Structural Pest Control Companies are registered and regulated by the Structural Pest Control Board, and apply pesticides which are registered and approved for use by the Department of Pesticide Regulation and the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
In California, landlords generally bear the responsibility for pest control to maintain habitable living conditions. However, tenants must also actively participate in pest prevention.
EPA and the states (usually that state's agriculture office) register or license pesticides for use in the United States. Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) authorizes EPA to register pesticides.
The California Department of Pesticide Regulation works closely with each county's Department of Agriculture, Weights & Measures (AWM), who are the primary local enforcement agents for pesticide laws and regulations.
A division of the California Department of Consumer Affairs, SPCB licenses and regulates pest control operators in the state of California. Use this site to verify licenses of pest control professionals and to find consumer information about pest control.
No student shall be removed, suspended, or expelled unless the conduct for which the student is disciplined is related to college activity or college attendance.
Water is protected for the use and benefit of all Californians. California's waters cannot be owned by individuals, groups, businesses, or governmental agencies. But permits, licenses, and registrations give individuals and others the right to beneficially use reasonable amounts of water.
(CN) — Environmental groups filed a lawsuit against the California Department of Water Resources Wednesday, claiming that the California State Water Project will harm endangered and threatened fish and the environment in the Sacramento River and San Joaquin River watersheds, as well as the San Francisco Bay-Delta ...
Bezerra's California Water Law (Hornbook Series)
Elderly Parole Eligible Date (EPED) – the date determinately and indeterminately-sentenced offenders are eligible for a parole hearing once they have served 25 years of incarceration and have reached the age of 60, based on the Three-Judge Panel's 2014 court order; offenders sentenced to life without the possibility of ...