Search ▸ Agenda item attachment
CMA 2017 #331 · Agenda item attachment · Dec 18 2017
A communication transmitted from Louis A. DePasquale, City Manager, relative to the Regulation for Keeping of Honey Bees
To:
Louis DePasquale, City Manager
From: Claude-Alix Jacob, Chief Public Health Officer
Date:
December 18, 2017
Re:
Beekeeping Regulation
The Cambridge Public Health Commission promulgated the “Cambridge Public Health
Department Regulation for the Keeping of Honey Bees” on December 5, 2017 under its
authority as a local health department (M.G.L c.111 §31). This will allow the Public Health
Department to regulate beekeeping in Cambridge in tandem with the proposed amendment
to the Zoning Ordinance that is currently before the Council. This is similar to how certain
other activities are regulated both by zoning, which dictates where such activities are
permitted to be conducted, and through health regulations, which regulate how such
activities are to be conducted, such as tattoo and massage parlors, for example.
Through the Regulations, the Cambridge Public Health Department (CPHD) will support
local access to healthy food, including local honey production. The Regulations will strike a
balance in protecting the public health of Cambridge residents while promoting healthy and
safe food access. The Regulations set standards for safe and sanitary beekeeping operations
to prevent nuisances and/or public health hazards. The Regulations establish the CPHD as
the City agency responsible for reviewing permit applications and issuing permits,
conducting routine and complaint-based inspections, evaluating variance requests, and
resolving regulatory violations.
The Commissioner of Public Health will appoint a panel of three (3) CPHD staff to act as
hearing officers. The panel will consider each proposed new application for beekeeping. A
public hearing will be required for each initial permit application. The applicant, abutting
neighbors and property owners will be notified of the date for a public hearing that will be
held to discuss each new permit application.
The hearing panel will function similarly to other boards and commissions in the City that
function in a quasi-judicial manner to evaluate applications that may be a matter of
importance to the community, like the License Commission and the Historical Commission.
This type of structure is also similar to how other communities with boards of public health
review and determine these kinds of applications.
The Regulations are attached for the City Council’s information. I look forward to discussing
the Regulations with the City Council and answering any questions they may have.