California Farm Bureau Federation Friday Review
JUNE 15, 2007
The CFBF Board voted to oppose the recently amended version of AB
771 (Kevin De Leon, D-Los Angeles) on Wednesday. This bill allows
growers of seedless mandarin varieties in Madera, Fresno, Kern,
and Tulare counties to form two-mile buffer zones around their
properties for the 2008 season. Honey bees would be banned from
these buffer zones for the bloom period of the seedless citrus
trees. The bill also requires the California Department of Food
and Agriculture to develop regulations by 2009 to control honey
bees in areas with seedless citrus plantings. The board
deliberated extensively on the repercussions of this legislation
and ultimately determined that the precedent setting nature of
creating buffer zones beyond one’s own property has negative
implications for private property rights. The bill is set for a
hearing before the Senate Agriculture Committee on Tuesday. CFBF
has communicated its opposition to the bill to the members of the
committee and will present testimony at next week’s hearing.
SB 180 (Carole Migden, D-San Francisco), which would circumvent
the secret ballot election process under the Agriculture Labor
Relations Act, has passed its first legislative test in the
Assembly with a straight partisan vote in the Labor and Employment
Committee. It now goes to the Assembly Appropriations Committee
before going to the Assembly Floor.
Farm Bureau, along with other employer groups, and the
Schwarzenegger Administration, continue to oppose SB180 on the
basis that it undermines the right of employees to cast a secret
ballot election for union representation by substituting it with a
signature card from a union organizer.
Farm Bureau continues to urge County Farm Bureaus and their
members to write Assembly Members urging a “NO” vote on SB180 –
Please refer to the “Farm Team Alert” for a sample letter or click
here. |