The San Diego County Board of Supervisors on June 10 confirmed levies and service charges for mosquito abatement and vector control for fiscal year 2026–27 after a public hearing and extensive caller commentary.
Staff explained the levy adjustments and costs for mosquito and vector control services and responded that finance staff were maintaining fiscal prudence; one caller characterized a roughly 6% increase in fees as acceptable given departmental financial management. Several callers, however, raised concerns ranging from health risks of larvicides and adulticides to broader conspiracy narratives about genetic modification and alleged malicious releases. The record includes a mix of technical skepticism and claims about cloud seeding, Bill Gates, and vaccine-linked theories; meeting staff repeatedly reminded callers to address the agenda item and enforced time limits.
The board voted by voice vote to approve the levies with all supervisors present voting in favor.
Context and limitations: many public comments were unspecific or speculative. Staff presented the levy as routine financing for vector control programs; the board did not alter program scope at the hearing. The county indicated it will continue standard reporting and compliance with safety protocols for control products.
What to watch: staff follow-up materials on levy revenues, planned expenditures, and safety data sheets for products used by the vector control program would provide technical detail not resolved during the hearing.