[Adopted 5-11-2023 by Ord. No. 2023-01]
It is recognized that honey bees are beneficial to humankind and to Pennsylvania by providing both home garden and agricultural pollination services as well as furnishing honey, beeswax, and other useful products. The purpose of this article is to establish requirements for beekeeping within the Township.
As used in this article, the following words and terms shall have the meanings ascribed in this section unless the context of their usage clearly indicates another meaning.
APIARY
Any place where bees are kept by a beekeeper.
AFRICANIZED HONEY BEE
Hybrids of the African honey bee (Apis mellifera scutellate) with various European Honey bees that are aggressive compared to the European subspecies.
BEE
Any stage of honey bee (Apis mellifera) or other species of the genus Apis.
BEE DISEASE
Disease such as American or European foulbrood, sac brood, bee paralysis, or other disease or abnormal condition of eggs larval, pupal, or adult stages of the honey bee, or other actionable disease as determined by the Department of Agriculture.
BEEKEEPER
A person who owns or has charge of one or more colonies of honey bees. COLONY
An aggregate of honey bees consisting of workers, drones, and a queen.
DEPARTMENT
Refers to the Springettsbury Township Department of Community Development.
FLYWAY BARRIER
A barrier composed of dense vegetation or man-made materials which directs bees quickly into the sky upon exiting the hive.
HIVE/ PRODUCTION HIVE
Any frame hive, box hive, box, barrel, log, gum, skep, or other receptacle or container, natural or artificial, or any part thereof, which may be used or employed by a beekeeper as a domicile for bees which is expected to establish a permanent nest.
HONEY BEE
All life stages of the common domestic honey bee, Apis mellifera species ("European" honey bee).
NUCLEUS COLONY
Any frame hive, box hive, box, barrel, log, gum, skep, or other receptacle or container, natural or artificial, or any part thereof, which may be used or employed by a beekeeper as a domicile for bees which is expected to establish a temporary nest, used to stem overwinter losses, mate or rear new queens, split production hives to prevent swarming, create a colony for sale, or other similar purposes not to exceed one standard nine-and-five-eighths-inch depth, ten-frame hive body with no attached supers.
TOWNSHIP
Springettsbury Township, County of York, Pennsylvania.
A. 
Registration, certification and permits.
(1) 
Registration with Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.
(a) 
No beekeeper may own or maintain an apiary within the Township without first registering and providing to the Township a current permit for all apiaries with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture Bureau of Plant Industry as required by the Pennsylvania Bee Law, 3 Pa.C.S.A. § 2101 et seq., as amended.
(b) 
A beekeeper owning or maintaining an apiary in the Township shall promptly notify the Township Department of Community Development in writing, without unnecessary delay, and in no event longer than 72 hours, if the Department revokes said apiary registration or if said registration has lapsed.
(2) 
Registration with the Township.
(a) 
No beekeeper shall own or maintain an apiary within the Township without first obtaining a registration permit from the Township Department of Community Development.
(b) 
An application for a one-time registration permit shall be made in writing and upon a supplied form or in such format as established by the Township and shall grant explicit permission to the Township or its designees to enter upon the property upon which the apiary is to be located, with notice, to determine compliance with this article.
(c) 
The application shall be accompanied by a plot plan that includes the size of the lot, the location of and number of hives, the location of the water source, the distance of the hives from any property lines, and, if required, the location of any flyway barriers. The issuance of a permit shall not obviate the necessity for compliance with all other Township ordinances.
B. 
Mandated education. The application for a Township permit shall also be accompanied by written evidence that the applicant has completed a beekeeping educational course/program with a minimum of eight hours of instructions or has a letter of validation from an officer of the PA State Beekeepers Association, an officer of a local bee club or master beekeeper.
C. 
Compliance with best management practices. The application for a Township permit shall also be accompanied by a signed "Voluntary Best Management Practices for Maintaining European Honey Bee Colonies in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania" prepared by the Pennsylvania Apiary Advisory Board. Failure to comply with the written Best Management Practices shall be grounds for the Township Code Enforcement Officer to revoke the permit of the Township for the beekeeper to maintain apiaries.
D. 
Fee. The application for a registration permit shall be accompanied by fee payable to the Township as set forth in the Township fee schedule.
E. 
Permission of owner. Beekeepers that wish to own or maintain an apiary on property that they do not own must include written permission from the property owner or landlord that explicitly indicates that the beekeeper has permission to own or maintain an apiary on the subject property. The property owner shall also grant written permission to the Township to enter upon the property for the purpose of determining compliance with this article. Such written permission shall be supplied to the Township as part of the beekeeping registration application.
F. 
Permit decision. Within 15 days of receipt of an application, the Department shall notify the applicant of a decision on the application and, if denied, the reasons therefor.
G. 
Transfer of permit prohibited. Permits issued hereunder are not transferable and no person holding a permit shall transfer the permit to another person.
Placement of any apiary shall conform to the following regulations to minimize and eliminate any possible concerns to adjoining property:
A. 
Apiary location.
(1) 
Location of an apiary must comply with the following criteria:
(a) 
An apiary shall not be located within 10 feet of any side or rear property line unless a flyway barrier is in place or the hive(s) are located at least 10 feet above grade.
(b) 
An apiary shall not be located within 50 feet of a preexisting swimming pool or a preexisting kenneled animal.
(c) 
An apiary is not permitted within 10 feet of any buildings located on adjacent properties.
(d) 
An apiary located in the front yard shall be at least 30 feet from the street right of way.
(e) 
Hives shall not be located within 10 feet of a primary residential entranceway.
B. 
Hive density.
(1) 
It shall be unlawful to keep more than the following number of production hives on any tract within the Township, based upon the size or configuration of the tract on which the apiary is situated:
(a) 
One-quarter acre (10,890 square feet) or less tract size: four production hives;
(b) 
More than 1/4 acre but less than 1/2 acre (21,780 square feet) tract size: eight production hives;
(c) 
More than 1/2 acre but less than one acre (43,560 square feet) tract size: 10 production hives;
(d) 
One acre or larger tract size: 15 production hives; and
(e) 
Regardless of tract size, where all hives are situated at least 200 feet in any direction from all property lines of the tract on which the apiary is situated, there shall be no limit to the number of production hives.
(2) 
Exceptions. A beekeeper may exceed these regulations under the following conditions:
(a) 
For each allowed production hive, a single nucleus colony may be kept year round to allow a beekeeper to mitigate winter bee losses.
(b) 
Apiaries that are legally preexisting prior to enactment of this article shall not be subject to the limitations of this Section and shall not exceed the number of hives active at the time of the ordinance and shall be confirmed by the preexisting apiary registration of the location as reported by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.
A. 
All beekeepers shall comply with rules and regulations set forth by the Pennsylvania Bee Law, 3 Pa.C.S.A. § 2101 et seq., as amended.
B. 
All beekeepers, shall, to the best of their ability, maintain their colonies per the "Voluntary Best Management Practices for Maintaining European Honey Bee Colonies in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania," as provided and amended by the Pennsylvania Apiary Advisory Board.
C. 
To the extent possible, hive entrances shall face away from the closest neighboring property and in such a direction that the bees fly across the beekeeper's property at sufficient distance to gain a height of at least the six feet at the property line. The use of barriers may be employed to redirect the bees flight pathway and establish bee flight pathways above six feet. Should the flight path not be able to be obtained as described above, then a flyway barrier shall be placed at least six feet in height, shall be placed along side of the hive(s) that contains the entrance to the hive(s), shall be located within five feet of the hive(s) and shall extend at least two feet on either side of the hive(s). A flyway barrier shall consist. of a fence, vegetation, hedge, or combination thereof. No flyway barrier is required for hive(s) that are located greater than 10 feet from property lines or on porches, balconies or roof tops that are at least 10 feet above grade except on adjacent properties where such porch, balcony or roof is located less than 10 feet from a property line.
D. 
A flyway barrier is not required if the property adjoining the apiary lot line is:
(1) 
Undeveloped;
(2) 
Zoned agricultural, industrial or is outside Township limits; or
(3) 
State game lands, a state park, national forest, state forest, natural park, or conservation area and has no preexisting human or horse trails located within 25 feet of the property line.
E. 
A supply of fresh water shall be maintained in a location readily accessible to all bee colonies on the site throughout the day to prevent bees from congregating at neighboring swimming pools or other sources of water on nearby properties between April 1 and November 1.
F. 
All beekeepers shall ensure that no bee comb or other materials that attract honey bees are left upon the ground of the apiary site. Upon removal from the apiary, all such materials shall be properly maintained in a sealed container or placed within a building or other bee-proof enclosure, so long as bees are kept on the property.
A. 
If an inspection is required as a result of a nuisance complaint, the designated Township Code Enforcement Officer will inspect the property only and not the bee hives. Should an internal hive inspection be needed, the state or a local beekeeping organization shall be contacted by the Township to assist in understanding how the complaint arose and to what extent it is caused by the honey bees or beekeeper. A personal notice of 48 hours shall be given to the beekeeper prior to any inspection by telephone, acknowledged email, or by posting at a conspicuous location on the premises.
B. 
The Township Code Enforcement Officer and such other person(s) designated by that Officer shall have the authority to enter upon the land where any beekeeping services and/or beekeeping operations are being conducted and to inspect any apiary to ensure compliance with this article and to conduct any other inspections authorized under this article.
A. 
The Township Code Enforcement Officer or his designee shall have authority to enforce this article. Upon determining that there exists any violation of this article, the Code Enforcement Officer shall first issue and serve by first-class mail upon the violator a notice of violation, which notice shall be in writing, specify the violation, the steps necessary to correct the violation, and the specified time from the date of the notice to correct the violation. Failure to correct the violation within the specified time frame shall authorize the Code Enforcement Official to institute and prosecute summary enforcement proceedings before a Magisterial District Judge.
B. 
The Township reserves the right to institute appropriate actions at law or in equity to restrain, correct or abate violations under this article and to impose against the violator the costs for removal of hives or to abate a violation, including the filing of a municipal claim.
Any person who violates any provision of this article shall, upon conviction in a summary proceeding, be fined not less than $200 nor more than $1,000, and shall pay the costs of prosecution or, in default of payment, undergo imprisonment pursuant to the Rules of Criminal Procedure for failure to pay a fine. A violation of each section of this article shall be deemed a separate violation and each day during which a violation continues shall constitute a separate offense.