap of the conibear type that is larger than 6 inches
by 6 inches, unless partially or wholly submerged in water.
(g) Set or maintain steel leghold traps within 30 feet of bait
placed in a manner or position so that it may be seen by any soaring
bird. As used in this subdivision, "bait" includes any bait composed
of mammal, bird, or fish flesh, fur, hide, entrails, or feathers.
(h) Set or maintain steel leghold traps with a spread of 51/2
inches or larger without a tension device.
(i) Kill any trapped mammal in accordance with this section by
intentional drowning, injection with any chemical not sold for the
purpose of euthanizing animals, or thoracic compression, commonly
known as chest crushing. This subdivision shall not be construed
to prohibit the use of lawfully set conibear traps set in water for
beaver or muskrat or the use of lawfully set colony traps set in
water for muskrat.
(j) Solicit trapping business from the public for reasons of
health or safety or any reason other than damage to crops or property
under a class II license, pursuant to Section 4152, 4180, or 4011.
(k) (1) Trap bats, except that nets may be used for nonlethal
control of property damage or for protection of human health or
safety. Nets and exclusion are the only lawful methods of removing
bats from a structure. Except as provided for in paragraph (2), bats
may be excluded only outside of the periods during which nonflying
young are present and when bats are in torpor or hibernation. This
subdivision shall not affect a person possessing a scientific
collector's permit, pursuant to Section 1002 or 2081.
(2) Bats may be excluded to protect human health or safety at any
time when in accordance with subparagraphs (A) and (B).
(A) If there are holes or cracks in a structure that allow bats to
enter the interior area of a structure that humans occupy, it is the
responsibility of a property owner or a designated agent or licensee
to seal or screen or otherwise close these holes to prevent bats
from entering the structure. If the property owner or a designated
agent or licensee is unable to seal, screen, or otherwise close the
holes or cracks that allow bats to enter the structure, the property
owner or a designated agent or licensee shall contact the nearest
regional office of the department prior to taking any action to
exclude the bats.
(B) If a property owner or a designated agent or licensee contacts
a regional office of the department to report that bats are entering
the interior of a structure that is occupied by humans and is unable
to seal those access points that allow bats entry, the department
shall assist the property owner or a designated agent or licensee in
addressing this risk to human health or safety. The department may
assist by recommending the appropriate course of action and may
request that the property owner or a designated agent or licensee
grant permission for a department warden or biologist to enter the
affected structure to further assist the property owner or a
designated agent or licensee. The department may want to identify the
species of bat, the protected status of the bat, the size of the
colony, or other factors in providing an effective remedy to protect
the health or safety of all occupants of the structure and the
protection of bats. The department shall not prohibit any person from
excluding bats for the protection of human health or safety.
(3) For purposes of this subdivision, the following terms have the
following meanings:
(A) "Exclusion" means a method of allowing an animal to leave an
area but not return.
(B) "Protection of human health or safety" means preventing direct
human contact with bats within any structure.
(C) "Torpor or hibernation" means a period in which the consistent
weekday temperature remains consistently under 50 degrees Fahrenheit
for seven consecutive days except as otherwise authorized by the
department.
SEC. 2. Section 4005 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read:
4005. (a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, every
person, other than a fur dealer, who traps fur-bearing mammals or
nongame mammals, designated by the commission or who sells raw furs
of those mammals, shall procure a trapping license. "Raw fur" means
any fur, pelt, or skin that has not been tanned or cured, except that
salt-cured or sun-cured pelts are raw furs.
(b) The department shall develop standards that are necessary to
ensure the competence and proficiency of applicants for a trapping
license. A person shall not be issued a license until he or she has
passed a test of his or her knowledge and skill in this field.
(c) Persons trapping mammals in accordance with Section 4152 or
4180 are not required to procure a trapping license except when
providing trapping services for profit.
(d) (1) A person who has complied with all applicable licensing
and license renewal requirements to trap wildlife for recreation or
fur may be issued a class I trapping license.
(2) A person who has passed the trapping license application test
established by the department pursuant to subdivision (b) for persons
trapping wildlife for a profit in accordance with Section 4152 or
4180 may be issued a class II trapping license. The department shall
publish on the Internet Web site of the department a list of class II
licensees authorized to provide trapping services to the public for
a profit in accordance with Section 4152 or 4180 and the registered
business name under which the licensee operates.
(3) A license shall be renewed only for the category of license
that is currently possessed.
(e) Raw furs taken by persons providing trapping services for
profit shall not be sold.
(f) The license requirement imposed by this section does not apply
to any of the following:
(1) Officers or employees of federal, county, or city agencies or
the department, when acting in their official capacities, or officers
or employees of the Department of Food and Agriculture when acting
pursuant to the Food and Agricultural Code pertaining to pests or
pursuant to Article 6 (commencing with Section 6021) of Chapter 9 of
Part 1 of Division 4 of the Food and Agricultural Code.
(2) Structural pest control operators licensed pursuant to Chapter
14 (commencing with Section 8500) of Division 3 of the Business and
Professions Code, when trapping rats, mice, voles, moles, or gophers.
(3) Persons and businesses licensed or certified by the Department
of Pesticide Regulation pursuant to Chapter 4 (commencing with
Section 11701) and Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 12201) of
Division 6 of, and Chapter 3.6, (commencing with Section 14151) of
Division 7 of, the Food and Agricultural Code, when trapping rats,
mice, voles, moles, or gophers.
(g) Except for species that are listed pursuant to Chapter 1.5
(commencing with Section 2050) of Division 3 or Chapter 8 (commencing
with Section 4700), nothing in this code or regulations adopted
pursuant thereto shall prevent or prohibit a person from trapping any
of the following animals:
(1) Gophers.
(2) House mice.
(3) Moles.
(4) Rats.
(5) Voles.
(h) Notwithstanding Section 12156, the commission may issue a
formal warning or suspend a license when a licensee is found, after a
duly noticed public hearing, to have published information about
wildlife diseases that is inconsistent with the information about
wildlife diseases published by the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention or by the department. The commission may
consider other sources of information as appropriate.
SEC. 3. Section 4006 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read:
4006. (a) A class I trapping license shall be issued as follows:
(1) To any resident of this state over the age of 16 years upon
payment of a base fee of forty-five dollars ($45), as adjusted under
Section 713.
(2) To any resident of this state under the age of 16 years upon
payment of a base fee of fifteen dollars ($15), as adjusted under
Section 713.
(3) To any person not a resident of this state upon payment of a
base fee of two hundred twenty-five dollars ($225), as adjusted under
Section 713.
A license shall not be issued to a nonresident if the state in
which he or she resides does not provide for issuance of a
nonresident trapping license to California residents. Also, a
nonresident issued a license under this subdivision may take only
those species, and may take or possess only that quantity of a
species that a resident of California may take or possess under a
nonresident trapping license or permit in the state of residence of
that nonresident.
(b) (1) The commission shall establish a base fee for a class II
trapping license, in an amount sufficient to recover all reasonable
administrative and implementation costs of the department and
commission relating to the license. The fee imposed pursuant to this
subdivision shall be adjusted pursuant to Section 713.
(2) Revenues of the license fees imposed pursuant to paragraph (1)
shall be available, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to fund
reimbursement of the department and commission for the reasonable
costs of the administration and enforcement of the provisions of this
code relating to class II trapping licenses and of regulations
adopted pursuant to those provisions.
SEC. 4. Section 4007 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read:
4007. A class I trapping license authorizes the person to whom it
is issued to take, during the open season, fur-bearing mammals and
nongame mammals for a term of one year from July 1st, or if issued
after the beginning of that term, for the remainder of the term and
to sell the raw fur of these mammals.
SEC. 5. Section 4008 of the Fish and Game Code is amended to read:
4008. A trapping license shall not be issued to any applicant
within one year following the expiration of any trapping license
previously issued to that applicant unless the applicant has
submitted to the department a sworn statement showing the number of
each kind of fur-bearing mammals and nongame mammals taken under the
previous license. A class I trapping licensee shall provide the names
and addresses of the persons to whom furs were shipped or sold.
SEC. 6. Section 4013 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read:
4013. (a) A class II trapping licensee shall make a reasonable
effort not to leave dependent young animals that are
orphaned as a consequence of the trapping and killing of their mother
to die within an area of a home or business that is inaccessible to
the licensee to determine whether dependent young are
present within a home or business premise and to prevent orphaning
young animals as a consequence of trapping and killing the mother
. "Reasonable effort" is defined as taking steps to ascertain
whether dependent young animals are present, including, but not
limited to, any of the following:
(1) Using the natural history information that is included in the
class II trapping license application examination , including
consideration of the time of year .
(2) Requesting information from the potential client that would
indicate whether dependent young animals are present, such as infant
vocalization , sounds in the early morning or daytime in a
localized area, and other sounds and activity commonly
associated with young being present.
(3) Conducting a visual inspection of the area where sounds or
activity have been reported when areas that may have well-hidden
young can be thoroughly inspected visually .
(4) Monitoring an entry point with a paper block or
, tracking powder , surveillance, or
recording device to determine whether the entry is disturbed on
a daily basis, indicating a mother returning to her young.
(5) Using a heat sensor , portable motion-activated camera,
or other monitoring, recording, surveillance, or
other technology.
(6) Affixing a one-way door attached to a
holding cage across an entry point of a structure to visually confirm
whether the animal is a lactating female is
present . Holding cages should be checked on a priority
basis within the lawful 24 hour trap check requirement period
pursuant to subdivision (e) of Section 4004. When
feasible, double-opening holding cages should be set to identify
whether a lactating female, sleeping separately from her young during
weaning, is returning to her young during her natural foraging
period. A single-opening holding cage should be removed if it is
observed that a struggle to enter has occurred.
(7) Other methods of identifying whether young dependent animals
are present.
(b) A lactating female animal shall not be killed, and traps shall
not be set , except as provided in paragraph (6) of subdivision
(a), if young animal sounds have been reported or it is known
or suspected that dependent young animals exist on the premises and
the removal of young is not possible due to the fact that
the area from which the licensee is trying to remove the animals is
inaccessible to the licensee the young are
inaccessible within the structure .
(c) If a licensee determines that young dependent animals are
present, the licensee shall use lawful and humane methods to
that encourage the mother to relocate the young
from the area from which the licensee is trying to remove the
animals. One-way doors may be installed when the young are
confirmed to be leaving and returning to the natal den, and the entry
points may be sealed when monitoring confirms that the mother and
young have left the natal den and no further activity is
occurring.
SEC. 7. Section 4014 is added to the Fish and Game Code, to read:
4014. (a) Class II trapping licensees that provide trapping
services for profit pursuant to Section 4152 or 4180 shall provide
each client with a written contract prior to setting traps.
(b) The written contract shall contain the following information
and disclosures and shall be printed in at least 12-point typeface
beginning on and continuing from the upper half of the first page of
the contract:
California law requires consumers to be provided with the
following information and disclosures prior to traps being set, when
hiring wildlife trapping services.
Name and current contact information of the person setting a
trap.
The current year's trapping license number of the individual
setting a trap and the business name under which the services are
provided.
"It is only lawful to trap wildlife for a profit in
California if damage to crops or property has occurred. Animals
posing a risk to human health or safety may only be taken by
specified government officials (Sections 4011, 4152, and 4180 of the
Fish and Game Code)."
"This is a description of the property damage as confirmed by
the licensed trapper through visual inspection:
__________________________________________."
"This is the target animal or species responsible for the
damage:
__________________________________________."
"All furbearing and nongame mammals that are legal to trap
must be immediately killed or released. Unless released, trapped
animals shall be killed by shooting where local ordinances,
landowners, and safety permit (Section 465.5(g)(1) of Title 14 of the
California Code of Regulations)."
"Nontarget animals are defined as those animals that become
accidentally trapped, but are not responsible for the documented
property damage. These animals must be immediately released."
"Traps must be inspected and all animals removed at least
once each day by the licensed trapper, the person hiring the trapper,
or an agent thereof, pursuant to Sections 4152 and 4180 of the Fish
and Game Code."
"This is the name and telephone number of the person charged
with checking the traps each day:
__________________________________________."
"A reasonable effort must be made to prevent orphaning
dependent animal young. It is prohibited to set traps for an animal
when young are inaccessible or to kill a lactating female animal if
young are inaccessible within a structure such as a home or business
as a consequence of trapping and killing the mother (Section 4013 of
the Fish and Game Code). A reasonable effort includes, but is not
limited to, (a) requesting information about sounds and activity that
would indicate young animals are present, (b) inspecting the area
where sounds or activity is occurring, and (c) monitoring an access
point for evidence of a mother returning daily to her young (Section
4013 of the Fish and Game Code)."
"The following methods of dispatching trapped mammals are
prohibited: drowning, chest crushing, or injection with any chemical
not sold for the purpose of animal euthanasia (Section 4004 of the
Fish and Game Code)."
An identifying tag issued by the Department of Fish and Game
is required to be affixed to every trap that is set (Section 465.5(g)
(1) of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations).
A person shall not trap a bat. Bats may be excluded, pursuant
to Section 4004(k) of the Fish and Game Code, during certain time
periods, as specified in Section 4004(k) of the Fish and Game Code.
Where necessary to protect human health or safety, the department may
exclude bats, as specified in Section 4004(k) of the Fish and Game
Code.
Address and signature of client:
__________________________________________.
Signature of licensed trapper who will be placing traps:
__________________________________________.
The following is a true and accurate list of each animal (by
species) trapped at this address, the date each animal was removed,
and the final disposition of the removed animal.
Species Trapped: _________________________________
Date: __________________________________________
Final disposition: ________________________________
SEC. 8. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the
Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the
meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
Constitution.