Read the full stored bill text
Wisconsin Legislature: AJR62: Joint Resolution Text
Skip navigation
Home
Documents
Senate
Assembly
Committees
Service Agencies
Docs
Options
Help
2025 Biennium
Statutes
Admin. Rules
Indices
Miscellaneous
Archives
Home
Bill, Rule, and Appointment Histories
Senators
Representatives
Committees
Text of Introduced Proposals
Amendment Text
Acts
Veto Messages
Enrolled Bills
Votes
Assembly and Senate Floor Calendars
Schedule of Committee Activities
Assembly and Senate Journals
Committee Records (ROCPs)
Legislative Rules
All Session-Related Documents
Subject Index to Acts
Subject Index to Legislation
Subject Index to Journals
Author Index to Legislation
Subject Index to Clearinghouse Rules
Miscellaneous Budget Documents
Executive Orders
Rulings of the Chair
Wisconsin Supreme Court Rules
Opinions of the Attorney General
Town Law Forms
Law
Districts
Session
Drafting Files
Feeds
Preferences
Show tree
Hide tree
Feedback
Help
Home
Senate Home
Senators
Committees
Session
Chief Clerk
Sergeant at Arms
Civics Education
Human Resources
Assembly Home
Representatives
Committees
Session
Chief Clerk
Sergeant at Arms
Human Resources
Schedule
Joint
Senate
Assembly
Study
Legislative Audit Bureau
Legislative Council
Legislative Fiscal Bureau
Legislative Human Resources Office
Legislative Reference Bureau
Legislative Technology Services Bureau
Menu
»
2025
»
Related Documents
»
Proposal Text
»
AJR62: Joint Resolution Text
Up
Up
2025 - 2026 LEGISLATURE
LRB-0555/1
MCP:skw
2025 ASSEMBLY JOINT RESOLUTION 62
May 30, 2025 - Introduced by Representatives
Snodgrass
,
Behnke
,
DeSanto
,
Miresse
,
Andraca
,
Arney
,
Billings
,
Clancy
,
Cruz
,
DeSmidt
,
Doyle
,
Fitzgerald
,
J. Jacobson
,
Joers
,
Johnson
,
Madison
,
Mayadev
,
Moore Omokunde
,
Palmeri
,
Rivera-Wagner
,
Roe
,
Sinicki
,
Stubbs
,
Subeck
,
Tenorio
,
Udell
and
Vining
, cosponsored by Senators
Pfaff
,
Habush Sinykin
,
Carpenter
,
Drake
,
Hesselbein
,
Larson
,
Ratcliff
,
Roys
,
Smith
,
Spreitzer
,
Wall
,
Wanggaard
and
Wirch
. Referred to Committee on Rules.
AJR62,1,1
1
Relating to:
designating June 2025 as Pollinator Awareness Month in Wisconsin.
AJR62,1,4
2
Whereas, bees, butterflies, and other pollinator species have a critically
3
important role in agriculture in the United States and help to produce a healthy
4
and affordable food supply and sustain ecosystem health; and
AJR62,1,7
5
Whereas, pollinators are responsible for the reproduction of 90 percent of the
6
world’s wild plant species by providing them with a healthy habitat rich in a variety
7
of native plants that are free or nearly free of pesticides; and
AJR62,1,10
8
Whereas, thanks to the more than 400 species of native pollinators in
9
Wisconsin, along with honeybees, we have very diverse dietary choices rich in
10
fruits, nuts, and vegetables; and
AJR62,1,13
11
Whereas, pollinators help to produce an estimated one out of every three bites
12
of food consumed in the United States and help reproduce at least 80 percent of
13
flowering plants; and
AJR62,2,3
14
Whereas, commodities produced in partnership with animal pollinators
1
generate $6.5 million in annual production, with domestic honeybees alone
2
pollinating an estimated $14.6 billion worth of crops in the United States each year
3
produced on more than two million acres; and
AJR62,2,5
4
Whereas, there are approximately 20,000 bee species in the world, 3,600 in the
5
United States, and 400 in Wisconsin; and
AJR62,2,8
6
Whereas, in Wisconsin, pollinator-dependent crops are harvested on over
7
100,800 acres, with apple, cranberry, cherry, green bean, and pickling cucumber
8
crops accounting for over $230 million in annual production; and
AJR62,2,11
9
Whereas, bees and other pollinators have experienced population declines due
10
to a combination of habitat loss, use of pesticides, and the spread of pests and
11
diseases; and
AJR62,2,13
12
Whereas, residents of Wisconsin have the opportunity to support bees and
13
other pollinators on both public and private land; and
AJR62,2,15
14
Whereas, the State of Wisconsin seeks to ensure a healthy environment and
15
create policies that sustain our environment; and
AJR62,2,20
16
Whereas, supporting native honeybees and other pollinators promotes
17
environmental awareness, sustainability, and increased interactions among
18
community stewards such as commercial and backyard beekeepers, farmers,
19
children, educators, Master Gardeners, plant nurseries, municipalities,
20
neighborhoods, and garden clubs and suppliers; and
AJR62,3,10
21
Whereas, the ideal pollinator-friendly habitat provides diverse and abundant
22
nectar and pollen from plants blooming in succession throughout the growing
23
season; provides undisturbed spaces such as leaf and brush piles, un-mowed fields
1
or field margins, and fallen trees and other dead wood for nesting and
2
overwintering for wild pollinators; provides water for drinking, nest-building,
3
cooling, diluting stored honey, and butterfly puddling; is pesticide-free or has
4
pesticide use carried out with the least ill effects possible on pollinators; is
5
comprised of mostly, if not all, native species of annual and perennial flowering
6
plants, grasses, vines, shrubs, and trees in landscapes because many wild
7
pollinators prefer or depend on the native plants with which they coadapted;
8
includes, where possible, designated pollinator zones in public spaces with signage
9
to educate the public and build awareness; and provides for safe and humane
10
removal of honeybees when required; and
AJR62,3,15
11
Whereas, No Mow May, a municipal effort encouraging homeowners to reduce
12
their mowing intensity to provide forage for native pollinators, began in Appleton in
13
2020 and has expanded throughout Fox Cities municipalities to include the
14
communities of Appleton, Fox Crossing, Oshkosh, De Pere, Fort Atkinson, and
15
Hortonville; and
AJR62,3,19
16
Whereas, a peer-reviewed scientific study of the effects of No Mow May and
17
the community-wide delay in early May lawn care, specifically mowing early growth
18
flowering plants, revealed that these efforts precipitated a five-fold increase in bee
19
species prevalence and a three-fold increase in bee species diversity; and
AJR62,3,22
20
Whereas, possible declines in the health and population of pollinators pose
21
what could be a significant threat to global food webs, the integrity of biodiversity,
22
and human health; and
AJR62,4,2
23
Whereas, it is in the strong economic interest of agricultural producers and
1
consumers in Wisconsin to help ensure a healthy and sustainable pollinator
2
population; now, therefore, be it
AJR62,4,4
3
Resolved by the
assembly
, the
senate
concurring, That
the Wisconsin
4
Legislature designates June 2025 as Pollinator Awareness Month in Wisconsin.
AJR62,4,5
5
(end)
Down
Down
/2025/related/proposals/ajr62
true
proposaltext
/2025/related/proposals/ajr62
proposaltext/2025/REG/AJR62
proposaltext/2025/REG/AJR62
section
true
Menu
»
2025
»
Related Documents
»
Proposal Text
»
AJR62: Joint Resolution Text
×
Details for
PDF view
Link
(Permanent link)
Bookmark this location
View toggle
Go to top of document
Search in this chapter
Search in this section
Search in this agency
Search in this chapter group
Search in this chapter
Search in this section
Cross references for section
Acts affecting this section
References to this
1970 Statutes Annotations
Appellate Court Citations
Administrative Code Index
Reference lines
Clear highlighting