File #: 22-1365    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Informational Report Status: Passed
File created: 10/7/2022 In control: Agricultural Commissioner
On agenda: 10/18/2022 Final action: 10/18/2022
Title: Approval of Cooperative Agreement No. 22-0998-003-SF Sudden Oak Mortality Regulatory Program Contract in the Amount of $17,609.94
Attachments: 1. Staff Report, 2. Cooperative Agreement 22-0998-003-SF.pdf, 3. Executed COOP Agreement 22-0998-003-SF.pdf

To: Board of Supervisors

From: Agricultural Commissioner

Agenda Section: Consent

SUBJECT:
title
Approval of Cooperative Agreement No. 22-0998-003-SF Sudden Oak Mortality Regulatory Program Contract in the Amount of $17,609.94
end

RECOMMENDATION(S):
Recommendation
That the Board of Supervisors:
1. Approve Cooperative Agreement No. 22-0998-003-SF known as the Sudden Oak Mortality Regulatory Program contract with the California Department of Food and Agriculture in the amount of $17,609.94;
2. Authorize the Chair to sign the original agreement, and direct the Clerk of the Board to return the signed agreement to the Agricultural Commissioner's Office for further processing; and
3. Grant a waiver from the provisions of the Nuclear Free Ordinance.

Body
SOURCE OF FUNDING:
California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) (1100-261-518020)

DISCUSSION:
The request for a waiver from the provisions of the Nuclear Free Ordinance is requested since the State of California will not modify its cooperative agreements to accommodate local ordinances. The Agricultural Commissioner's Office receives annual subventions from CDFA to offset the local costs of enforcing certain state-mandated programs. Cooperative Agreement No. 22-0998-003-SF provides funding to Humboldt County for the Sudden Oak Mortality Regulatory Program.

Phytophthora ramorum, the pathogen that causes the plant disease known as Sudden Oak Death (SOD), has caused widespread die-off of several native tree species (Tan Oak, Coast Live Oak and Black Oak) in California and Oregon since it was first identified in the mid-1990s. Since the discovery of an SOD infestation in the Redway area in 2002, Humboldt County has been subject to federal and state quarantine restrictions on plants and plant parts covered by the quarantine (California Code of Regulations, Division 4, Subchapter 6, Section 3700, & Code of Federal Regulations Section 301.92). Numerous host plants for SOD are important to the wo...

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