[Adopted 8-19-1981 by Ord. No. 2584; amended in its entirety 7-15-2020 by Ord. No. 3080]
That the findings contained in the preamble of Ord. No. 3080 are hereby adopted as a part of this article.
As used in this article, the following words and terms shall have the meanings ascribed in this section unless the context of their usage indicates another usage.
APIARY
The assembly of one or more colonies of bees at a single location.
BEEKEEPER
A person who owns or has charge of one or more colonies of bees.
BEEKEEPING EQUIPMENT
Anything used in the operation of an apiary, such as hive bodies, supers, frames, top and bottom boards and extractors.
COLONY
An aggregate of bees consisting principally of workers, but having, when perfect, one queen and at times drones, brood, combs, and honey.
HIVE
The receptacle inhabited by a colony that is manufactured for that purpose.
HONEY BEE
All life stages of the common domestic honey bee, apis mellifera species.
LOT
A contiguous parcel of land under common ownership.
NUCLEUS COLONY
A small quantity of bees with a queen housed in a smaller than usual hive box designed for a particular purpose.
UNDEVELOPED PROPERTY
Any idle land that is not improved or actually in the process of being improved with residential, commercial, industrial, church, park, school or governmental facilities or other structures or improvements intended for human occupancy and the grounds maintained in associations therewith. The term shall be deemed to include property developed exclusively as a street or highway or property used for commercial agricultural purposes.
A. 
The purpose of this article is to establish certain requirements for beekeeping within the Township, to avoid issues which might otherwise be associated with beekeeping in populated areas.
B. 
Compliance with this article shall not be a defense to a proceeding alleging that a given colony constitutes a nuisance, but such compliance may be offered as evidence of the beekeeper's efforts to abate any proven nuisance.
C. 
Compliance with this article shall not be a defense to a proceeding alleging that a given colony violates applicable ordinances regarding public health, but such compliance may be offered as evidence of the beekeeper's compliance with acceptable standards of practice among hobby beekeepers in the State of Pennsylvania.
A. 
Honey bee colonies shall be kept in hives with removable frames, which shall be kept in sound and usable condition.
B. 
Each beekeeper shall ensure that a convenient source of water is available to the colony so long as colonies remain active outside of the hive.
C. 
Each beekeeper shall ensure that no wax comb or other material that might encourage robbing by other bees are left upon the grounds of the apiary lot. Such materials once removed from the site shall be handled and stored in sealed containers, or placed within a building or other insect-proof container.
D. 
Each beekeeper shall maintain his/her beekeeping equipment in good condition, including keeping the hives painted if they have been painted but are peeling or flaking, and securing unused equipment from weather, potential theft or vandalism and occupancy by swarms. It shall not be a defense to this article that a beekeeper's unused equipment attracted a swarm and that the beekeeper is not intentionally keeping bees.
A. 
Except as otherwise provided in this article, in each instance where a colony is kept less than 25 feet from a property line of the lot upon which the apiary is located, as measured from the nearest point on the hive to the property line, the beekeeper shall establish and maintain a flyway barrier at least six feet in height. The flyway barrier may consist of a wall, fence, dense vegetation or a combination there of, such that bees will fly over rather than through the material to reach the colony. If a flyway barrier of dense vegetation is used, the initial planting may be four feet in height, so long as the vegetation normally reaches six feet in height or higher. The flyway barrier must continue parallel to the apiary lot line for 10 feet in either direction from the hive, or contain the hive or hives in an enclosure at least six feet in height. A flyway barrier is not required if the property adjoining the apiary lot line 1) is undeveloped, or 2) is zoned agricultural, industrial or is outside of the Township limits, or 3) is a wildlife management area or naturalistic park land with no horse or foot trails located within 25 feet of the apiary lot line. The flyway buffer shall comply with any applicable regulations of fences under the Township's Zoning Ordinance and any other applicable ordinances.
B. 
No person is permitted to keep more than the following numbers of colonies on any lot within the Township, based upon the size or configuration of the apiary lot:
(1) 
One-half acre or smaller lot: two colonies.
(2) 
Larger than 1/2 acre but smaller than 3/4 acre lot: four colonies.
(3) 
Larger than 3/4 acre lot but smaller than one acre lot: six colonies.
(4) 
One acre but smaller than five acres: eight colonies.
(5) 
Larger than five acres: no restriction.
C. 
If the beekeeper serves the community by removing a swarm or swarms of honey bees from locations where they are not desired, the beekeeper shall not be considered in violation the portion of this article limiting the number of colonies if he temporarily houses the swarm on the apiary lot in compliance with the standards of practice set out in this article for no more than 30 days from the date acquired.
A designated Township official shall have the right to inspect any apiary for the purpose of ensuring compliance with this article between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. once annually upon prior notice to the owner of the apiary property, and more often upon complaint without prior notice.
Whoever violates or fails to comply with any of the provisions of this article or fails to correct, within the time set by the Chief Administrative Officer or his or her designee, the violations for which such person has been cited shall be fined not less than $100 nor more than $1,000. A separate offense shall be deemed committed each day during or on which a violation or noncompliance occurs or continues. The Township is also authorized to enforce the provisions of this article by equitable action for injunctive relief.