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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

State suspends license after bee kill

Eugene tree service’s actions evaluated; fine possible

Associated Press

EUGENE – The Oregon Department of Agriculture on Friday suspended the pesticide license of the tree care service responsible for spraying an insecticide blamed for killing 1,000 bees at a Eugene apartment complex.

Department spokesman Bruce Pokarney said Glass Tree Care and Spray Service of Eugene also may face a fine once the investigation is complete.

The company did not immediately return a phone call for comment on the action. But in an email to the Register-Guard newspaper before the suspension, company President J.P. Mischkot wrote, “We hold ourselves to the highest business and applicator standards, and take this matter very seriously.”

The dead bees were found after the company sprayed 17 linden trees in bloom earlier this week.

The department says the company should have known the pesticide had come under new restrictions after being linked to the deaths of thousands of bees after being sprayed on blooming linden trees at a parking lot in Wilsonville last year.

Investigators found dead bumblebees, mostly, and some dead honeybees. The department said the pesticide was sprayed to control aphids, which cause a sticky mess on vehicles in parking lots.

The pesticide contained the same chemicals that were identified in the Wilsonville parking lot bee kill a year ago, Pokarney said. About 50,000 bees died in that incident. The active ingredients are imidacloprid and dinotefuran, a class of insecticides known as neonicotinoids.

After that event, the state tightened label restrictions. The department acknowledged that older stockpiles of the pesticide would not have the new labeling restrictions on spraying linden trees in bloom, but given the amount of outreach the state did, the company should have known.

In February, the Eugene City Council banned the pesticides from city property, winning the city the “America’s most bee-friendly city” honor. The ban doesn’t apply to private property.