Search Results | Clear Search | Previous (in doc) | Next (in doc) | Prev Doc | Next Doc
B.C. Reg. 604/2004
M422/2004 and M423/2004
Deposited December 29, 2004
effective December 31, 2004
This consolidation is current to November 26, 2024.
Link to consolidated regulation (PDF)
Link to Point in Time

Integrated Pest Management Act

Integrated Pest Management Regulation

[Last amended March 5, 2024 by B.C. Reg. 41/2024]

Contents
1Definitions
Part 1 — Minister's Regulation
Division 1 — Interpretation
2Classes of pesticides
2.1Administrator may designate "single entity"
3Exclusions from the definition of "pesticide"
4Definition of "service"
Division 2 — Licences
5Pesticide uses requiring a licence
6Exceptions from licensing requirement
6.1Exemption from licensing for certain uses
7Licence requirement exemptions
8Licence criteria
9Public consultation requirements — licensee
10Public notification requirements — licensee
11Different notification requirements — Public Health Act
12Exemptions from public notification requirements
13Licence fees
Division 3 — Certificates
14Pesticide classes and pesticide uses requiring a certificate
15Pesticides prescribed in relation to certified individuals
16Certificate criteria
17Certificate fees
Division 4 — Permits
18Pesticides and pesticide uses requiring a permit
19Permit criteria
20Public consultation requirements — permits
21Exemptions from public consultation requirement
22Public notification requirement — permits
23Permit fees
Division 5 — Pesticide Use Notices — Confirmations
24Pesticide classes and pesticide uses requiring a confirmation
25Confirmation holder exemptions
26Confirmation criteria
27Public consultation requirements — confirmations
28Public notification requirement — confirmations
29Confirmation fees
30Fee for pest management plan copy
Division 6 — General Requirements — Use, Containment, Transport, Storage and Sale of a Pesticide
31Requirement to notify fire department
32Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder
33Containment, storage, transportation, disposal and use of pesticides
Division 6.1 — Use of Pesticides for Purposes of Agricultural Operations
33.1Use requirements — agricultural operations
Division 7 — Records and Reporting Requirements
34Records of sale and annual report — vendor licensee
35Records of use — licensee
36Records of use — permit holder
37Records of use — confirmation holder
38Public consultation records
39Annual use report — licensee, permit holder and confirmation holder
40Licensee — notice of intent to treat public land or aerially or by fumigation
41Licensee — annual notice of intent to treat more than 20 ha private forest land
42Confirmation holder — annual notice of intent to treat
Part 2 — Administrator's Regulation
Division 1 — Interpretation
43Classification of pesticides
Division 2 — Licences
44Category of licence required
45Licence applications
46Duties of certified individuals in relation to licensee
47Licence terms and conditions
48Vendor licence terms and conditions
49User service and user non-service licence terms and conditions
Division 3 — Certificates
50Category of certificate required
51Certificate applications
52Certificate examinations
53Certificate renewal requirements
54Certificate terms and conditions
54.1Pesticide dispenser certificate terms and conditions
54.2Residential applicator certificate terms and conditions
Division 4 — Permits
55Category of permit required
56Permit applications
57Permit terms and conditions
Division 5 — Confirmations
58Pest management plans
59Pesticide use notice requirements
Division 5.1 — Assistant Applicators
59.1Prohibited activities
59.2Training and training records
59.3Supervision requirements
Division 6 — Public Consultations and Public Notifications
60Public consultation — permit application
61Public consultation — pest management plan
62Public consultations — licensees in respect of forest land
63Treatment notice — form and content
64Public notification requirement — form and content
Division 7 — Standards for Use, Containment, Transport, Storage or Sale of Pesticide
65Pesticide container and labelling standards
66Pesticide storage
67Pesticide storage and signage requirements — vendor licensee
68Licensee use of pesticide — integrated pest management
69Confirmation holder use of pesticide — integrated pest management
70Use requirements — all users
71Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder
72Use requirements — confirmation holder
73Use requirements for pesticide-free zone — confirmation holder and licensee
74Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to specific uses
75Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to forestry uses
76Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to railway vegetation management
77Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to noxious weed and invasive plant management
78Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to mosquito management
79Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to the use of wood preservatives on poles
80Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder using bacterial pesticide
81Use requirements — licensee in relation to rodenticide use
82Use requirements — licensee in relation to fumigant gas
Division 8 — Records
83Keeping records
Schedule 1
Schedule 2
Schedule 3
Schedule 4
Schedule 5
Schedule 6

Definitions

1   In this regulation:

"Act" means the Integrated Pest Management Act;

"agriculture" has the same meaning as "qualifying agricultural use" in the Classification of Land as a Farm Regulation, but does not include aquaculture, or aquacultural activities, carried on in a body of water;

"assistant applicator" means an individual who does not hold a certificate required under section 50 [category of certificate required], but uses a pesticide under the supervision of a certificate holder;

"bacterial pesticide" means a pesticide that is or contains bacteria as the active ingredient;

"body of water" does not include a human-made, self-contained body of or structure for water;

"business day" means a day other than Saturday or Sunday or another holiday;

"category of essential service location" means a category set out in column 2 of the table in Schedule 6;

"classified wetland" means a wetland in any of classes W1 to W5 under the Forest Planning and Practices Regulation;

"commercial pesticide" means a pesticide described in section 2 (c) [classes of pesticides];

"Crown land" means land, or an interest in land, vested in the government;

"domestic pesticide" means a pesticide described in section 2 (d) [classes of pesticides];

"essential service location" means a location described in column 3 of the table in Schedule 6;

"excluded pesticide" means a pesticide described in section 2 (e) [classes of pesticides] and set out in Schedule 2;

"federal Act" means the Pest Control Products Act (Canada);

"government corporation" has the same meaning as in the Financial Administration Act;

"highway" has the same meaning as in the Transportation Act;

"industrial site" means an area of land on which is located industrial infrastructure and ancillary works, including, without limiting this,

(a) facilities for manufacturing or processing,

(b) mines, well sites, equipment yards and other facilities for or ancillary to energy production or resource extraction,

(c) highways, transmission lines, pipelines, railways, associated rights of way and other facilities for storing or distributing products, energy or resources,

(d) incinerators, landfills, sewage treatment plants and other facilities for the disposal or treatment of waste,

(e) dams, dikes and reservoirs, and

(f) facilities operated as public airports,

but does not include landscaped land;

"injury threshold" means the point at which the abundance of pests and the damage they are causing or are likely to cause indicates that pest control is necessary or desirable;

"invasive plant" means a prescribed species of invasive plant listed under the Invasive Plants Regulation;

"land" includes foreshore, bodies of water on land and land covered by water;

"landscape" means an area of land that has been improved by planting with ornamental plants or is maintained for ornamental purposes;

"multi-residence building" means a building that contains two or more separate units occupied as living accommodation and includes, without limiting this, apartment buildings, hotels, and strata titled buildings that contain two or more separate units occupied as living accommodation;

"multi-residence property" means a parcel of land on which is located two or more separate units occupied as living accommodation, whether the units are in the same building or are detached;

"no-treatment zone" means an area of land that must not be treated with pesticide;

"noxious weed" has the same meaning as under the Weed Control Act;

"owner", in relation to land, includes a person who has a right of exclusive possession of the land;

"permit-restricted pesticide" means a pesticide described in section 2 (a) [classes of pesticides] and set out in Schedule 1;

"pesticide-free zone" means an area of land that

(a) must not be treated with pesticide, and

(b) must be protected from pesticide moving onto it;

"pipeline" means

(a) a pipe, or a system or arrangement of pipes, by which petroleum, natural gas, or water used or obtained in drilling for, or in the production of, petroleum or natural gas is conveyed, and

(b) property that is used for, with or incidental to the operation of the pipe or system or arrangement of pipes,

but does not include a pipe or system or arrangement of pipes used to distribute natural gas in a community to ultimate consumers;

"private land" includes Crown land in relation to which the government has granted to a person a right of exclusive possession for agricultural or other farming purpose, but does not include bodies of water;

"public land" means

(a) Crown land that is not private land,

(b) bodies of water, and

(c) land that is owned or leased for its own purposes by

(i) a local authority described in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d) or (e) of the definition of that term in the Schedule to the Community Charter,

(ii) a university, or an institution, as defined in section 1 of the College and Institute Act,

(iii) a board, or a francophone education authority, as defined in section 1 (1) of the School Act,

(iv) a regional hospital district board, or a regional hospital district, as defined in section 1 of the Hospital District Act, and

(v) a government corporation as defined in section 1 of the Financial Administration Act;

"restricted pesticide" means a pesticide described in section 2 (b) [classes of pesticides];

"right of way" does not include a landscaped area;

"second-generation anticoagulant rodenticide" or "SGAR" means a pesticide that contains any of the following active ingredients:

(a) brodifacoum;

(b) bromadiolone;

(c) difethialone;

"selective application" means the application of a pesticide to individual plants so that the vegetation between the individual plants is not treated;

"single entity", in relation to the management of land, means

(a) one or more persons, each of whom is registered as a joint tenant or a tenant in common in relation to the land,

(b) an individual, partnership, corporation or agency,

(c) a ministry of the government,

(d) a government corporation, or

(e) a program of a ministry of the government, or a division or other part of a government corporation, designated under section 2.1;

"stream" has the same meaning as in the Forest Planning and Practices Regulation;

"treatment area", in relation to a pesticide use, means the area of land to which pesticide is applied or is intended to be applied;

"treatment location", in relation to a pesticide use, means the treatment area and the pesticide-free zones or no-treatment zones required under this regulation in relation to the use;

"treatment site", in relation to the use or proposed use of an SGAR in a treatment area, includes any additional areas in the vicinity of the treatment area where the SGAR is used or is intended to be used for the management of rodents;

"veterinarian" means an individual who is authorized to practise veterinary medicine under the Veterinarians Act;

"wetland" has the same meaning as in the Forest Planning and Practices Regulation.

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 1; 267/2006, s. 1; 234/2015, s. 1; 235/2015, s. 1; 264/2022, App., s. 1.]

Part 1 — Minister's Regulation

Division 1 — Interpretation

Classes of pesticides

2   The following classes of pesticides are established:

(a) permit-restricted pesticides, being those pesticides assigned to this class under section 43 (1) [classification of pesticides] because the administrator considers that the risk of unreasonable adverse effects from their use should be evaluated for each proposed use;

(b) restricted pesticides, being those pesticides that

(i) are required under the federal Act to be labelled with the product class designation "RESTRICTED", and

(ii) are not permit-restricted pesticides or excluded pesticides;

(c) commercial pesticides, being those pesticides that

(i) are required under the federal Act to bear a label indicating their product class designation acceptable under that Act in relation to their general uses in commercial activities that are specified on the label as "commercial", "industrial", "agricultural" or another commercial activity, and

(ii) are not permit-restricted pesticides or excluded pesticides;

(d) domestic pesticides, being those pesticides

(i) that

(A) are required under the federal Act to be labelled with the product class designation "DOMESTIC", and

(B) are not permit-restricted pesticides or excluded pesticides, or

(ii) that are contained in a fertilizer registered under the Fertilizers Act (Canada);

(e) excluded pesticides, being those pesticides assigned to this class under section 43 (2) [classification of pesticides] because the administrator considers that excluding them from compliance with the requirements imposed on a licensee, permit holder or confirmation holder under the Act will not increase the risk of unreasonable adverse effects from their use.

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 2; 234/2015, s. 2.]

Administrator may designate "single entity"

2.1   (1) On request, the administrator may designate a program of a ministry of the government as a single entity for the purposes of this regulation if satisfied that the program's pesticide use is operationally distinct from, or otherwise unrelated to, other pesticide uses of the ministry.

(2) On request, the administrator may designate a division or other part of a government corporation as a single entity for the purposes of this regulation if satisfied that the pesticide uses of the division or part are operationally distinct from, or otherwise unrelated to, other pesticide uses of the corporation.

(3) A designation under subsection (1) or (2) must be in writing.

[en. B.C. Reg. 258/2006, s. 3.]

Exclusions from the definition of "pesticide"

3   The following micro-organisms, materials, substances and control products are excluded from the definition of "pesticide" in section 1 of the Act:

(a) an article, instrument, apparatus, contrivance or gadget that, by itself or in conjunction with another control product, is used as a means to control pests directly or indirectly;

(b) a control product that is

(i) used to control arthropods on or in humans, livestock or domestic animals, and

(ii) administered internally by mouth or injection;

(c) a control product that is used to destroy, inactivate or reduce viruses, bacteria or other micro-organisms for the purposes of treating, mitigating or preventing a disease in humans or animals;

(d) a control product that is used to destroy, inactivate or reduce mould, mildew or odours, except when used as a wood preservative.

[am. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 3.]

Definition of "service"

4   In the Act and this regulation, "service", in relation to a pesticide, means the use of the pesticide by a person, or an employee or contractor of the person, under a contract for service between the person and the owner or manager of the land on which the pesticide is to be used.

[am. B.C. Reg. 258/2006, s. 4.]

Division 2 — Licences

Pesticide uses requiring a licence

5   (1) Except as provided in subsection (2), the following uses of a pesticide are prescribed for the purpose of section 4 (1) (b) of the Act:

(a) the management of vegetation or preservation of wood on not more than 20 ha per year of public or private land that is

(i) used for a railway right of way, yard or associated signal or communication facility, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(b) the management of vegetation on not more than 20 ha per year of public or private land that is

(i) used for

(A) a highway,

(B) a facility or right of way for a public utility as defined in the Utilities Commission Act,

(C) a facility or right of way for the delivery of water, not including a pipe or a system or arrangement of pipes to distribute water in a community to ultimate consumers, or

(D) a pipeline and associated facilities, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(c) the management of mosquitoes, using a bacterial pesticide, on not more than 1 ha per year of public or private land that is

(i) a body of water, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(c.1) the management of mosquitoes, using a bacterial pesticide or methoprene, in a storm water catch basin;

(d) to preserve up to 1 000 wooden poles per year on public or private land that is

(i) used for

(A) a highway, or

(B) a facility or right of way for a public utility as defined in the Utilities Commission Act, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(e) effective January 7, 2007, the management of pests inside rooms used as living accommodation, or in areas to which more than one occupier has access, in a multi-residence building on private land and containing at least 4 separate units;

(f) effective January 7, 2007, the management of pests on outdoor areas, to which more than one occupier has access, of a multi-residence property on private land and containing at least 4 separate units;

(g) the management of forest pests on private land used for timber production, including private roads, roadsides and other areas ancillary to the timber production;

(h) the management of pests of structures and pests of goods on public land;

(i) the management of pests of gardens and pests of landscaping, including the management of weeds on parking lots, driveways and hard-surfaced pathways, including sidewalks, on public or private land;

(j) the management of forest pests on not more than 20 ha per year of public land that is

(i) used for timber production or forested, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(k) the management of vegetation on not more than 20 ha per year of public land that is

(i) used for an industrial site, other than an industrial site described in paragraph (a) (i) or (b) (i), and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(l) the management of noxious weeds or invasive plants on not more than 50 ha per year of public land managed by a single entity;

(m) the management of plant roots in sewers and drain pipes on public land;

(n) the use of an SGAR on public or private land for the management of rodents.

(2) The use of a pesticide other than an SGAR for the management of pests inside rooms used as living accommodation is not prescribed under subsection (1) if an occupier of the living accommodations uses the pesticide only within the occupier's own living accommodations.

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 5; 426/2008, s. 1; 234/2015, s. 4; 18/2022, ss. 1 and 2; 264/2022, App., s. 2.]

Exceptions from licensing requirement

6   (1) A licence under section 4 of the Act is not required by a person who

(a) sells, uses or provides a service using an excluded pesticide,

(a.1) is the owner of private land and uses, on that land, a pesticide set out in Schedule 5 of this regulation,

(b) uses or sells a pesticide only as an employee or contractor of a licensee,

(c) is the owner of land and uses a pesticide only on goods brought to the land by the owner,

(d) under a contract for paving services, uses a pesticide to manage vegetation on land before paving it,

(e) having a possessory interest in agricultural land in relation to which another person has a surface lease, or another right of entry, for purposes of a pipeline or an oil or gas facility, applies pesticide to control vegetation on the pipeline right of way or on or around the oil or gas facility under contract with the holder of the surface lease or other right of entry,

(f) is a manufacturer of pesticides, or a manufacturer's agent, and supplies a pesticide to a pesticide wholesaler,

(g) is a wholesaler of pesticides and supplies pesticide to a vendor licensee or a veterinarian,

(h) is a wholesaler of pesticides and returns pesticide to its manufacturer or the manufacturer's agent,

(i) uses a pesticide for a research purpose, if

(i) the pesticide is exempt from registration under the federal Act for the research purpose, and

(ii) the use is consistent with the terms on which the pesticide is exempt from registration, or

(j) is a pesticide user service licensee, a pesticide user non-service licensee or a confirmation holder and sells surplus pesticide to a pesticide user service licensee, a pesticide user non-service licensee, a confirmation holder or the holder of an appropriate certificate, if the seller notifies the administrator of the sale.

(2) A licence under section 4 of the Act is not required by a veterinarian, or an individual under the direction of a veterinarian, who sells or uses a pesticide for the treatment of animal pests.

(3) Nothing in subsection (2) excepts the use of a pesticide by a veterinarian from a requirement under section 6 of the Act.

(4) A licence under section 4 of the Act is not required by a person to use domestic glyphosate on private land if the person is not providing a service and the glyphosate is used for one or more of the following purposes:

(a) to manage weeds

(i) on parking lots, driveways and hard-surfaced pathways, or

(ii) that are poisonous to the touch;

(b) to manage

(i) a plant that is an alien invasive species listed in the Schedule to the Spheres of Concurrent Jurisdiction — Environment and Wildlife Regulation,

(ii) an invasive plant, or

(iii) a noxious weed designated under section 2 of the Weed Control Regulation.

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 6; 234/2015, s. 5.]

Exemption from licensing for certain uses

6.1   Despite section 5 (1) (i) of this regulation, a person is exempt from the requirement to hold a licence under section 4 (1) (b) of the Act for the use of a pesticide as described in section 5 (1) (i) if

(a) the person

(i) holds a residential applicator certificate under section 50 [category of certificate required], and

(ii) complies with the conditions set out in section 54.2 [residential applicator certificate terms and conditions] and with the terms and conditions, if any, of the certificate, or

(b) the person

(i) holds a pesticide applicator certificate under section 50, and

(ii) complies with the conditions set out in section 54.2, as if the user held a residential applicator certificate, and with the terms and conditions, if any, of the pesticide applicator certificate.

[en. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 6.]

Licence requirement exemptions

7   (1) A licensee is exempt from the requirements under section 68 [licensee use of pesticide — integrated pest management] in relation to the use of wood preservatives on land described in section 5 (1) (a).

(2) A licensee is exempt from a requirement under section 33 (3) (b) [containment, storage, transportation, disposal and use of pesticides] in relation to a pesticide use if the licensee holds a permit issued under section 6 (1) of the Act authorizing the exemption in relation to the use and setting out terms and conditions the licensee must comply with instead.

Licence criteria

8   For the purpose of section 4 (3) (b) of the Act, the administrator must be satisfied that the applicant

(a) holds, or employs a person who holds, the category of certificate that under section 50 [category of certificate required] is required in relation to the category of licence applied for, and

(b) maintains a business location in British Columbia for doing business in the Province or provides the administrator with an address in British Columbia at which the person may be served with documents.

Public consultation requirements — licensee

9   A licensee must conduct public consultations in the manner and to the extent set out in section 62 [public consultations — licensees in respect of forest land] if the licensee intends to use a pesticide for a use described in section 5 (1) (g) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] on more than 20 ha per year managed by a single entity.

[am. B.C. Reg. 18/2022, s. 1.]

Public notification requirements — licensee

10   (1) In this section:

"multi-residence common area" means

(a) an indoor area of a multi-residence property to which all or most occupants of the property have access, and

(b) an outdoor area of a multi-residence property that is

(i) within 5 m of an entrance or a window to living accommodations, or

(ii) maintained for purposes of passage, parking or recreation;

"multi-residence restricted access area" means an area of a multi-residence property that

(a) is not used or intended to be used as living accommodation, and

(b) is not accessible to the general public and most occupants of the property;

"outdoor public use area" means an outdoor landscaped area of

(a) public land that is maintained for purposes of public passage or recreation, or

(b) private commercial land to which members of the public may reasonably be expected to have access.

(2) At least 72 hours before using a pesticide in occupied living accommodations, a licensee must provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) [treatment notice — form and content] to

(a) the occupant of the living accommodations, and

(b) if different from the occupant, the owner or manager of the building or the agent of either.

(3) A licensee who uses a pesticide in unoccupied living accommodations must

(a) provide, before or immediately following the use, a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to the owner or manager of the building or the agent of either, and

(b) either

(i) provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to a person who will be occupying the living accommodations within 48 hours after the pesticide use, or

(ii) immediately following the use, post a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) and (2) at each entrance to the unoccupied living accommodation, which notice must not be removed by the licensee for 48 hours after the pesticide use.

(4) At least 48 hours before using a pesticide in a multi-residence common area, a licensee must

(a) provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to the owner or manager of the building or the agent of either, and

(b) either

(i) provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to each person who has access to the common area within 48 hours after the use, or

(ii) post a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) and (2)

(A) at each entrance to an indoor treatment area,

(B) if the common area is an outdoor area that is fenced, at each gate or opening that provides access to the common area, and

(C) if the common area is an outdoor area that is not fenced, at intervals around the common area so that the notice is clearly visible and will provide notice of the pesticide use to any person approaching the common area,

which treatment notice must not be removed by the licensee within 48 hours after the pesticide use.

(5) A licensee who uses a pesticide in a multi-residence restricted access area must

(a) before or immediately following the use, provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to the owner or manager of the building or the agent of either, and

(b) either

(i) provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to each person who has access to the treatment area within 48 hours after the use, or

(ii) immediately following the use, post a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) and (2) at each entrance to the treatment area, which notice must not be removed by the licensee for at least 48 hours after the pesticide use.

(5.1) Subject to subsection (5.3), before using a pesticide, other than an excluded pesticide, in an outdoor area of private residential land, a licensee or, if there is no licensee, a certificate holder, must provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to

(a) the occupant of the land,

(b) all tenants of the land, if any, and

(c) if different from the occupant, the owner or manager of the land or the agent of either.

(5.2) For the purposes of subsection (5.1) of this section, the reference in

(a) section 63 (1) (e) and (f) to the licensee is to be read, if there is no licensee, as a reference to the certificate holder, and

(b) section 63 (1) (e) to the licence number is to be read, if there is no licence, as a reference to the certificate number.

(5.3) Subsection (5.1) does not apply if subsection (4) or (5) applies.

(6) Before using a pesticide in an outdoor public use area for a use described in section 5 (1) (f), (i) or (l), a licensee must post a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) and (2),

(a) if the treatment area is fenced, at each gate or opening that provides access to the area, and

(b) if the treatment area is not fenced, at intervals around or along the area as necessary so that a notice is clearly visible and will provide notice of the pesticide use to any person approaching the area,

which treatment notices must not be removed by the licensee within 48 hours after the pesticide use.

(7) At least 72 hours before using a pesticide on the property of a school or a child care facility, a licensee must provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to the school or facility administrator, principal or manager or an agent of the administrator, principal or manager.

(8) At least 48 hours before using a pesticide on private land to control adult mosquitoes, a licensee must provide a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) to

(a) the owner or manager of each property within 200 m of the treatment area, and

(b) beekeepers whose bees enter or are likely to enter the treatment area.

(9) Before using a fumigant gas in a structure, a licensee must

(a) post a treatment notice that complies with section 63 (1) and (2) at each entrance to the structure, and

(b) ensure that the treatment notice remains posted until the licensee confirms that it is safe to enter the structure.

(10) The notice period under subsection (2), (4), (7) or (8) may be shortened only with the consent of each person who has access to the proposed treatment area and is entitled to notice of the proposed use either in writing or by posted notice.

(11) Before using a pesticide for a use described in section 5 (1) (a), (b), (g), (j) or (k), a licensee must post a notice in accordance with section 64 [public notification requirement — form and content] immediately before the use.

(12) Immediately following a pesticide use for which a treatment notice was required to be given or posted under this section, the licensee must provide written notice to the owner, manager, administrator or principal, or the agent of the owner, manager, administrator or principal, giving notice that the pesticide use occurred and of any differences between the information given in the treatment notice and the actual pesticide use.

(13) If during public consultations a licensee offers to directly notify an individual about an intended pesticide use, before performing the use the licensee must notify the individual in the agreed time and manner.

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 7; 234/2015, s. 7.]

Different notification requirements — Public Health Act

11   Section 10 (2) to (8) of this regulation does not apply to a licensee under the Integrated Pest Management Act to the extent that an order made by a medical health officer under the Public Health Act imposes a different requirement on the licensee in relation to giving notice of pesticide use.

[en. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 8.]

Exemptions from public notification requirements

12   A licensee is exempt from section 10 (4) (b), (5) (b) or (6), as applicable, in relation to a pesticide use if

(a) the pesticide is insecticide applied in cracks and crevices,

(b) the pesticide is insect gel, or insect bait in a bait station, that is placed in a concealed location not accessible to children or pets,

(c) the pesticide is insecticide applied to a wasp nest that

(i) is outdoors, or

(ii) is indoors and no person will have access to the treatment area within the 48 hour period after the use,

(d) the pesticide is rodenticide and is used in accordance with the requirements in section 81 [use requirements — licensee in relation to rodenticide use],

(e) the pesticide is herbicide and is used to manage weeds along fences or in cracks in the pavement on roads, in sidewalks or in parking lots,

(f) granular pesticide is used in flower, vegetable or shrub beds and mixed into soil,

(g) the pesticide is bacterial pesticide applied to water, or

(h) the pesticide is used as described in section 5 (1) (d).

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 8; 234/2015, s. 9.]

Licence fees

13   (1) Repealed. [B.C. Reg. 264/2022, App., s. 3 (a).]

(2) An applicant for a pesticide user non-service licence for a pesticide use described in section 5 (1) (a) to (f), (h) to (l) or (n) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] must include $250 with the application for each year of the term requested.

(3) An applicant for a pesticide user service licence for a use described in section 5 (1) (a), (b), (g), (j), (k) or (l) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] and an applicant for a pesticide user non-service licence for a use described in section 5 (1) (g) must include with the application the following fee for each year of the term requested:

(a) $250 if the application is for pesticide use on less than 50 ha in each year;

(b) $500 if the application is for pesticide use on 50 or more ha in any year and less than 500 ha in each year;

(c) $1 000 if the application is for pesticide use on 500 or more ha in any year.

(4) An applicant for a pesticide user service licence for a pesticide use not referred to in subsection (2) or (3) must include with the application the following fee for each year of the term requested:

(a) $250 if the application is for the pesticide use from one business address;

(b) $500 if the application is for the pesticide use from 2 or 3 business addresses;

(c) $1 000 if the application is for the pesticide use from 4 or more business addresses.

(5) An applicant for a pesticide vendor licence must include with the application the following fee for each year of the term requested:

(a) $250 if the application is for the sale of domestic pesticides only or for the sale of less than 100 kg per year of commercial, restricted or permit-restricted pesticides;

(b) $1 000 if the application is for the sale of 100 or more kg per year of commercial, restricted or permit-restricted pesticides.

(6) If an applicant would be subject to a fee under two or more of subsections (2), (3), (4) and (5) in respect of an application, the licence fee payable on application is the highest fee payable under subsection (2), (3), (4) or (5) as applicable.

(7) A fee paid on application is not refundable unless the application is withdrawn before any processing has occurred.

(8) If a licensee is required by the term and condition in section 47 (1) (c) [licence terms and conditions] to give notice to the administrator of a change that has the effect of increasing the fee payable in relation to the licence, the notice must be accompanied by the amount of the increase.

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 9; 234/2015, s. 10; 18/2022, s. 1; 264/2022, App., s. 3; 44/2023.]

Division 3 — Certificates

Pesticide classes and pesticide uses requiring a certificate

14   (1) The following classes of pesticides are prescribed for the purpose of section 5 (1) of the Act:

(a) permit-restricted;

(b) restricted.

(2) The following uses are prescribed for the purposes of section 5 (1) of the Act:

(a) aerial application of a pesticide by a pilot;

(b) use of an SGAR on public or private land for the management of rodents.

[am. B.C. Reg. 264/2022, App., s. 4.]

Pesticides prescribed in relation to certified individuals

15   The following classes of pesticides are prescribed for the purposes of section 5 (2) and (3) of the Act:

(a) permit-restricted;

(b) restricted;

(c) commercial;

(d) domestic.

[am. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 11.]

Certificate criteria

16   (1) For the purpose of section 5 (5) (b) of the Act, the administrator must be satisfied that the applicant

(a) has reached 16 years of age,

(b) has attained the appropriate educational level for the certificate or has completed one or more courses specified by the administrator, and

(c) either

(i) has passed an examination set by the administrator for the purpose of testing the knowledge of an applicant in relation to the matters listed in Schedule 3 for the category of certificate applied for, or

(ii) has passed an examination, approved by the administrator, of another provincial government and has passed an examination set by the administrator for the purpose of testing the knowledge of an applicant in relation to the Act and this regulation.

(2) Despite subsection (1) (c), if an applicant has previously held a certificate in the category applied for, the administrator may issue a new certificate in accordance with section 53 [certificate renewal requirements].

(3) Before reinstating a suspended certificate, the administrator must be satisfied that the holder satisfies the requirements of section 5 (5) of the Act.

Certificate fees

17   (1) An applicant for a certificate, other than a residential applicator certificate, must include with the application a fee of $90 for each certificate examination required for the certificate.

(2) If an applicant for a certificate

(a) has been given notice of the time and place of a certificate examination on 2 different occasions, and

(b) has failed to attend for the examination on both occasions,

the administrator is deemed to have rejected the applicant's application and the fee paid under subsection (1) is forfeited.

(3) An applicant for a certificate renewal to whom section 53 applies must include with the application a non-refundable fee of $25.

[am. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 12.]

Division 4 — Permits

Pesticides and pesticide uses requiring a permit

18   (1) Permit-restricted pesticides are prescribed for the purpose of section 6 (1) of the Act.

(2) Except as provided in subsection (4), the following uses of a pesticide are prescribed for the purpose of section 6 (1) of the Act:

(a) aerial application of a pesticide;

(b) use of a pesticide, other than an excluded pesticide, in or on a body of water, unless under section 5 [pesticide uses requiring a licence] a licence is required for the use or under section 24 [pesticide classes and pesticide uses requiring a confirmation] a confirmation is required for the use;

(c) use of a pesticide, other than an excluded pesticide, on public land, unless under section 5 a licence is required for the use or under section 24 a confirmation is required for the use;

(d) use of strychnine to control bird populations.

(3) In addition to the uses prescribed in subsection (2), if a licence or confirmation applicant or holder requires an exemption from a requirement under section 33 (3) (b) [containment, storage, transportation, disposal and use of pesticides] in relation to a use for which the licence or confirmation, as applicable, is required, a permit specifying the requirement and the terms and conditions on which the exemption is authorized is required for the use.

(4) A use described in subsection (2) is not prescribed if

(a) the use is aerial application to private land used primarily for agricultural production,

(b) the use is aerial application

(i) of a pesticide listed in Schedule 4,

(ii) in accordance with a licence or a confirmation, and

(iii) to land that is neither in an urban area nor used for residential purposes,

(c) the use is for research purposes

(i) of a pesticide that is exempt from registration under the federal Act for research purposes, and

(ii) consistent with the terms on which the pesticide is exempted from registration, or

(d) the use is of a pesticide on public land used for agricultural activities, except agricultural activities authorized by a licence or permit issued under the Range Act.

[am. B.C. Reg. 258/2006, s. 10.]

Permit criteria

19   (1) For the purposes of section 6 (3) (b) of the Act, the administrator must be satisfied that the applicant

(a) maintains a business location in British Columbia for doing business in the Province or provides the administrator with an address in British Columbia at which the person may be served with documents,

(b) has conducted the consultations as required under section 20 [public consultation requirements — permits] and submitted a description of the action, if any, the applicant proposes to take in response to comments received during consultations, and

(c) if requested by the administrator, has submitted to the administrator an evaluation of the geographical features that require a pesticide-free zone or a no-treatment zone at the treatment location.

(2) For the purposes of section 6 (3) (b) of the Act in relation to a permit for a use described in section 18 (3), the administrator must also be satisfied that

(a) meeting the requirement is impractical in relation to the proposed use, method of application or treatment area, and

(b) if the terms and conditions imposed on the permit under section 18 (3) are complied with, allowing the licensee or confirmation holder to perform the use without meeting the requirement will not cause unreasonable adverse effects.

Public consultation requirements — permits

20   An applicant for a permit must conduct public consultations in accordance with section 60 [public consultation — permit application].

Exemptions from public consultation requirement

21   An applicant for a permit is exempt from the requirement under section 60 (2) (j) for a 30 day comment period if the applicant satisfies the administrator that

(a) the application relates to an unforeseen pest problem and the delay in applying the pesticide required to carry out the consultations is likely to result in an unreasonable adverse effect,

(b) the particular pesticide use to which the application relates is

(i) to such a small area, or

(ii) to such a remote area

that the use is unlikely to affect any person, other than the person who owns the treatment area, or any other person's property, or

(c) the application relates to a treatment area located within a region of the Province in respect of which the provincial health officer or a medical health officer has advised that there is an increased risk to human health due to the West Nile virus.

[am. B.C. Regs. 426/2008, s. 2; 234/2015, s. 13; 18/2022, s. 3.]

Public notification requirement — permits

22   If during public consultations a permit holder offers to directly notify an individual about an intended pesticide use, before performing the use the holder must notify the individual in the agreed time and manner.

Permit fees

23   (1) An applicant for a permit must include with the application a fee of $1 000 for a term of up to 3 years.

(2) A fee paid on application is not refundable unless the application is withdrawn before any processing has occurred.

Division 5 — Pesticide Use Notices — Confirmations

Pesticide classes and pesticide uses requiring a confirmation

24   (1) The following classes of pesticides are prescribed for the purpose of section 7 (1) of the Act:

(a) restricted pesticides;

(b) commercial pesticides;

(c) domestic pesticides.

(2) Except as provided in subsection (3), the following uses of a pesticide in a class referred to in subsection (1) are prescribed for the purpose of section 7 (1) of the Act:

(a) the management of vegetation or preservation of wood on more than 20 ha per year of public or private land that is

(i) used as a railway right of way, yard or associated signal or communication facility, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(b) the management of vegetation on more than 20 ha per year of public or private land that is

(i) used as

(A) a highway,

(B) a facility or right of way for a public utility as defined in the Utilities Commission Act,

(C) a facility or right of way for the delivery of water, not including a pipe or a system or arrangement of pipes to distribute water in a community to ultimate consumers, or

(D) a pipeline and associated facilities, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(c) the management of mosquitoes, using bacterial pesticide, on more than 1 ha per year of public land that is

(i) a body of water, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(d) the preservation of more than 1 000 wooden poles per year on public or private land that is

(i) used as

(A) a highway, or

(B) a facility or right of way for a public utility as defined in the Utilities Commission Act, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(e) the management of forest pests on more than 20 ha per year of public land that is

(i) used for timber production or forested, and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(f) the management of vegetation on more than 20 ha per year of public land that is

(i) used as an industrial site, other than an industrial site described in paragraph (a) (i) or (b) (i), and

(ii) managed by a single entity;

(g) the management of noxious weeds or invasive plants on more than 50 ha per year of public land managed by a single entity;

(h) the management of mosquitoes on public land, other than with a bacterial pesticide applied to a body of water.

(3) A use described in subsection (2) (h) is not prescribed if carried out by aerial application to land that is in an urban area or used for residential purposes.

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 5; 234/2015, s. 14; 18/2022, s. 1; 41/2024, s. 1.]

Confirmation holder exemptions

25   (1) A confirmation holder is exempt from the requirements under section 69 [confirmation holder use of pesticide — integrated pest management] in relation to the use of wood preservatives on land described in section 24 (2) (a).

(2) A confirmation holder is exempt from a requirement in section 33 (3) (b) [containment, storage, transportation, disposal and use requirements] in relation to a pesticide use if the confirmation holder holds a permit issued under section 6 (1) of the Act authorizing the exemption in relation to the use and setting out terms and conditions the confirmation holder must comply with instead.

Confirmation criteria

26   For the purpose of section 7 (3) (b) of the Act, the administrator must be satisfied that the applicant

(a) maintains a business location in British Columbia for doing business in the Province or provides the administrator with an address in British Columbia at which the person may be served with documents, and

(b) has conducted the consultations as required under section 27 (1) and submitted with the application a description of the action, if any, the applicant proposes to take in response to comments received during consultations.

Public consultation requirements — confirmations

27   (1) A person preparing a pest management plan for the purposes of section 7 (1) (a) of the Act must conduct public consultations in relation to the pest management plan in accordance with section 61 [public consultation — pesticide management plan].

(2) A holder of a confirmation must conduct public consultations in accordance with section 61 before submitting an amendment to the pesticide use notice if the amendment relates to information required under section 59 (1) (c), (d) or (e) [pesticide use notice requirements].

Public notification requirement — confirmations

28   (1) A holder of a confirmation must give notice to individuals in the vicinity of a treatment location, in accordance with section 64 [public notification requirement — form and content].

(2) If during public consultations a confirmation holder offers to directly notify an individual about an intended pesticide use, before performing the use the holder must notify the individual in the agreed time and manner.

Confirmation fees

29   (1) An applicant for a confirmation must include with the pesticide use notice the following fees:

(a) for a use described in section 24 (2) (a) to (c) or (e) to (h) [pesticide uses requiring a confirmation],

(i) $500 for a confirmation if the confirmation is for pesticide use on less than 50 ha in each year of the term,

(ii) $1 000 for a confirmation if the confirmation is for pesticide use on 50 or more ha in any year of the term and less than 500 ha in each year of the term, and

(iii) $2 000 for a confirmation if the confirmation is for pesticide use on 500 or more ha in any year of the term;

(b) for a use described in section 24 (2) (d),

(i) $1 000 if the confirmation is for pesticide use on more than 1 000 poles in any year of the term of confirmation and not more than 10 000 poles in each year of the term of the confirmation, and

(ii) $2 000 if the confirmation is for pesticide use on more than 10 000 poles in any year of the term of the confirmation.

(2) If an amendment to a pesticide use notice required under section 59 (2) [pesticide use notice requirements] has the effect of increasing the fee payable in relation to the confirmation, the amended notice must be accompanied by the amount of the increase for the remainder of the term of the confirmation.

(3) If a confirmation is issued in relation to a pesticide use notice or an amended pesticide use notice, the fee paid with the pesticide use notice is not refundable.

Fee for pest management plan copy

30   For the purposes of section 7 (6) (c) (ii) of the Act, a confirmation holder may charge $0.25 for each page for a copy of the pest management plan.

Division 6 — General Requirements — Use, Containment, Transport, Storage and Sale of a Pesticide

Requirement to notify fire department

31   Within 60 days after starting to store pesticides at a location, each of the following must provide notice of the storage location to the fire department responsible for fire protection at that location:

(a) a pesticide manufacturer;

(b) a pesticide distributor;

(c) a pesticide formulator;

(d) a pesticide wholesaler;

(e) a licensee;

(f) a permit holder;

(g) a confirmation holder.

[am. B.C. Reg. 258/2006, s. 11.]

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder

32   A person who holds a licence or a confirmation must

(a) apply integrated pest management in accordance with section 68 [licensee — integrated pest management] or 69 [confirmation holder — integrated pest management], as applicable, when using a pesticide, and

(b) unless the pesticide use is authorized under another enactment or by an order of the court or the Lieutenant Governor in Council, before using a pesticide obtain the express permission of the owner or manager of the land to which pesticide is applied.

Containment, storage, transportation, disposal and use of pesticides

33   (1) A person who stores a pesticide must store it in a manner that

(a) minimizes hazards to human health and the environment, and

(b) is in accordance with the standards prescribed in sections 65 [pesticide container and labelling standards], 66 [pesticide storage] and 67 [pesticide storage — licensee], as applicable.

(2) A person who transports or causes or allows the transport of a pesticide must ensure that the pesticide is secured and transported in accordance with the applicable standards prescribed in Division 7 [Standards for Use, Containment, Transport, Storage or Sale of Pesticide] of Part 2 and in a manner that prevents

(a) the escape, discharge or unauthorized removal of the pesticide from the transport vehicle, and

(b) the contamination of food or drink intended for animal or human consumption, household furnishings, toiletries, clothing, bedding or similar items that are transported with the pesticide.

(3) A person who uses a pesticide must use it in a manner that

(a) minimizes hazards to human health and the environment, and

(b) is in accordance with the applicable standards prescribed in Division 7 [Standards for Use, Containment, Transport, Storage or Sale of Pesticide] of Part 2 in relation to

(i) the handling, mixing, applying or disposing of pesticides, and

(ii) the handling and disposal of containers used for pesticide.

Division 6.1 — Use of Pesticides for Purposes of Agricultural Operations

Use requirements — agricultural operations

33.1   (1) In this section, "agricultural operation", "contaminated runoff", "groundwater", "property boundary" and "watercourse" have the same meaning as in the Code of Practice for Agricultural Environmental Management, B.C. Reg. 8/2019.

(2) A person who applies a pesticide for the purposes of an agricultural operation must ensure all of the following:

(a) that contaminated runoff does not enter a watercourse or groundwater, or cross a property boundary;

(b) that pesticide spray drift does not enter a watercourse or groundwater;

(c) that all precautions are taken that are reasonably necessary to prevent an unreasonable volume of pesticide spray drift from crossing a property boundary, unless the person in possession of the property into which the drift crosses allows otherwise.

(3) A person who applies pesticides for the purposes of an agricultural operation must keep a record containing the following information:

(a) the date, time and location of application;

(b) the temperature, precipitation, wind speed and wind direction at the time of application;

(c) the name of each targeted pest;

(d) for each pesticide applied,

(i) the product trade name and pest control product registration number, and

(ii) the application method and rate of application.

[en. B.C. Reg. 264/2022, App., s. 5.]

Division 7 — Records and Reporting Requirements

Records of sale and annual report — vendor licensee

34   (1) A licensee who sells pesticides must

(a) keep a record of each sale of a commercial, permit-restricted or restricted pesticide, and

(b) prepare and submit to the administrator by April 1 of each year following a calendar year in which the licensee was licensed, a summary of the licensee's sales in the calendar year.

(2) The record required under subsection (1) (a) must include all the following in relation to each sale:

(a) the date of sale;

(b) the purchaser's name, address, telephone number and, for sales of restricted or permit-restricted pesticide, the purchaser's applicator certificate number;

(c) the certified dispenser's name and certificate number;

(d) the pesticide sold, including its trade name and registration number under the federal Act;

(e) the size of the container the pesticide was sold in and the number of containers sold;

(f) if the pesticide is an SGAR,

(i) the name and certificate number of a person who holds a valid pesticide applicator certificate endorsed for the use of SGARs, and

(ii) the name and licence number of the licensee who intends to use the SGAR;

(g) if the pesticide is an SGAR and the licensee who intends to use the SGAR holds a pesticide non-service user licence, the category of essential service location that applies to the treatment site at which the SGAR is to be used.

(3) The annual summary of pesticide sales required under subsection (1) (b) must include all the following in relation to each commercial, restricted and permit-restricted pesticide sold by the licensee in the calendar year to which it relates:

(a) trade name;

(b) registration number under the federal Act;

(c) active ingredient;

(d) total litres or kilograms sold.

[am. B.C. Regs. 234/2015, s. 16; 264/2022, App., s. 6.]

Records of use — licensee

35   (1) A licensee who uses a pesticide, other than a wood preservative, must keep a record containing the following information for each treatment location and day of use:

(a) if the use was performed as a service, the name and address of the person for whom the service was performed;

(b) if the service was performed for another licensee or a permit or confirmation holder, the number of the person's licence, permit or confirmation;

(c) if the use was not performed as a service, the name and address of the owner or manager of the treatment location;

(d) the name and certificate number of the pesticide applicator certificate holder who used the pesticide or supervised the use;

(e) the date and time of the pesticide use;

(f) the name of the pest targeted by the use or the purpose of the pesticide use;

(g) the trade name of each pesticide used and its registration number under the federal Act;

(h) for each pesticide used, the method and rate of application and the total quantity used;

(i) if the use was outdoors, the prevailing meteorological conditions including temperature, precipitation and velocity and direction of the wind;

(j) pest monitoring methods and injury thresholds used to fulfill the licensee's integrated pest management requirements in relation to the use;

(k) advice given to the owner or manager of the treatment area in relation to the following:

(i) safe re-entry time;

(ii) the number of days before a crop can be harvested safely;

(iii) additional precautions that should be taken to minimize exposure to the pesticide;

(l) if the licensee decided under section 71 (4) [use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder] that a no-treatment zone may be reduced, the information on which the licensee based the decision.

(2) A licensee who performs a use described in section 5 (1) (g) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] on more than 20 ha per year managed by a single entity must also keep records of each of the following for each treatment location:

(a) the results of pest monitoring carried out by the licensee in relation to

(i) the pest population, and

(ii) the damage caused by pests;

(b) the use of the monitoring results described in paragraph (a) to determine injury thresholds;

(c) how public notification was given and where notices were posted;

(d) the effectiveness and impacts of the pesticide use.

(3) A licensee who performs a use described in section 5 (1) (g) on more than 20 ha per year managed by a single entity must keep a record for each piece of the licensee's pesticide application equipment that requires calibration showing when the equipment was calibrated and the data upon which its calibration was based.

(4) A licensee who uses a wood preservative must keep the records described in subsection (1) (a) to (h) for each treatment location and day of use.

(5) A licensee who uses a fumigant gas must keep a record of the results of monitoring required under section 82 [use requirements — licensee in relation to fumigant gas].

(6) A licensee who uses an SGAR must keep a record containing the following information:

(a) for each treatment site, the information described in subsection (1);

(b) measures that were taken to comply with the requirements set out in section 68 (1) (a);

(c) the results of rodent monitoring carried out by the licensee in relation to

(i) the rodent population, and

(ii) the damage caused by rodents;

(d) the date on which the SGAR is removed from the treatment site.

(7) Despite subsection (1) (i), a licensee is not required to record the prevailing meteorological conditions if a pesticide is deployed in a weather-resistant container.

[am. B.C. Regs. 258/2006, s. 12; 234/2015, s. 17; 18/2022, s. 1; 264/2022, App., s. 7.]

Records of use — permit holder

36   A permit holder who uses a pesticide, or authorizes the use of a pesticide, must keep a record containing the following information for each treatment location and day of use under the permit:

(a) the name and address of the owner or manager of the treatment location;

(b) if the use was performed as a service, the name and licence number of the licensee who performed the service;

(c) if the use was not performed as a service, the name and certificate number of the pesticide applicator certificate holder who used the pesticide or supervised the use;

(d) if a confirmation was required for the use, the confirmation number;

(e) the information described in section 35 (1) (e) to (i) and (k) [records of use — licensee].

[am. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 17.]

Records of use — confirmation holder

37   (1) A confirmation holder who uses a pesticide or authorizes the use of a pesticide, other than a wood preservative, must keep a record containing the following information for each treatment location and day of use:

(a) the name and address of the owner or manager of the treatment location;

(b) if the use was performed as a service, the name and licence number of the licensee who performed the service;

(c) if the use was not performed as a service, the name and certificate number of the pesticide applicator certificate holder who used the pesticide or supervised the use;

(d) if a permit was required for the use or the class of pesticide, the permit number;

(e) the information required under section 35 (1) (e) to (i), (k) and (l) and (2).

(2) A confirmation holder must keep a record for each piece of the holder's pesticide application equipment that requires calibration showing when the equipment was calibrated and the data upon which its calibration was based.

(3) A confirmation holder who uses a wood preservative, or authorizes the use of a wood preservative, must keep the records required under section 35 (4).

[am. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 17.]

Public consultation records

38   (1) A licensee, a permit holder and a confirmation holder who is required under this regulation to conduct consultations in relation to an application or a pesticide use must prepare and maintain the following records of those consultations:

(a) a record of when, where and how the notice was published or when the notice was given of the public consultation, as applicable;

(b) a summary of the verbal public responses to the public consultation;

(c) a summary of the responses given by the licensee, permit holder or confirmation holder to the public responses described in paragraph (b).

(2) In addition to the records under subsection (1), a licensee, a permit holder and a confirmation holder must also retain

(a) copies of any notices published or given under section 60, 61 or 62, and

(b) all written responses to the notice under subsection (1).

(3) If a person described in subsection (1) conducting public consultations described in subsection (1) agrees to give notice to an individual before a pesticide use, the licensee, permit holder or confirmation holder must retain a copy of the notice given.

[am. B.C. Regs. 234/2015, s. 18; 18/2022, s. 4.]

Annual use report — licensee, permit holder and confirmation holder

39   (1) A pesticide user service licensee and a pesticide user non-service licensee, a permit holder and a confirmation holder must provide to the administrator an annual report for a calendar year by January 31 in the next calendar year.

(2) An annual report under this section must include

(a) the name and address of the licensee, permit holder or confirmation holder, and their licence, permit or confirmation number,

(b) the following information for each pesticide used in the calendar year:

(i) trade name;

(ii) registration number under the federal Act;

(iii) active ingredient;

(iv) amount in kilograms, and

(c) the total area treated.

(3) The annual report of a pesticide user service licensee must

(a) provide separate records of the information required under subsection (2) (b) for

(i) those pesticides used for another licensee or a permit or confirmation holder, and

(ii) those pesticides used for a person who did not hold a licence, permit or confirmation for the use, and

(b) set out the total area treated in the calendar year for a use described in section 5 (1) (a), (b), (j), (k) or (l).

(3.1) If a licensee uses an SGAR that was purchased by the licensee by means of the internet, the licensee must, in the licensee's annual report for the calendar year in which the SGAR was used, include the name of the person who sold the SGAR to the licensee.

(4) In the annual report required under this section a licensee, in relation to a use described in section 5 (1) (g) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] on more than 20 ha per year managed by a single entity, and a confirmation holder, in relation to all pesticide uses, must also provide the following information:

(a) a description of the treatment location and a map identifying its gross boundaries;

(b) the methods used to apply pesticide;

(c) the total area treated;

(d) total area treated with each pesticide used;

(e) methods of non-pesticide pest controls used and the estimated total area of their use.

[am. B.C. Regs. 28/2005; 18/2022, ss. 1 and 5; 264/2022, App., s. 8.]

Licensee — notice of intent to treat public land or aerially or by fumigation

40   If a licensee has not given prior notice under section 45 (h) [licence applications] that the licensee intends to

(a) use a pesticide on public land,

(b) aerially apply pesticide, or

(c) use a fumigant gas pesticide,

the licensee must give written notice to the administrator at least 2 business days before the first such use.

Licensee — annual notice of intent to treat more than 20 ha private forest land

41   (1) For the purpose of the annual notice of intent to treat under this section, a licensee who uses a pesticide for a use described in subsection (2) must prepare and retain a detailed map or diagram showing the treatment locations for the applicable calendar year and indicating for each treatment location

(a) the proposed treatment areas, and

(b) the geographic features that require a pesticide-free zone or a no-treatment zone.

(2) At least 14 days before using a pesticide for the first time in a calendar year for a use described in section 5 (1) (g) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] on more than 20 ha per year managed by a single entity, a licensee must provide to the administrator a notice of intent to treat that complies with subsection (3).

(3) A notice of intent to treat under subsection (2) must provide all the following information:

(a) the name and business location of the licensee;

(b) a description of each treatment location proposed for a use described in subsection (2) for the calendar year and a map or diagram, based on the map or diagram prepared and retained under subsection (1), that clearly identifies those locations;

(c) a description of the proposed treatment for each treatment area including the pesticide to be used and its method of application;

(d) the total area of treatment areas in the treatment locations described under paragraph (b).

(4) After a notice of intent to treat has been submitted for a calendar year, the licensee may increase the total provided under subsection (3) (d) by up to 10% if the licensee gives written notice to the administrator at least 2 business days before using the pesticide, which notice provides the information required under subsection (3) in relation to the increased area.

(5) If, during a calendar year, the licensee intends to exceed the total provided under subsection (3) (d) by more than 10%, the licensee, at least 14 days before a pesticide use that causes the excess, must provide to the administrator a revised notice of intent to treat that complies with subsection (3).

(6) The detailed map required by subsection (1) must be provided to the administrator within 3 business days of a request.

[am. B.C. Regs. 234/2015, s. 19; 18/2022, s. 1.]

Confirmation holder — annual notice of intent to treat

42   (1) For the purpose of an annual notice of intent to treat under this section, a confirmation holder who uses a pesticide, or authorizes the use of a pesticide, other than a wood preservative, must prepare and retain a detailed map or diagram showing the treatment locations for the applicable calendar year and indicating for each treatment location

(a) the proposed treatment areas, and

(b) the geographic features that require a pesticide-free zone or a no-treatment zone.

(2) At least 21 days before the first use of pesticide in a calendar year, a confirmation holder must submit to the administrator a notice of intent to treat that complies with subsection (3).

(3) A notice under subsection (2) must contain all the following information, which information must be consistent with the information provided in the pesticide management plan and pesticide use notice prepared or submitted in relation to the confirmation:

(a) the name and business location of the confirmation holder;

(b) a description of the proposed treatment locations for the calendar year and a map or diagram, based on the map or diagram prepared and retained under subsection (1), that clearly identifies those locations;

(c) a description of the proposed treatment for each treatment area including the pesticide to be used and its method of application;

(d) the total area of treatment areas in the treatment locations described under paragraph (b).

(4) After a notice of intent to treat has been submitted for a calendar year, a confirmation holder may increase the total provided under subsection (3) (d) by up to 10% if the confirmation holder gives written notice to the administrator at least 2 business days before using the pesticide, which notice provides the information required under subsection (3) in relation to the increased area.

(5) If, during a calendar year, a confirmation holder intends to exceed the total provided under subsection (3) (d) by more than 10%, the confirmation holder, at least 21 days before a pesticide use that causes the excess, must provide to the administrator a revised notice of intent to treat that complies with subsection (3).

(6) The detailed map described in subsection (1) must be provided to the administrator within 3 business days of a request.

[am. B.C. Reg. 258/2006, s. 13.]

Part 2 — Administrator's Regulation

Division 1 — Interpretation

Classification of pesticides

43   (1) The pesticides set out in Schedule 1 are classified as permit-restricted pesticides.

(2) The pesticides set out in Schedule 2 are classified as excluded pesticides.

Division 2 — Licences

Category of licence required

44   (1) The following categories of licences are prescribed:

(a) pesticide vendor;

(b) pesticide user service;

(c) pesticide user non-service.

(2) Subject to Division 2 [Licences] of Part 1, a person must hold a pesticide vendor licence who

(a) sells or offers to sell a pesticide, or

(b) purchases, directly or indirectly, a pesticide for the purpose of selling the pesticide.

(3) Subject to Division 2 of Part 1, a person must hold a pesticide user service licence who

(a) provides, or offers to provide, for a fee a service respecting pesticides,

(b) provides, or offers to provide, for a fee a service of a use prescribed in section 5 (1) [pesticide uses requiring a licence], or

(c) purchases, directly or indirectly, a pesticide for the purpose of providing a service described in paragraph (a) or (b).

(4) Subject to Division 2 of Part 1, a person must hold a pesticide user non-service licence who uses, or whose employees use, pesticide on the person's own land.

Licence applications

45   An applicant for a licence must provide the following information, as applicable to the category of licence and class of pesticides or use applied for, in an application form that is signed by the applicant or the applicant's agent and is in the form specified by the administrator:

(a) name, address and telephone number of the applicant, and if the applicant is a corporation, the name of a person who is the principal contact in relation to the application;

(b) if the applicant carries on business in a name other than a name provided under paragraph (a), that other name;

(c) each business address where pesticides are sold or from which pesticides are used;

(d) category of licence applied for;

(e) classes and amounts of pesticides in relation to which the applicant applies to be licensed to sell;

(f) uses of pesticides for which the applicant applies to be licensed and the number of hectares or poles per year to be treated under the licence;

(g) term requested up to a maximum of 5 years;

(h) whether the applicant intends to, during the term of the licence,

(i) use a pesticide on public land,

(ii) aerially apply a pesticide, or

(iii) use a fumigant gas pesticide.

[am. B.C. Regs. 235/2015, ss. 20 and 21; 19/2022, s. 1.]

Duties of certified individuals in relation to licensee

46   (1) For the purpose of section 5 (2) of the Act, the duties that a licensee providing a service using a class of pesticides prescribed in section 15 [pesticides prescribed in relation to certified individual] must ensure are performed by a certified individual are the following:

(a) be present when the service is provided;

(b) either

(i) perform the use, or

(ii) supervise, in accordance with section 59.3 [supervision requirements], not more than 4 assistant applicators who perform the use.

(2) Repealed. [B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 22 (b).]

(3) For the purpose of section 5 (3) of the Act, the duties that a licensee selling a class of pesticides prescribed in section 15 must ensure are performed by a certified individual are the following:

(a) advise each person who intends to purchase a pesticide that the person

(i) may lawfully use the pesticide only for the use described on the label and in accordance with the instructions on that label, and

(ii) is subject to any prohibitions, limits or conditions with respect to the use of the pesticide as set out in applicable provincial enactments and municipal bylaws;

(a.1) ask each person who intends to purchase a pesticide what the person intends to use the pesticide for and

(i) take reasonable steps to confirm that the pesticide is appropriate for the intended use, or

(ii) refuse to sell the pesticide to the person if the person does not provide sufficient information to confirm that the pesticide is appropriate for the intended use;

(b) offer to provide advice in relation to pest management and the safe use of the pesticide;

(c) in respect of the sale of SGARs,

(i) confirm that each person who intends to purchase an SGAR

(A) holds a valid pesticide user service licence or pesticide user non-service licence, and

(B) either holds a valid pesticide applicator certificate endorsed for the use of SGARs, or can provide the name and certificate number of a person who holds such a certificate,

(ii) if the person who intends to purchase the SGAR holds a pesticide non-service user licence, ask the person

(A) to identify the category of essential service location that applies to the treatment site at which the SGAR is to be used, and

(B) to present documentation that demonstrates the authority of the person to use SGARs to manage rodents at the essential service location at which the SGAR is to be used,

(iii) refuse to sell the SGAR if the requirements set out in subparagraphs (i) and (ii) are not met, and

(iv) at the time of the sale, advise the purchaser of the SGAR that

(A) the use of SGARs creates risks to wildlife,

(B) when using SGARs there are requirements in relation to integrated pest management and the keeping of records, and

(C) there are standards in relation to the disposal of SGARs and of dead rodents, and municipal bylaws may also apply to such disposal.

[am. B.C. Regs. 235/2015, s. 22; 19/2022, s. 2; 265/2022, s. 9.]

Licence terms and conditions

47   (1) The following are terms and conditions of every licence issued under section 4 of the Act:

(a) a licensee must comply with all applicable regulations;

(b) a licence is not transferable without the written approval of the administrator;

(c) within 30 days after a change in any information provided by the licensee in an application under section 45 [licence applications], the licensee must give written notice to the administrator of the change;

(d) if a licensee performs a pesticide use as a service

(i) for a permit holder, the licensee must comply with the terms and conditions of the permit, or

(ii) for a confirmation holder, the licensee must comply with the requirements set out in sections 73 to 79;

(e) if a licensee believes that the licensee or another person has contravened the Act or this regulation in a manner involving the release of pesticide into the environment, the licensee must give written notice to the administrator as soon as practicable.

(2) A person may request the administrator's approval of a transfer of a licence to another person by submitting to the administrator an application containing the name of the licensee and the information required on a new licence application.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, ss. 23 and 24.]

Vendor licence terms and conditions

48   The following are terms and conditions of every pesticide vendor licence issued under section 4 of the Act:

(a) the licence is valid according to its terms only in relation to the business location indicated on the licence application;

(b) the licensee must have available for inspection, at the place and time a pesticide is sold, a copy of the certificate held by the certified individual required under section 5 (3) of the Act to perform duties described in section 46 (3) [duties of certified individuals in relation to licensee] in relation to the sale;

(c) a licensee may not sell a pesticide to an individual who has not reached 16 years of age;

(d) a licensee may sell or distribute a permit-restricted pesticide or a restricted pesticide only to a person who

(i) holds a certificate, or

(ii) is the agent of an individual who holds a certificate;

(e) a licensee may sell or distribute a permit-restricted pesticide only to a person who

(i) holds a permit, or

(ii) is the agent of a person who holds a permit;

(f) a licensee must ensure that an individual holding a pesticide dispenser certificate endorsed for the applicable class of pesticides performs the following functions:

(i) provides assistance with handling and storing pesticide at the business location;

(ii) provides assistance in responding to emergencies involving pesticides at the business location;

(g) a licensee must, in respect of the sale of an SGAR,

(i) confirm that a person who intends to purchase the SGAR

(A) holds a valid pesticide user service licence or a pesticide user non-service licence, and

(B) either holds a valid pesticide applicator certificate endorsed for the use of SGARs, or can provide the name and certificate number of a person who holds such a certificate,

(ii) if the person who intends to purchase the SGAR holds a pesticide non-service user licence, ask the person

(A) to identify the category of essential service that applies to the treatment site at which the SGAR is to be used, and

(B) to present documentation that demonstrates the authority of the person to use SGARs to manage rodents at the essential service location at which the SGAR is to be used,

(iii) refuse to sell the SGAR if the requirements set out in subparagraphs (i) and (ii) are not met, and

(iv) at the time of the sale, advise the purchaser of the SGAR that

(A) the use of SGARs creates risks to wildlife,

(B) when using SGARs there are requirements in relation to integrated pest management and the keeping of records, and

(C) there are requirements in relation to the disposal of SGARs and of dead rodents, and municipal bylaws may apply to such disposal.

[am. B.C. Regs. 19/2022, s. 3; 265/2022, s. 10.]

User service and user non-service licence terms and conditions

49   (1) The following are terms and conditions of every pesticide user service licence and pesticide user non-service licence:

(a) the licensee must ensure that an individual holding the certificate required under section 50 (4) in relation to a particular use is present when the use is performed and either

(i) performs the use, or

(ii) supervises, in accordance with section 59.3 [supervision requirements], not more than 4 assistant applicators who perform the use;

(b) Repealed. [B.C. Reg. 267/2006, s. 14 (a).]

(c) the licensee must ensure that a copy of the certificate of the certificate holder performing the duties for the licensee that must be performed by a certificate holder is at or near the treatment area during the pesticide use.

(2) Repealed. [B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 25 (b).]

[am. B.C. Regs. 267/2006, s. 14; 235/2015, s. 25.]

Division 3 — Certificates

Category of certificate required

50   (1) The following categories of certificates are prescribed:

(a) pesticide dispenser;

(b) pesticide applicator;

(c) residential applicator.

(2) Subject to Division 3 [Certificates] of Part 1, an individual must hold a pesticide dispenser certificate endorsed for the class of pesticide dispensed who performs for a person holding a pesticide vendor licence the duties required under section 46 (3) [duties of certified individual in relation to licence] in relation to the class of pesticides.

(3) Subject to Division 3 of Part 1, an individual must hold a pesticide applicator certificate endorsed for a class of pesticide who performs for a holder of a pesticide user service licence or a pesticide user non-service licence the duties required under section 46 (1) [duties of certified individual in relation to licence] in relation to the class of pesticides.

(4) Subject to Division 3 of Part 1, an individual must hold a pesticide applicator certificate endorsed for a pesticide use who performs or supervises the pesticide use for a holder of a pesticide user service licence, a pesticide user non-service licence, a permit or a confirmation unless the use is of an excluded pesticide.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 26.]

Certificate applications

51   An applicant for a certificate must provide the following information, as applicable to the category of certificate and class of pesticides or use applied for, in an application form that is signed by the applicant and is in the form specified by the administrator:

(a) individual's name and address and date of birth;

(b) category of certificate applied for;

(c) class of pesticides or uses requested in relation to the category of certificate.

Certificate examinations

52   (1) An examination for the purpose of section 16 (1) (c) [certificate criteria] examines the applicant's knowledge in relation to the certificate applied for and each matter set out in Schedule 3.

(2) An examination referred to in subsection (1)

(a) may be taken orally or in writing, as directed by the administrator, and

(b) must be taken at the time and place directed by the administrator.

Certificate renewal requirements

53   (1) For the purposes of section 16 (2), the administrator may reissue a certificate before its expiry date or within one year after that date without requiring the applicant to sit the examination required under section 16 (1) (c) if

(a) within the 5 year period immediately preceding the application date, the applicant has accumulated 20 continuing education credits relating to a matter set out in Schedule 3, or

(b) the applicant

(i) has accumulated at least 5 but fewer than 20 continuing education credits relating to a matter set out in Schedule 3 within the 5 year period immediately preceding the application date, and

(ii) as a term of the new certificate, agrees to complete the difference between the number of continuing education credits accumulated in the 5 year period referred to in subparagraph (i) and 20 within the period specified for that purpose in the certificate.

(2) A continuing education credit is equal to one hour of training that is

(a) in relation to a matter set out in Schedule 3, and

(b) provided by a training provider that

(i) is approved by the administrator,

(ii) provides training approved by the administrator, and

(iii) maintains, for at least 5 years, registration, attendance and course completion information for each student.

Certificate terms and conditions

54   The following are terms and conditions of every certificate issued under section 5 of the Act:

(a) a certificate holder must comply with all applicable regulations;

(b) a certificate is not transferable;

(c) if a certificate holder believes that the certificate holder or another person has contravened the Act or this regulation in a manner involving the release of pesticide into the environment, the certificate holder must give written notice to the administrator as soon as practicable;

(d) a certificate holder must ensure that the certificate holder's certificate is at or near anyplace where the certificate holder is performing a duty that under this regulation must be performed by a certified individual.

[am. B.C. Regs. 235/2015, s. 24; 19/2022, s. 4.]

Pesticide dispenser certificate terms and conditions

54.1   Without limiting section 54 [certificate terms and conditions], it is a condition of every pesticide dispenser certificate issued under section 5 of the Act that the certificate holder perform the duties described in section 46 (3) [duties of certified individuals in relation to licensee].

[en. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 27.]

Residential applicator certificate terms and conditions

54.2   Without limiting section 54 [certificate terms and conditions], the following are terms and conditions of every residential applicator certificate issued under section 5 of the Act:

(a) the certificate holder may use, under the certificate, only a pesticide that

(i) is classed as a domestic pesticide,

(ii) is not a fumigant, and

(iii) does not have a label indicating that the pesticide may be used only by persons holding a certificate or other authorization to use the pesticide;

(b) the certificate holder may use, under the certificate, a pesticide only

(i) on private residential land,

(ii) if the certificate holder is the owner or occupier of the land on which the pesticide is used or if the certificate holder is acting with the agreement of the owner or occupier of that land, and

(iii) for a purpose described in section 5 (1) (i).

[en. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 27.]

Division 4 — Permits

Category of permit required

55   (1) Subject to Division 4 [Permits] of Part 1, a person must hold a permit endorsed for the use of a permit-restricted pesticide who uses or authorizes the use of the permit-restricted pesticide.

(2) Subject to Division 4 of Part 1, a person must hold a permit endorsed for the applicable use who uses or authorizes the use of a pesticide for a use described in section 18 (2) [pesticides and pesticide uses requiring a permit].

(3) Subject to Division 4 of Part 1, a licensee and a confirmation holder require a permit for the purposes of section 7 (2) [licence requirement exemptions] or 25 (2) [confirmation holder exemptions], as applicable, authorizing an exemption from a requirement under section 33 (3) (b) in relation to a use and setting out terms and conditions the licensee or confirmation holder must comply with instead.

Permit applications

56   An applicant for a permit must provide the following information in an application form that is signed by the applicant or the applicant's agent and is in the form specified by the administrator:

(a) name, address and telephone number of the applicant, and if the applicant is a corporation, the name of a person who is the principal contact in relation to the application;

(b) if the applicant carries on business in a name other than a name provided under paragraph (a), that other name;

(c) pesticide class or pesticide use in relation to which the permit is applied for and the following information in relation to the particular pesticide intended to be used:

(i) active ingredient;

(ii) registration number under the federal Act;

(iii) rate of application;

(iv) method of application;

(v) number of hectares to be treated;

(vi) quantity in kilograms;

(d) purpose of the proposed pesticide use;

(e) a description of the treatment location and a map identifying the gross boundaries of the treatment area;

(f) proposed start and end date of pesticide use;

(g) name of the owner or manager of the treatment location.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 20.]

Permit terms and conditions

57   (1) The following are terms and conditions of every permit issued under section 6 of the Act:

(a) a permit holder must comply with all applicable regulations;

(b) a permit is not transferable without the written approval of the administrator;

(c) a permit holder must ensure that an individual holding the certificate required under section 50 (4) [category of certificate required] in relation to a particular use is present when the use is performed and either

(i) performs the use, or

(ii) supervises, in accordance with section 59.3 [supervision requirements], not more than 4 assistant applicators who perform the use;

(d) a permit holder must ensure that a copy of the certificate of the individual described in paragraph (c) is at or near the treatment location during the pesticide use;

(e) if a permit holder believes that the permit holder or another person has contravened this regulation in a manner involving the release of pesticide into the environment, the permit holder must give written notice to the administrator as soon as practicable.

(2) Repealed. [B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 28 (b).]

(3) A person may request the administrator's approval of a transfer of a permit to another person by submitting to the administrator an application containing the name of the permit holder and the information required on a new permit application.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, ss. 24 and 28.]

Division 5 — Confirmations

Pest management plans

58   (1) A pest management plan prepared for the purpose of section 7 (1) (a) of the Act must include the following identifying information:

(a) a description of the geographic boundaries of the area to which the plan applies and maps or diagrams showing proposed treatment areas within that area;

(b) the person responsible for managing pests in relation to the land described in paragraph (a);

(c) the name and phone number of an individual who is the principal contact for information relating to the pest management plan.

(2) A pest management plan prepared for the purpose of section 7 (1) (a) of the Act must include the following integrated pest management elements:

(a) a description of the program that will be employed to prevent organisms from becoming pests;

(b) either

(i) a description of the program that will be employed to identify pests targeted by the plan, or

(ii) identification of the pests targeted by the plan;

(c) a description of the monitoring program that will be employed before or during the pesticide use for assessing pest populations, environmental conditions and damage caused by pests, which program must include a description of

(i) the monitoring methods,

(ii) the frequency of monitoring, and

(iii) the data that will be collected;

(d) the injury thresholds that will be applied in deciding whether a pesticide treatment is necessary and an explanation of

(i) how the thresholds were chosen, and

(ii) how the thresholds will be applied;

(e) pest treatment options including

(i) a description of the pesticide and non-pesticide treatment methods of controlling pests that may be used,

(ii) the rationale for selecting the treatment methods described under subparagraph (i),

(iii) the benefits and limitations of each treatment method described under subparagraph (i), and

(iv) a description of how a decision to use treatment methods will be made;

(f) a description of the monitoring program that will be employed for evaluating the effectiveness of the pesticide use on pest populations and the environment, including effects on organisms other than targeted pests, by comparison with the information collected under the program described in paragraph (c), which program must include a description of

(i) the monitoring methods,

(ii) the frequency of monitoring, and

(iii) the data that will be collected.

(3) A pest management plan prepared for the purpose of section 7 (1) (a) of the Act must include the following operational information:

(a) a description of the methods of handling, preparing, mixing, applying and otherwise using pesticides that will be employed under the plan including a description of the following procedures:

(i) procedures for safely transporting pesticides;

(ii) procedures for safely storing pesticides;

(iii) procedures for safely mixing, loading and applying pesticides;

(iv) procedures for the safe disposal of empty pesticide containers and unused pesticides;

(v) procedures for responding to pesticide spills;

(b) a description of the environmental protection strategies and procedures that will be followed under the plan, including a description of the following strategies and procedures:

(i) strategies to protect community watersheds and other domestic and agricultural water sources from adverse effects of pesticide use;

(ii) strategies to protect fish and wildlife, riparian areas and wildlife habitat from adverse effects of pesticide use;

(iii) strategies to prevent pesticide contamination of food intended for human consumption;

(iv) pre-treatment inspection procedures for identifying treatment area boundaries;

(v) procedures for maintaining and calibrating pesticide application equipment;

(vi) procedures for monitoring weather conditions and strategies for modifying pesticide application methods for different weather conditions;

(c) identification of each pesticide that will be used under the plan, the manner of its application and the type of equipment required for each manner of application.

(4) If a confirmation holder submits under section 59 (2) an amendment to a pesticide use notice, the confirmation holder must amend the pest management plan prepared in relation to the pesticide use notice so that it is consistent with the amended pesticide use notice.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 29.]

Pesticide use notice requirements

59   (1) A pesticide use notice under section 7 (2) of the Act must be signed by the applicant or the applicant's agent and contain the following information:

(a) the name and business address of the applicant, and if different from the business address, an address for service on the applicant;

(b) if the applicant carries on business in a name other than a name provided under paragraph (a), that other name;

(c) the class of pesticide prescribed under section 24 (1) [pesticide classes and pesticide uses requiring a confirmation] or the use prescribed under section 24 (2) in relation to which the notice is sent;

(d) a description of the geographic boundaries of the area to which the pesticide use notice relates, as described in the applicable pest management plan, including the names of the regional districts of which all or a part are within those geographic boundaries;

(e) a list of the active ingredients of the pesticides proposed for use under the applicable pest management plan;

(f) a statement of whether aerial application of pesticide is intended under the applicable pest management plan;

(g) the name and phone number of an officer or employee of the applicant who is the principal contact for information relating to the applicable pest management plan;

(h) the location for the purpose of section 7 (6) (a) of the Act;

(i) the maximum number of hectares or poles per year intended to be treated with pesticide under the applicable pest management plan;

(j) the term of the applicable pest management plan, which must not exceed 5 years;

(k) the amount of the fee prescribed in section 29 [confirmation fees] in relation to the confirmation requested.

(2) If, after the applicant has submitted a pesticide use notice, the information required under subsection (1) changes, the applicant must submit to the administrator an amended pesticide use notice containing the amended information.

[am. B.C. Regs. 235/2015, s. 20; 19/2022, s. 1.]

Division 5.1 — Assistant Applicators

Prohibited activities

59.1   A licensee, a permit holder and a confirmation holder must ensure that assistant applicators do not perform any of the following activities under the licence, permit or confirmation:

(a) select the pesticides to be used in a treatment area;

(b) determine the method or rate of pesticide application in a treatment area;

(c) determine injury thresholds for the purposes of section 68 (1) (d) [licensee use of pesticide — integrated pest management] or 69 (1) (d) [confirmation holder use of pesticide — integrated pest management], if applicable;

(d) mix pesticide concentrates;

(e) calibrate pesticide application equipment;

(f) handle or use fumigants;

(g) use permit-restricted pesticides or restricted pesticides;

(h) use pesticides having a label indicating that the pesticide may be used only by persons holding a certificate or other authorization to use the pesticide;

(i) conduct evaluations for the purposes of section 68 (2) or 69 (2), if applicable;

(j) use an SGAR.

[en. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 30; am. B.C. Reg. 265/2022, s. 11.]

Training and training records

59.2   (1) A licensee, a permit holder and a confirmation holder must ensure that each assistant applicator applying or using a pesticide under the licence, permit or confirmation has, within the 12 months before the first application of a pesticide in a calendar year, completed a course established by the administrator for the purpose of ensuring that assistant applicators are knowledgeable in the application of the pesticide.

(2) A licensee, a permit holder and a confirmation holder must

(a) prepare and maintain a record of each assistant applicator's completion of the course referred to in subsection (1),

(b) keep the record at or near the treatment area during application of the pesticide, and

(c) make the record available to the supervising certificate holder.

[en. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 30.]

Supervision requirements

59.3   A certified individual who is supervising assistant applicators

(a) must not be more than 500 m from each assistant applicator,

(b) must maintain continuous visual or auditory contact with each assistant applicator,

(c) must review the record kept under section 59.2 [training and training records] in respect of each assistant applicator, and

(d) must not permit an assistant applicator to apply a pesticide unless satisfied that the assistant applicator has completed the course required under section 59.2 (1).

[en. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 30.]

Division 6 — Public Consultations and Public Notifications

Public consultation — permit application

60   (1) Within the 45 day period after the administrator has issued an application number in relation to an application for a permit for a pesticide use, the applicant must

(a) publish a notice of the application containing the information set out in subsection (2) in the manner specified by the administrator, or

(b) if all persons who may be affected by use are identifiable, give written notice containing the information set out in subsection (2) to each of those persons.

(2) A notice for the purpose of subsection (1) must contain all the following:

(a) the heading "APPLICATION FOR PESTICIDE USE" in block letters 18 pt. or larger and in bold or medium type;

(b) the application number;

(c) the applicant's name, address, email address and a telephone number at which the applicant can be contacted;

(d) the purpose of the pesticide use;

(e) the manner of application of the pesticide;

(f) the location and size of the treatment area;

(g) the trade name of the pesticide and its active ingredient;

(h) pesticide use proposed start and end dates;

(i) a location where copies of the permit application and maps of the treatment area may be examined;

(j) the following paragraph:

A person wishing to contribute information about the treatment area for the evaluation of this permit application must send copies of the information to both the applicant at the address above or email address above and the administrator under the Integrated Pest Management Act at [address] within 30 days of the publication of this notice.

(3) Within 90 days after the date the notice required under subsection (1) is published or given, as applicable, the applicant for the permit must submit to the administrator

(a) proof of publication of the notice or, if the notice was not published, a copy of the notice and a statement identifying the persons to whom the notice was given, and

(b) a signed statement describing the action the applicant proposes to take in response to information provided in response to the notice.

[am. B.C. Regs. 19/2022, s. 5; 265/2022, s. 12, 41/2024, s. 2.]

Public consultation — pest management plan

61   (1) At least 45 days before submitting a pesticide use notice to the administrator, an applicant for a confirmation must publish, in the manner specified by the administrator, the first of 2 notices containing the information set out in subsection (2), that must be published in a 2 week period.

(2) A notice for the purpose of subsection (1) must contain all the following:

(a) the heading "DEVELOPMENT OF A PEST MANAGEMENT PLAN" in block letters;

(b) a reference number or other identifier unique to the proposed pest management plan;

(c) the applicant's name, address, email address and telephone number;

(d) a statement that the use of pesticides is intended within the area to which the pest management plan applies;

(e) a description, with reference to communities, of the area to which the pest management plan applies;

(f) the proposed duration of the pest management plan;

(g) the trade name and active ingredient of the pesticides proposed to be used under the pest management plan;

(h) the proposed manners of applying the pesticides identified under paragraph (g);

(i) a location where copies of the proposed pest management plan and maps of the proposed treatment area may be examined;

(j) the following paragraph:

A person wishing to contribute information about a proposed treatment area, relevant to the development of the pest management plan, may send copies of the information to the applicant at the address above or email address above within 30 days of the publication of this notice.

(3) If a proposed pesticide use under a pest management plan has the potential to significantly impact an individual or member of an organization or community, the confirmation holder must make reasonable efforts, starting at least 45 days before submitting a pesticide use notice to the administrator, to contact and consult those individuals.

[en. B.C. Reg. 19/2022, s. 6; am. B.C. Regs. 265/2022, s. 12; 41/2024, s. 3.]

Public consultations — licensees in respect of forest land

62   (1) For the purposes of section 9 [public consultation requirements — licensee], at least 14 days before the pesticide use, the licensee must give written notice to the owner of any property within 150 m of the treatment area.

(2) A notice for the purposes of subsection (1) must contain all the following:

(a) description of the treatment area;

(b) reason for the pesticide use;

(c) pesticide to be used, its registration number under the federal Act and its active ingredients;

(d) the earliest date that the pesticide will be used;

(e) the width of the no-treatment zone that will be maintained from a water supply intake or well used for domestic or agricultural purposes, including water for livestock or for irrigation of crops;

(f) a request that the recipient

(i) supply the licensee with the location of water supply intakes or wells described in paragraph (e), and

(ii) advise the licensee of other land uses that may be adversely affected by the use;

(g) a phone number at which the licensee or an employee can be reached for more information about the proposed pesticide use.

Treatment notice — form and content

63   (1) A treatment notice for the purposes of section 10 must contain all the following information:

(a) description of the treatment area;

(b) name of the targeted pest;

(c) the registration number under the federal Act of the pesticide to be used and its active ingredient;

(d) proposed date and start time of the pesticide use and proposed alternative dates and times of the pesticide use;

(e) name of licensee and licence number;

(f) a phone number at which the licensee or an employee can be reached for more information about the proposed pesticide use;

(g) precautions that should be taken to minimize exposure to a pesticide or its residues, including, without limiting this, specifying the period following the use during which people should not enter the treatment area;

(h) if fruit-bearing trees or other food crops are treated, the number of days before food can be harvested safely.

(2) A treatment notice posted for the purposes of section 10 must

(a) if posted in an outdoor area, be at least 550 cm2 in size and if posted in an indoor area, be at least 200 cm2 in size,

(b) if the notice may be exposed to water, be constructed of water resistant material,

(c) use type or letters that are clearly legible to a person approaching the treatment area,

(d) contain a cautionary symbol, like a stop sign or a raised hand, that will draw the attention of a person approaching the treatment area, and

(e) display, in bold, block letters, the words "NOTICE OF PESTICIDE USE" or, in place of the word "pesticide", the word "insecticide", "herbicide" or another category of pesticide.

[am. B.C. Regs. 267/2006, s. 15; 235/2015, s. 31; 41/2024, s. 4.]

Public notification requirement — form and content

64   (1) A notice for the purposes of section 10 (11) [public notification requirements — licensee] or 28 (1) [public notification requirement — confirmations] must be posted or given before each pesticide use in accordance with this section and in the case of a notice posted in accordance with subsection (2) may not be removed for at least 14 days after the use.

(2) Except as provided in subsections (3) and (4), a notice for the purposes of section 10 (11) or 28 (1) must

(a) if in relation to private land, be posted

(i) so that it is clearly visible and legible from each approach maintained by the owner or manager of the land for use by the public to access the treatment area, or

(ii) at a location on a highway so that the notice is clearly visible and legible to a member of the public accessing the approaches described in subparagraph (i) from the highway,

(b) if in relation to public land, be posted

(i) so that it is clearly visible and legible from each approach used by the public to access the treatment area, or

(ii) at a location on a highway so that so the notice is clearly visible and legible to a member of the public accessing the approaches described in subparagraph (i) from the highway,

(c) if posted by a confirmation holder, give notice of

(i) the trade name or active ingredient of the pesticide that will be used,

(ii) the date and time of the pesticide use,

(iii) precautions to be taken to prevent harm to people entering the treatment area,

(iv) the confirmation holder's confirmation number, and

(v) how to contact the confirmation holder or that person's agent to obtain additional information about the pesticide or pesticide use, and

(d) if posted by a licensee, give notice of

(i) the trade name or active ingredient of the pesticide that will be used,

(ii) the date and time of the pesticide use,

(iii) precautions to be taken to prevent harm to people entering the treatment area,

(iv) the licensee's licence number, unless the licensee is using the pesticide under contract with a confirmation holder, in which case, the confirmation holder's confirmation number, and

(v) how to contact the licensee or that person's agent to obtain additional information about the pesticide or pesticide use, unless the licensee is using the pesticide under contract with a confirmation holder, in which case, how to contact the confirmation holder or that person's agent for the additional information.

(3) A notice for the purposes of section 28 (1) in relation to a confirmation holder intending to use, or authorize the use of, a pesticide to manage adult mosquitoes

(a) must be

(i) published in the manner specified by the administrator,

(ii) broadcast on a radio station heard in the treatment area, or

(iii) given personally to the residents of the treatment area,

(b) must be given in writing to beekeepers registered under the Bee Regulation who have apiaries registered under the Bee Regulation in the treatment area, and

(c) must give notice of the matters described in subsection (2) (c) in relation to the proposed pesticide use.

(4) Notice under this section is not required in relation to a use described in section 5 (1) (c) or (d) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] or 24 (2) (c) or (d) [pesticide uses requiring a confirmation].

[am. B.C. Regs. 267/2006, s. 16; 427/2008, s. 3; 235/2015, s. 32; 19/2022, s. 7.]

Division 7 — Standards for Use, Containment, Transport, Storage or Sale of Pesticide

Pesticide container and labelling standards

65   (1) Pesticide must be kept, handled, stored or transported

(a) in the container in which it was originally packaged and with the label originally affixed by the manufacturer, or

(b) in a container designed for containing the pesticide and labelled in accordance with subsection (2).

(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) (b), a label must display

(a) the trade name of the pesticide,

(b) the name and the concentration of the active ingredient in the pesticide, and

(c) the pesticide's registration number under the federal Act.

(3) Subsections (1) and (2) do not apply to tanks being used for mixing pesticides for or holding pesticides during use.

[am. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 2.]

Pesticide storage

66   (1) Pesticide, other than excluded pesticides and domestic pesticides, must be stored

(a) separately from food intended for human or animal consumption, and

(b) in a storage facility that is

(i) ventilated so that pesticide vapours are vented to the outside,

(ii) not used for the storage of food intended for human or animal consumption,

(iii) locked when unattended, and

(iv) accessible only to persons authorized by the person storing the pesticide.

(2) Each door providing access to a facility described in subsection (1) (b) must bear a sign that

(a) has the words "WARNING: CHEMICAL STORAGE — AUTHORIZED PERSONS ONLY" written in block letters, and

(b) is clearly visible to a person approaching the door.

(3) Fumigants and other pesticides that

(a) release vapours, and

(b) bear a "poison" symbol on the label

must be stored in a storage facility that is not attached to or within a building used for living accommodation.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 33.]

Pesticide storage and signage requirements — vendor licensee

67   (1) Despite section 66, a holder of a pesticide vendor licence must store and display pesticides, other than domestic or excluded pesticides, in a storage facility that is

(a) separated from the other areas of the vendor's business premises by floor to ceiling walls constructed of wood, fibreboard, plaster, brick or other solid material,

(b) entered from the outside or, if the entry is inside, has a self-closing door, and

(c) ventilated so that pesticide vapours are vented to the outside.

(2) A holder of a pesticide vendor licence must store and display domestic pesticides separately from food intended for human or animal consumption.

(3) A holder of a pesticide vendor licence must store and display SGARs and domestic pesticides, other than excluded pesticides, in a manner that prevents the public from accessing the pesticides without the assistance of a certified dispenser.

(4) If a holder of a pesticide vendor licence offers SGARs for sale, the licensee must, in the place where each SGAR is displayed, post signage that complies with the standards established by the administrator.

[am. B.C. Regs. 267/2006, s. 17; 235/2015, s. 34; 265/2022, s. 13.]

Licensee use of pesticide — integrated pest management

68   (1) Except as provided in section 7 (1) [licence requirement exemptions], a licensee may use a pesticide only after doing all the following in accordance with integrated pest management principles:

(a) identify and implement, or identify and advise the owner, occupant or manager of the treatment area of, reasonable measures to prevent pests;

(b) identify pest species and pest complexes to be managed;

(c) monitor to determine the population of pests and their location;

(d) determine the injury threshold for each pest and apply them to the determination of when to use a pesticide;

(e) select pest treatment methods based on

(i) consideration of practical alternatives to pesticide use, and

(ii) protection of human health and the environment.

(2) After each pesticide use, a licensee must evaluate, in accordance with integrated pest management principles, the effectiveness of the use.

[am. B.C. Reg. 265/2022, s. 14.]

Confirmation holder use of pesticide — integrated pest management

69   (1) Except as provided in section 25 (1) [confirmation holder exemptions], a confirmation holder may use, or authorize the use of, a pesticide only after doing all the following in accordance with integrated pest management principles:

(a) implement the reasonable measures to prevent pests identified in the pest management plan prepared in relation to the confirmation;

(b) identify pest species and pest complexes to be managed;

(c) determine, on the basis of monitoring

(i) the population of pests and their location,

(ii) the environmental conditions and features of the treatment area, and

(iii) the damage that has been or may be caused by the pests;

(d) determine the injury threshold for each pest and apply it to the determination of when to use a pesticide;

(e) select pest treatment methods based on, as identified in the pest management plan prepared in relation to the confirmation,

(i) consideration of practical alternatives to pesticide use, and

(ii) protection of human health and the environment.

(2) A confirmation holder must make pre-treatment and post-treatment observations of the treatment area to evaluate the effectiveness and impact of each pesticide use.

Use requirements — all users

70   (1) A container used to prepare, mix or apply a pesticide must not be washed or submerged in a body of water.

(2) If equipment is used to draw water from a body of water or an irrigation system into a container used to contain, prepare, mix or apply a pesticide, a gap must be maintained between the pesticide and the equipment so that pesticide is prevented from entering the body of water or irrigation system.

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder

71   (1) A licensee, for the purposes of a pesticide use for which the licence is required, and a confirmation holder for the purposes of a pesticide use for which the confirmation is required, must do all the following before the pesticide use:

(a) ensure that each individual who will be using the pesticide is informed of

(i) the boundaries of the proposed treatment area,

(ii) the requirements for personal protection, and

(iii) the pesticide use procedures required to protect human health and the environment;

(b) ensure that the application equipment is in good working order and, if required, is calibrated to conform with the application rates on the pesticide label;

(c) carry out an inspection of the treatment area to ensure that the applicable regulatory requirements and standards can be met in carrying out the use;

(d) if the pesticide is to be applied aerially, ensure that the pilot conducts an inspection of the proposed treatment area to ensure that the pilot is familiar with the boundaries and other critical features of the treatment area.

(2) A person described in subsection (1) must ensure that the following precautions are taken in carrying out the pesticide use:

(a) precautions to prevent unprotected human exposure to pesticide;

(b) precautions to ensure that domestic water sources, agricultural water sources and soil used for agricultural crop production are protected for their intended use;

(c) except as provided under subsection (12), precautions to avoid the use of pesticide over vertebrate wildlife or domestic animals that are visible to the user.

(3) Except as provided in subsections (4) and (12) and section 79 (2), a person described in subsection (1) must maintain a 30 m no-treatment zone around a water supply intake or well used for domestic or agricultural purposes, including water for livestock or for irrigation of crops.

(4) A person described in subsection (1) may reduce the no-treatment zone under subsection (3) if reasonably satisfied that the smaller zone will ensure that pesticide from the use will not enter the water supply intake or well.

(5) Except as provided in subsection (12) or (13), a person described in subsection (1) must ensure that a no-treatment zone between an outdoor pesticide use area and a body of water is sufficient to prevent the release of pesticide spray or runoff into the body of water.

(6) Unless an adjacent property owner or manager agrees otherwise, a person described in subsection (1) must ensure that a no-treatment zone between an outdoor pesticide use area and the adjacent property is sufficient to prevent the release of pesticide spray or runoff onto the adjacent property.

(7) Except as provided in section 76 (3) [use requirements — railway vegetation management], a person described in subsection (1) must not engage in broadcast spraying or foliar spraying outdoors if the wind speed exceeds 8 km per hour.

(8) Except in the case of pesticide use to manage adult mosquitoes, a person described in subsection (1) must spray pesticides only between 30 minutes before sunrise and 30 minutes after sunset unless a lighting device is used so that the person applying the pesticide and the pesticide use are clearly visible from a distance of at least 30 m.

(9) A person described in subsection (1) must not

(a) use a residual pesticide on water-saturated soil, during heavy rainfall or if heavy rainfall is imminent, or

(b) spray a pesticide on foliage covered by ice or frost or if water is flowing on the foliage.

(10) A person described in subsection (1) must ensure that a use of herbicide does not remove vegetation that is necessary to

(a) prevent erosion of a stream bank,

(b) prevent debris that would cause an unreasonable adverse effect from entering a stream, or

(c) maintain slope stability in areas where landslides have occurred.

(11) A person described in subsection (1) must use slug bait that may be harmful to children or domestic animals only

(a) in slug bait stations that are resistant to tampering by children and animals, or

(b) in areas that are inaccessible to children and domestic animals.

(12) Subsections (2) (c), (3) and (5) do not apply in relation to a pesticide use if the pesticide is a bacterial pesticide.

(13) Subsection (5) does not apply in relation to pesticide use in a storm water catch basin if the pesticide is methoprene.

[am. B.C. Regs. 267/2006, s. 18; 427/2008, s. 4; 235/2015, ss. 35 and 36; 19/2022, s. 8.]

Use requirements — confirmation holder

72   (1) A confirmation holder using, or authorizing the use of, a pesticide must

(a) comply with all applicable regulations,

(b) ensure that an individual holding the certificate required under section 50 (4) [category of certificate required] in relation to a particular use is present when the use is performed and either

(i) performs the use, or

(ii) supervises, in accordance with section 59.3 [supervision requirements], not more than 4 assistant applicators who perform the use,

(c) ensure that the certificate of the individual described in paragraph (b) is at or near the treatment area during the pesticide use, and

(d) if the confirmation holder believes that the confirmation holder or another person has contravened the Act or this regulation in a manner involving the release of pesticide into the environment, the confirmation holder must give written notice to the administrator as soon as practicable.

(2) Repealed. [B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 37 (b).]

(3) A confirmation holder may use, or authorize the use of, pesticides only in areas described for the purposes of section 42 (3) [confirmation holder — annual notice of intent to treat] in the confirmation holder's notice of intent to treat provided to the administrator for the calendar year in which the pesticide use is proposed.

(4) A confirmation holder must ensure that a person applying pesticide on the confirmation holder's behalf has access to the detailed map or diagram required under section 42 (1) [confirmation holder — annual notice of intent to treat].

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, ss. 24 and 37.]

Use requirements for pesticide-free zone — confirmation holder and licensee

73   (1) Except as provided in sections 74 (1) and (2), 75 (3) to (7), 76 (5) to (7), 77 (2), 78 (2), 79 (3) and (4) and 80, a licensee, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 5 (1) (a), (b), (g), (j), (k) or (l) [pesticide uses requiring a licence], and a confirmation holder, for the purposes of a pesticide use for which the confirmation is required, must ensure that a minimum 10 m pesticide-free zone is maintained around or along bodies of water, dry streams and classified wetlands.

(2) Pesticide-free zones must be measured in horizontal distance from the high water mark of the body of water, dry stream or classified wetlands.

(3) A person described in subsection (1) must ensure that a no-treatment zone, sufficient to ensure the maintenance of the pesticide-free zone required under subsection (1), is maintained around the pesticide-free zone.

(4) This section does not apply in relation to a pesticide use if the pesticide is a bacterial pesticide.

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to specific uses

74   (1) A licensee for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 5 (1) (a), (b), (k) or (l) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] and a confirmation holder for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 24 (2) (a), (b), (f) or (g) [pesticide classes and pesticide uses requiring a confirmation] using glyphosate, may reduce the pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) as follows:

(a) to 2 m along or around a body of water or a classified wetland that is fish bearing or that drains directly into a fish bearing body of water or a dry stream that when wet is fish bearing or drains directly into a fish bearing body of water

(i) if the treatment area is

(A) railway ballast, signal, switch or yard, or

(B) another industrial site that must be free of vegetation, or

(ii) if the pesticide is applied using selective application methods;

(b) except as provided in section 77 (2), to 5 m along or around body of water or a classified wetland that is fish bearing or that drains directly into a fish bearing body of water or along or around a dry stream that when wet is fish bearing or drains directly into a fish bearing body of water, unless the treatment area is described in paragraph (a) (i);

(c) except as provided in section 77 (2), to a 2 m no-treatment zone along or around a body of water if the body of water is not fish bearing at any time of the year and does not drain directly into a fish bearing body of water.

(2) A person described in subsection (1), despite that subsection, may apply glyphosate

(a) up to but not below the high water mark of temporary, free-standing bodies of water, and

(b) over dry streams

that are not fish bearing at any time of the year and do not drain directly into a fish bearing body of water.

[am. B.C. Reg. 19/2022, s. 9.]

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to forestry uses

75   (1) In this section:

"fish bearing", in relation to a body of water or classified wetland, means the body of water or classified wetland is frequented by

(a) anadromous salmonids,

(b) rainbow trout, cutthroat trout, brown trout, bull trout, Dolly Varden char, lake trout, brook trout, kokanee, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, mountain whitefish, lake whitefish, arctic grayling, burbot, white sturgeon, black crappie, yellow perch, walleye or northern pike,

(c) a species of fish identified as a species at risk under section 11 (1) of the Government Actions Regulation, or

(d) a species of fish identified as regionally important wildlife under section 11 (2) of the Government Actions Regulation;

"wildlife habitat feature" means a wildlife habitat feature identified under section 11 of the Government Actions Regulation.

(2) A licensee, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 5 (1) (g) or (j) [pesticide uses requiring a licence], and a confirmation holder, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 24 (2) (e) [pesticide uses requiring a confirmation], must ensure that integrated pest management monitoring activities required under section 68 (1) or 69 (1) are conducted within the 18 month period before the pesticide use to which it relates.

(3) A person described in subsection (2) using glyphosate may reduce the pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) to 2 m along or around a body of water or classified wetland if

(a) the body of water or classified wetland is not fish bearing at any time of the year, and

(b) selective application methods are used between 2 m and 10 m above the high water mark.

(4) The pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) is not required along or around a body of water by a person described in subsection (2) using glyphosate, if

(a) the body of water is

(i) a temporary free-standing body of water,

(ii) not a classified wetland nor a wildlife habitat feature,

(iii) not fish bearing and does not drain into a fish bearing body of water within 100 m, and

(b) no glyphosate is applied below the high water mark.

(5) The pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) is not required along or around a body of water by a person described in subsection (2) using glyphosate if the body of water is

(a) a temporary free-standing body of water,

(b) not a wildlife habitat feature,

(c) not fish bearing and does not drain into a fish bearing body of water within 100 m, and

(d) either smaller than 25 m2 or not a wetland.

(6) The pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) is not required along a dry stream by a person described in subsection (2) using glyphosate, if

(a) the dry stream is not a wildlife habitat feature, and

(b) not fish bearing when wet.

(7) If the conditions in subsection (5) or (6) are met, glyphosate may be applied to a body of water and a dry stream.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 38.]

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to railway vegetation management

76   (1) A licensee, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 5 (1) (a), and a confirmation holder, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 24 (2) (a), may not apply pesticide from an aircraft.

(2) A person described in subsection (1) must not apply pesticide to Rubus species of plants that are more than 3 m away from rails, signals or switch stands from the time the flowers open until the berries have predominantly dropped from the vines.

(3) A person described in subsection (1) may spray pesticide when wind speeds are between 8 km per hour and 16 km per hour if a shrouded boom is used.

(4) A person described in subsection (1) may apply pesticide from a moving vehicle if

(a) a shrouded boom is used and the vehicle speed is not more than 30 km per hour,

(b) a shrouded boom is not used, paragraph (c) does not apply and the vehicle speed is not more than 16 km per hour, or

(c) the pesticide is a wood preservative.

(5) A person described in subsection (1) using glyphosate may reduce the pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) to a 1 m no-treatment zone along or around a body of water if

(a) the pesticide is applied to railway ballast or yards, and

(b) the body of water is a temporary, free-standing body of water that is not fish bearing at any time of the year and does not drain directly into fish bearing waters.

(6) A person described in subsection (1) may reduce the pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) to a 1 m no-treatment zone along or around a body of water or a dry steam if

(a) the treatment is selective application to trees at highway crossings along the right of way,

(b) the body of water or dry stream is not fish bearing at any time of the year and does not drain directly into fish bearing water, and

(c) if in relation to a body of water, the body of water is a temporary, free-standing body of water.

(7) The pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) is not required by a person described in subsection (1) if

(a) the pesticide is a wood preservative, and

(b) precautions are taken that prevent the deposit of the wood preservative below the high water mark.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 36.]

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to noxious weed and invasive plant management

77   (1) Each of the following must not apply herbicide more than 1.5 m from a targeted weed or plant:

(a) a licensee for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 5 (1) (l);

(b) a licensee performing noxious weed or invasive plant management in relation to a use described in section 5 (1) (a), (b), (g), (j) or (k);

(c) a confirmation holder, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 24 (2) (g);

(d) a confirmation holder performing noxious weed or invasive plant management in relation to a use described in section 24 (2) (a), (b), (e) or (f).

(2) A person described in subsection (1) using glyphosate may reduce the pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) to a minimum of 1 m if selective application is used between 1 m and 10 m above the high water mark.

(3) A person described in subsection (1) in carrying out the use must make reasonable efforts to

(a) identify sites where biological weed control organisms have been released, and

(b) prevent harm to those organisms.

[am. B.C. Reg. 267/2006, s. 19.]

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to mosquito management

78   (1) Subject to subsection (1.1), a licensee, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 5 (1) (c), and a confirmation holder, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 24 (2) (c) or (h), must not use a pesticide that is a mosquito larvicide in permanent, fish bearing bodies of water or waters that have permanent, direct, surface-water connections with fish bearing bodies of water.

(1.1) A person described in subsection (1) is exempt from that subsection if the following conditions are met:

(a) the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control has advised the public that it has identified the West Nile virus in mosquitoes in the region of the Province where the pesticide is to be applied, and

(b) the mosquitoes to be treated are species that are vectors of the West Nile virus.

(2) The pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) is not required by a confirmation holder in relation to the application of pesticide to a body of water for the purpose of managing mosquitoes.

(3) If a person described in subsection (1) does not know whether specific bodies of water are described by that subsection, the person must contact a local representative of Fisheries and Oceans Canada and inquire before applying mosquito larvicide to those waters.

(4) A person described in subsection (1) must

(a) confirm by water dip samples that mosquito larvae are present in a body of water before applying mosquito larvicide to the body of water,

(b) document the efficacy of a use of mosquito larvicide by conducting pre-treatment and post-treatment larval samples of the water, and

(c) spray a pesticide for the purpose of controlling adult mosquitoes only between sunset and sunrise.

(5) A person described in subsection (1) may not use a pesticide containing propoxur in

(a) a wildlife management area designated under section 4 of the Wildlife Act,

(b) a critical wildlife area or wildlife sanctuary designated under section 5 of the Wildlife Act,

(c) land acquired and administered under section 3 of the Wildlife Act,

(d) an ecological reserve designated under the Ecological Reserve Act,

(e) a bird sanctuary designated under the regulations pursuant to the Migratory Birds Convention Act, 1994 (Canada), or

(f) a wildlife area designated under the Canada Wildlife Act.

(6) A licensee, for the purposes of a pesticide use described in section 5 (1) (c.1), may use methoprene in a storm water catch basin only if the following conditions are met:

(a) the licensee must contact the drinking water officer within the meaning of the Drinking Water Protection Act for the region within which the treatment is proposed in order to ascertain if the proposed treatment area is near a water supply intake or well used for domestic or agricultural purposes, including water for livestock or irrigation of crops, and

(b) if the storm water catch basin drains directly into a fish bearing body of water,

(i) the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control has advised the public that it has identified the West Nile virus in mosquitoes in the region of the Province where the pesticide is to be applied, and

(ii) the mosquitoes to be treated are species that are vectors of the West Nile virus.

[am. B.C. Regs. 267/2006, s. 20; 427/2008, s. 5; 235/2015, s. 39.]

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder in relation to the use of wood preservatives on poles

79   (1) In this section:

"external liquid formulation" means liquid preservative that is applied to the exterior of wood;

"groundline bandage treatment formulation" means a preservative in a paste form that is applied to the exterior of wood and then wrapped with a covering;

"liquid internal preservative" means a liquid preservative that is applied to wood by low pressure through a hole drilled into the core of the wood.

(2) The no-treatment zone required under section 71 (3) is not required by a licensee for the purpose of a use described in section 5 (1) (d) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] or a confirmation holder for the purpose of a use described in section 24 (2) (d) if

(a) an external liquid formulation, a groundline bandage treatment formulation or a liquid internal preservative is used, and

(b) a 10 m no-treatment zone is maintained

(i) around wells, and

(ii) from a water intake on any side from which land slopes upward.

(3) The pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) [use requirements for pesticide-free zone] is not required by a person described in subsection (2) if

(a) a liquid internal wood preservative is used,

(b) a 3 m no-treatment zone is maintained from fish bearing bodies of water and dry streams that are fish bearing when wet,

(c) a 1 m no-treatment zone is maintained from non-fish bearing bodies of water, and

(d) no pesticide is applied below the high water mark of dry streams that are not fish bearing at any time of the year.

(4) The pesticide-free zone required under section 73 (1) [use requirements for pesticide-free zone] is not required by a person described in subsection (2) if

(a) an external liquid formulation or groundline bandage treatment formulation is used,

(b) a 3 m no-treatment zone is maintained from fish bearing bodies of water and dry streams that are fish bearing when wet, and

(c) a 1 m no-treatment zone is maintained from non-fish bearing bodies of water or dry streams that are not fish bearing at any time of the year.

Use requirements — licensee and confirmation holder using bacterial pesticide

80   Sections 71 (2) (c), (3) and (5) and 73 (1) do not apply to a licensee or a confirmation holder using a bacterial pesticide.

Use requirements — licensee in relation to rodenticide use

81   (1) A licensee providing a service or performing a use described in section 5 (1) (e), (f), (h), (i) or (n) [pesticide uses requiring a licence] must deploy rodenticide bait only

(a) in rigid walled bait containers that are fastened down to prevent tipping or removal and that remain securely closed for the period of time they are in use, or

(b) in locations and in a manner so that unauthorized people and domestic pets cannot gain access to them.

(2) A licensee who deploys rodenticide bait in a container must ensure that a label is placed on the outside of the container lid which label contains all the following:

(a) the word "Poison" or the symbol for poison;

(b) the name of the licensee's contact and the phone number at which that person can be reached for information about the pesticide use;

(c) the pesticide's active ingredient or its registration number under the federal Act.

(3) If a licensee applies rodenticide bait for a use described in section 5 (1) (e), (f), (h), (i) or (n) in living accommodations or in areas of multi-residence buildings or multi-residence properties to which children have access, the rodenticide

(a) must contain an agent, like denatonium benzoate, that causes a bitter taste, and

(b) must be removed from the treatment area and destroyed when the baiting program is complete.

(4) Subsection (3) applies to a licensee applying rodenticide bait for a use described in section 5 (1) (e), (f), (h), (i) or (n) in a playground or inside or outside a school, daycare, recreational facility or other facility frequented by or likely to be frequented by children.

(5) A licensee must not do any of the following:

(a) use an SGAR at a treatment site that is not an essential service location;

(b) use an SGAR at a treatment site unless the licensee has determined that rodents are present at the treatment site or that there is evidence of recent rodent activity at the treatment site;

(c) use an SGAR at a treatment site unless practical alternatives to the use of an SGAR have been implemented and have not been effective in relation to the management of rodents;

(d) use an SGAR at a treatment site unless the licensee ensures that the owner, occupant or manager has implemented the measures described in section 68  (1) (a), if the licensee is not personally implementing those measures;

(e) use an SGAR at a treatment site for more than 35 consecutive days;

(f) use an SGAR at a treatment site for more than 120 days in a year;

(g) use an SGAR in one of the following areas, unless subsection (6) applies:

(i) a critical wildlife area or wildlife sanctuary designated under section 5 of the Wildlife Act;

(ii) an ecological reserve designated under the Ecological Reserve Act;

(iii) a bird sanctuary designated under the regulations pursuant to the Migratory Birds Convention Act, 1994 (Canada).

(6) Despite subsection (5) (g), a licensee may use an SGAR in an area set out in that subsection if

(a) the area is a place where the government of British Columbia or an agent of the government of British Columbia, the government of Canada or an agent of the government of Canada, or a First Nation engages in a program that has the purpose of conserving or protecting a species or an ecosystem from the impacts of non-native rodents, and

(b) the licensee complies with all other applicable requirements under the Act.

(7) A licensee who intends to use or who uses an SGAR must, in relation to each proposed treatment site, do the following:

(a) before each use, ask the owner, occupant or manager of the treatment site to disclose whether an SGAR has been used in that treatment site within the preceding year and, if one has been used, the dates on which it was used;

(b) refrain from using the SGAR at the treatment site if it appears to the licensee that the number of days set out in subsection (5) (e) or (f) has been exceeded or would be exceeded if the licensee were to use the SGAR;

(c) prepare a rodent management plan in the form and containing the information specified by the administrator;

(d) follow the rodent management plan referred to in paragraph (c) when using the SGAR;

(e) remove any spilled SGAR as soon as practicable;

(f) make reasonable efforts to remove all dead rodents from the treatment site, except for any dead rodents that in the opinion of the licensee were not poisoned by an SGAR;

(g) subject to paragraph (h), remove each SGAR from the treatment area by no later than 35 days after the date that the SGAR is first used;

(h) if the licensee is not permitted to enter the treatment site for the purposes of complying with paragraphs (f) or (g),

(i) advise the owner, occupant or manager of the treatment site to remove the SGARs and dead rodents from the treatment site, and

(ii) provide advice on disposal practices that minimize hazards to human health and the environment and that comply with applicable municipal bylaws;

(i) dispose of SGARs and rodents that are removed from the treatment site and from other areas in proximity to the treatment site in a manner that minimizes hazards to human health and the environment and that complies with applicable municipal bylaws.

(8) For greater certainty, nothing in this section is intended to limit a person's obligations under the Act in relation to pest management plans.

[am. B.C. Regs. 267/2006, s. 21; 265/2022, s. 15.]

Use requirements — licensee in relation to fumigant gas

82   (1) A licensee who uses a fumigant gas must monitor the concentrations of the fumigant in the air in and near the treatment area for the purposes of

(a) detecting fumigant leaks from the treatment area,

(b) determining whether the pesticide use is effective,

(c) determining when concentrations are at a level that is safe for humans to re-enter the treatment area, and

(d) if the fumigant is released into buildings or spaces where humans may be present, determining if concentrations are at a level that is safe for human exposure.

(2) A licensee using a fumigant gas must restrict access by unprotected individuals to the treatment area until a person holding a pesticide applicator certificate has determined that the fumigant gas concentration levels are safe for human exposure.

(3) A licensee, when clearing a fumigant gas from a treatment area after the use, must release the fumigant gas into the atmosphere in a manner that prevents human exposure to hazardous concentrations of the fumigant gas.

[am. B.C. Reg. 235/2015, s. 40.]

Division 8 — Records

Keeping records

83   (1) Records required to be kept under this regulation must be kept

(a) up to date,

(b) except as provided in subsection (2), at the business location identified on the licence or permit application or the pesticide use notice, as applicable, and

(c) for a period of 3 years after the sale, use or application to which they relate.

(2) A licensee, permit holder or confirmation holder

(a) may keep records relating to a pesticide use at or near the treatment location during the use, and

(b) must ensure that the records described in paragraph (a) are at the business location described in subsection (1) (b) within 60 days after completion of the pesticide treatment to which they relate.

Schedule 1

[am. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 41.]

Permit-Restricted Pesticides

4-aminopyridine
monosodium methanearsonate (MSMA)

Schedule 2

[en. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 42; am. B.C. Reg. 264/2022, App., s. 16.]

Excluded Pesticides

acetic acid (DOMESTIC)
adjuvants (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
animal repellents (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL) except thiram
anti-fouling paints (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
antisapstain wood preservatives used on private, industrial land owned by the company or person responsible for applying the preservatives (COMMERCIAL)
asphalt solids used as pruning paints (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
bactericides used in petroleum products (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
boron compounds (DOMESTIC)
boron compounds formulated with up to 5% copper for insect control and wood preservation (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
10capsaicin (DOMESTIC, COMMERCIAL and RESTRICTED)
11cleansers (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
12corn cellulose (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
13corn gluten (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
14deodorizers (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
15d-phenothrin (DOMESTIC)
16d-trans-allethrin, also referred to as d-cis, trans allethrin (DOMESTIC)
17fatty acids (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
18ferric phosphate (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
19ferrous sulphate (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
20formic acid (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
21hard surface disinfectants (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
22insect repellents (DOMESTIC)
23insect semiochemicals, including pheromones, kairomones, attractants and repellents (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
24insecticides sold and used in tamper-resistant bait stations (DOMESTIC)
25kaolin (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
26laundry additives (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
27material preservatives (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
28methoprene (DOMESTIC)
29mineral oils for insect and mite control (DOMESTIC)
30naphthalene for fabric protection (DOMESTIC)
31n-octyl bicycloheptene dicarboximide (DOMESTIC)
32octenol (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
33oxalic acid (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
34paradichlorobenzene for fabric protection (DOMESTIC)
35pesticides in aerosol containers (DOMESTIC)
36pesticides registered under the federal Act for application to pets (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
37piperonyl butoxide (DOMESTIC)
38plant growth regulators (DOMESTIC)
39polybutene bird repellents (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
40pyrethrins (DOMESTIC)
41resmethrin (DOMESTIC)
42silica aerogel, also referred to as silica gel, amorphous silica and amorphous silica gel (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
43silicon dioxide, also referred to as diatomaceous earth (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
44slimicides (COMMERCIAL)
45soaps (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
46sulphur, including lime sulphur, sulphide sulphur and calcium polysulphide (DOMESTIC)
47 swimming pool algicides and bactericides (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
48 tetramethrin (DOMESTIC)
49 thymol (DOMESTIC and COMMERCIAL)
50 wood preservatives (DOMESTIC)
51 zinc strips (DOMESTIC)

Schedule 3

[am. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 43.]

Certificate Examination Matters

General pesticide characteristics
Act and Regulations
Labelling
Human Health
Pesticide Safety
Environment
Pest Management
Application Technology
Emergency Response
10 Professionalism

Schedule 4

[en. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 44.]

Scheduled Pesticides

Bacillus sphaericus, also referred to as Bs
Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis, also referred to as Bti
Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki, also referred to as Btk
glyphosate
nuclear polyhedrosis virus

Schedule 5

[en. B.C. Reg. 234/2015, s. 45.]

No Licence or Certificate Required for Certain Uses

Bacillus sphaericus, also referred to as Bs (DOMESTIC)
Bacillus subtilis (DOMESTIC)
Bacillus thuringiensis var. israelensis, also referred to as Bti (DOMESTIC)
Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki, also referred to as Btk (DOMESTIC)
citric acid (DOMESTIC)
copper (oxychloride and tribasic only) (DOMESTIC)
FeHEDTA (DOMESTIC)
ferric sodium EDTA (DOMESTIC)
garlic (DOMESTIC)
10 lactic acid (DOMESTIC)
11 Phoma macrostoma (DOMESTIC)
12 pyriproxyfen (DOMESTIC)
13 Sclerotinia minor (DOMESTIC)
14 sodium chloride (DOMESTIC)
15 spinosad (DOMESTIC)

Schedule 6

[en. B.C. Reg. 264/2022, App., s. 17.]

Essential Service Locations

Column 1
Item
Column 2
Categories of essential
service locations
Column 3
Essential service locations
1Health servicesHospitals
2Health servicesFacilities, other than hospitals, where emergency health care services are provided
3Health servicesPrimary health care facilities, including but not limited to assisted living facilities and facilities where day surgeries are performed
4Health servicesSubsidized housing facilities that make available on-site supports for adults who are at risk of or are experiencing homelessness
5Health servicesSafe use injection sites
6Emergency response services, emergency management services and national defenceDepartment of National Defence facilities
7Emergency response services, emergency management services and national defenceCanadian Armed Forces, Canadian Coast Guard and Coast Guard Auxiliary facilities
8Emergency response services, emergency management services and national defenceLocal, regional, provincial and federal emergency response and emergency management facilities
9Emergency response services, emergency management services and national defenceFacilities associated with emergency responders, including police, fire, ambulance and 9-1-1 dispatch
10Electricity, water, oil and gas and similar servicesInfrastructure and facilities associated with the generation, transmission or distribution of electricity, but not including charging stations
11Electricity, water, oil and gas and similar servicesInfrastructure and facilities associated with drinking water, including but not limited to water filtration facilities and water distribution facilities
12Electricity, water, oil and gas and similar servicesWastewater processing facilities
13Electricity, water, oil and gas and similar servicesInfrastructure and facilities associated with petroleum, natural gas and propane gas production, processing, transmission, distribution and storage, but not including gasoline stations
14Agriculture and foodPlaces where land is used for agriculture
15Agriculture and foodAquaculture operations
16Agriculture and foodFacilities for food production, processing, storage and transportation
17Agriculture and foodGrocery stores, convenience stores, food banks and other places engaged in the provision or retail sale of food, but not including vending machines or stores that primarily sell beverages, pet food, cannabis, liquor or snacks
18TransportationInfrastructure and facilities associated with commercial or industrial shipping, including commercial ports, passenger terminals and commercial terminals and shipyards
19TransportationAirplane hangars
20TransportationInfrastructure and facilities associated with the transportation of passengers and goods by rail
21Sanitation, waste and recycling servicesWaste (garbage and organics) processing facilities
22Sanitation, waste and recycling servicesRecycling processing facilities, including but not limited to recycling transfer stations and recycling collection locations
23Sanitation, waste and recycling servicesWaste disposal facilities, including landfills and waste-to-energy facilities, but not including residential and commercial waste collection areas
24CommunicationsInfrastructure and facilities associated with radio, cable television and telecommunications systems and services, including but not limited to cellular towers, broadcasting structures, undersea cable landing stations and internet exchange points, but not including offices and call centres
25Coroner, mortuary and similar servicesFacilities for coroners and facilities where forensic services are performed
26Coroner, mortuary and similar servicesFacilities where mortuary services are performed, including funeral homes, crematoria and cemeteries
27Coroner, mortuary and similar servicesFacilities associated with the storage, transportation and certification of human remains
28Environmental protectionPlaces where the government of British Columbia or an agent of the government of British Columbia, the government of Canada or an agent of the government of Canada, or a First Nation engages in a program that has the purpose of conserving or protecting a species or an ecosystem from the impacts of non-native rodents

[Provisions relevant to the enactment of this regulation: Integrated Pest Management Act, S.B.C. 2003, c. 58, ss. 36, 38 and 39.]