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File #: 82212    Version: 1 Name: Reaffirming the City of Madison's Commitment to Supporting Pollinator Health and Authorizing the City of Madison to Take the Mayors Monarch Pledge.
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 2/22/2024 In control: BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS
On agenda: 3/5/2024 Final action: 3/5/2024
Enactment date: 3/13/2024 Enactment #: RES-24-00120
Title: Reaffirming the City of Madison's Commitment to Supporting Pollinator Health and Authorizing the City of Madison to Take the Mayors Monarch Pledge.
Sponsors: Yannette Figueroa Cole, Marsha A. Rummel, Amani Latimer Burris
Date Ver.Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsWatch
3/5/20241 COMMON COUNCIL Adopt unanimously under suspension of MGO 2.055  Action details Meeting details Not available
2/22/20241 Parks Division RECOMMEND TO COUNCIL TO ADOPT UNDER SUSPENSION OF MGO 2.055  Action details Meeting details Not available
Fiscal Note
The proposed resolution proclaims the City of Madison Board of Park Commissioners' commitment to supporting pollinator health throughout the parks system. The City of Madison is a certified Bee City and the Madison Common Council has authorized the City of Madison to take the Mayor's Monarch Pledge to support pollinator health. The annual cost to participate in these organizations is $500 each and is included in the Parks Division's 2024 Operating Budget. No additional appropriation is required.

Title
Reaffirming the City of Madison's Commitment to Supporting Pollinator Health and Authorizing the City of Madison to Take the Mayors Monarch Pledge.

Body
WHEREAS, in 2017, the City of Madison became a certified Bee City per the requirements outlined by BEE CITY USA®; and,

WHEREAS, pollinator-friendly communities can benefit local and regional economies through healthier ecosystems, increased vegetable and fruit crop yields, and increased demand for pollinator-friendly plant materials from local nurseries and growers; and,

WHEREAS, the loss of pollinators, including honey bees, native bees, bats, birds, and butterflies, across the country have been severe over the past few decades; and,

WHEREAS, bees and other pollinators have experienced population declines due to a combination of habitat loss, use of pesticides, and the spread of pests and diseases; and,

WHERAS, Garden Scouts, a volunteer group at Olbrich Botanical Gardens, surveys the outdoors gardens for pollinators and records sightings in iNaturalist; and

WHEREAS, the rusty patched bumblebee - a resident species at Olbrich Botanical Gardens and once commonly seen in 28 states, including Wisconsin, as recently as the 1990’s - has become the first bumblebee species to be listed as endangered under federal law; and,

WHEREAS, in 2014, the Madison Common Council passed RES-14-00747 directing the Madison Food Policy Council to initiate a Pollinator Protection Task Force to study pollinator hea...

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