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Code · Florida · Title XXIX — Public Health · Chapter 388

388.011 Definitions.

283 words·~1 min read·/fl/title-xxix/chapter-388/388-011·

A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

As used in this chapter:
(1)“Arthropod” means those insects of public health or nuisance importance, including all mosquitoes, midges, sand flies, dog flies, yellow flies, and house flies.
(2)“Board of commissioners” means the governing body of any mosquito control program, and may include boards of county commissioners, city councils, municipalities, or other similar governing bodies when context so indicates.
(3)“County” means a political subdivision of the state administered by a board of county commissioners.
(4)“Department” means the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
(5)“District” means any mosquito control special district established in this state by law for the express purpose of controlling arthropods within boundaries of such districts.
(6)“Integrated arthropod control” means the implementation of arthropod control measures, including, but not limited to, the use of pesticides and biological control agents and source reduction, to control arthropods without an unreasonable adverse effect on the environment.
(7)“Land management agency” means the agency charged with managing publicly owned lands.
(8)“Local arthropod control agency” means the county, city, or district charged with arthropod control over publicly owned lands.
(9)“Nuisance” means a condition in which pestiferous arthropods occur in such numbers as to be annoying, obnoxious, or inimical to human comfort.
(10)“Program” means any governmental jurisdiction that conducts mosquito control, whether it be a special district, county, or municipality.
(11)“Source reduction” means the physical land or water management of arthropod breeding areas to reduce the area’s suitability for arthropod breeding.
(12)“Unreasonable adverse effects on the environment” means any unreasonable risk to humans or the environment, with due consideration of the economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of the use of any arthropod control measure.
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