I want to thank the committee for taking the time to study this issue regarding electronic logs and for including the Alberta Beekeepers Commission. We bring a unique problem to the ELD requirements.
As many of you may know, I am a beekeeper here in Stettler, Alberta. I pollinate hybrid canola seed and I produce a tremendous amount of honey. We run about 3,600 hives.
Previously, my colleagues have covered many important points in previous presentations. My objective is to bring out the unique aspects of hauling honey bees and how hauling honey bees has similar challenges and concerns under the current regulations but is also quite different in terms of risk to public safety, which is not currently contemplated in the enforcement of regulations and the use of ELDs.
First, we will reiterate that the requests and recommendations put forth today are in regard to interprovincial movement of bees only. Movement of bees within a province is governed under the provincial acts.
Honeybees, like all livestock, are subject to the Health of Animals Act. While it may be strange to contemplate animal welfare in terms of honeybees, transit from one location to another is very stressful for the bees. Our primary concerns are the health and viability of the honey bees, the safety of the drivers and vehicles and the safety of the public. Perhaps it's important to articulate the distinction that when trucks hauling bees are stopped, the bees become a risk to the public in that general area, particularly if they're stopped in the middle of the day and it's hot.
In general, honeybees are moved for the following reasons: We move hives to fill fields for contract pollination. We move bees when we're receiving packages from overseas from the port of entry to the beekeeper's place of residence. We move bees back to where the farm is located after wintering in warmer climates.
During transport, we take the welfare of our bees and public safety very seriously. We recognize that regulations are important; however, in these cases regulations can have a negative impact on livestock and public safety.
To expand on that, when we're moving bees, we plan where we're going to get fuel, when we're going to get fuel, when we're going to stop and take a leak, and where we're going to stop and have a rest.
The Alberta Beekeepers Commission recommends amending the regulations to bring them into alignment with the regulations in the United States, which allow a radius of 150 air miles from origin or destination in unforeseen circumstances. Recognizing that this would take some time in the short term, we, along with the other sectors presenting at this committee, recommend the creation of a guidance document to be provided to the drivers and enforcement officers to provide greater clarity so that doing the right thing when the plan falls apart is not injudiciously punished. We're not asking for an exemption, but for flexibility and discretion when it comes to enforcement of hours.
Beekeepers need to load their trucks in the evening or in the early morning, when all the foragers that are in the hive are back in the hive. You don't want to load up a pile of hives and leave 90% of your bees out flying around so that when they come back, they're like, “What happened to our house?”
Most moving of bees happens at night, but on long hauls the trucks need.... In Canada, we have very short nights and very long days, so on long hauls you need to run your truck during daylight hours. This brings a unique danger to the travelling public. These trips are carefully planned and orchestrated with contingencies, as nothing ever goes according to plan, right down to where and when to refuel and what speed to drive and where you are going to go to the washroom if you have to do that.
Due to economies of scale, many beekeepers are using larger and larger equipment to move hives, packaged bees, and honey across this country. The need to move bees stems from a dependence on apis mellifera for food security and to make the industry more resilient in the face of winter losses.
More often than not, honey bees are hauled by the producer on self-owned equipment. Because we have to do the long hauls and we need to have the bees in a timely fashion, a lot of commercial carriers don't want to carry bees, so it's the beekeepers themselves who are doing the moving.
The Alberta Beekeepers Commission recommends changing section 2(1)(a) of the regulation, where it says “Application”, to reflect the current realities in agriculture. While most agriculture producers are now transporting with tractor-trailer units, a significant number of producers in the Prairies have expanded to the point that they operate across jurisdictional boundaries. Section 2(1)(a), which restricts it to two-axle and three-axle trucks, is too narrow a definition. Most commercial producers are driving equipment that is way bigger than that.
Our sectors and drivers want assurance that a threat to bee health viability and public safety is deemed an emergency situation. In the regulations, there is no definition for “emergency”. The definition of “adverse conditions” that expanded beyond traffic accidents or weather also includes situations such as delays by road closures, accidents, smoke, or whatever the case might be—weather and other unforeseen circumstances. At this point, no definition exists of what constitutes an emergency. Unforeseen circumstances that occur on the road may, in the mind of a producer, be an emergency, but not to an enforcement officer. That's a problem.
Moving bees during daylight hours and warm temperatures is doable. Stopping to refuel for even two minutes or to go to the washroom is not. Stopping represents a real and present danger to everyone else on the road. Bees want to fly when the sun is shining. Stopping for even a few minutes when the sun is shining presents a clear and very real danger to the travelling public.
The changes requested by the Alberta Beekeepers Commission would have a positive impact for beekeepers across Canada, such as Manitoba beekeepers moving their beehives to B.C. for wintering and Ontario beekeepers moving hives into the Maritimes for blueberry pollination.
I have a couple of personal anecdotes of unforeseen events that really messed with moving bees. If there's time, I would like to be able to read them into the record.
Thanks very much for your time.