11-year-old launches campaign to save the bees: "We're going to win"

Authored by cbsnews.com and submitted by StevenSanders90210

Scarlett Harper is fearless, especially when it comes to bees. When the 11-year-old Illinois resident learned the bees in her neighborhood were being wiped out by mosquito pesticides, she launched a campaign to save them.

"Go make some phone calls, get some state reps on board, let's do this!" she said on Instagram in May.

Harper helped create the "Bee Bill," officially known as Illinois HB 3118, with State Representative Robyn Gabel. It aims to restrict mosquito control pesticides that can be lethal to bees. After cold-calling lawmakers, Harper was able to secure 22 co-sponsors — and the bill made it out of the state's Energy and Environment Committee with a unanimous 29-0 vote.

"Bees are completely vital to humans," she said. "They pollinate a third of our food supply, and without them, we really can't survive."

Harper's parents say she developed a passion for the environment all on her own. It started at an early age, when she realized her love of gardening. When she was nine, she said she learned of a plan in her town to cut down trees for a construction project. She joined her town's Environmental Forestry Commission and spoke to officials to try and stop the project.

Harper is seen with a swarm of bees. CBS News

Harper is much younger than most of the people who are fighting to pass bills. But she said she sees her age as an advantage.

"As a kid trying to make an impact stopping the climate crisis, I have been lucky to be given a little extra leeway to be blunt and impatient with how slow progress is," she said. "I realized that early on and started using my voice to state the elephant in the room."

"Instead of thinking of my age as a disadvantage, I try to use it as a tool, because I'm a little bit younger," she added. "I can not get bogged down in what might go wrong."

While the Bee Bill started off strong, it faced opposition from pesticide companies and landscapers, and the session ended with the bill stalled. But that's left Harper even more determined to fight for the bees. She said she hopes that the legislation will be reintroduced next session.

"We're going to win," she said.

"You're not giving up?" asked CBS News.

ron-the-wees on August 19th, 2021 at 23:31 UTC »

Did anyone read the article? It said she wanted to ban a mosquito pesticide, not just replace them with honey bees. The points are valid, but doesn’t apply to this girl

esto20 on August 19th, 2021 at 17:47 UTC »

Why do people think that beekeeping honeybees will "save the bees"? Of anything it's making the situation worse

mglyptostroboides on August 19th, 2021 at 17:31 UTC »

Beekeeper here.

We don't need beekeepers to save the bees. Especially in North America, where honeybees are an introduced species. In fact, novice beekeepers with poor hive hygiene practices are probably making colony collapse disorder worse. We need to be focusing on conserving native pollinators like bumblebees.

Unfortunately, there's this persistent myth in the hobbyist beekeeping community that the ecosystem needs beekeepers. It's entirely bullshit. Only a few crops need it, and none of them are staple crops. If all honeybees in North America disappeared overnight, all that would happen is apples and almonds would suddenly become extremely expensive. Wheat and corn and so on are all wind pollinated. And all the native plants are pollinated just fine by bumblebees and other insects.

Despite all this, amateur beekeepers will look you straight in the eye and tell you the environment "needs" us. I even overheard a woman at the local beekeeping club (which I no longer attend because it's full of garbage like this) say it was okay her first hive absconded because she was "adding more bees to the area". What?! She thought she was still saving the world even by being a bad apiarist! All she was doing was spreading diseases and parasites that can hurt other hives. And she was boosting the numbers of a species that doesn't even belong here.

Beekeeping is just a hobby. We're not superheroes. Stop spreading this myth.