Newport trims its controversial tree policy
Alicia Robinson
Council members pruned the city’s controversial tree policy Tuesday
night, giving the city manager final say over “problem trees.”
The hotly debated revisions, adopted Tuesday, pleased those who
say it takes too long to remove trees that are ripping up sidewalks.
But environmentalists fear it will give the city free rein to rip up
trees.
City Manager Homer Bludau now has final authority to remove
“problem” trees and in some cases trees with 24-inch root bases will
be used to replace larger trees that are removed. The new guidelines
do not create a separate policy for view communities, as was proposed
earlier.
The city owns about 40,000 trees valued at $70 million, city
General Services Director Dave Niederhaus said. Annual maintenance
costs for the urban forest are about $2 million, of which $1.3
million goes to repairing sidewalks, curbs and water and sewer lines
that are damaged by intrusive tree roots.
Niederhaus said the changes will streamline the process for
residents who want a tree removed when it is too big, dying, or
causing damage to sidewalks or sewer lines. Allowing smaller trees as
replacements also will save money for residents, who in many cases
must foot the bill for tree replacement.
The old tree policy was a source of complaints, with residents
saying it took too long to get rid of a tree even when its roots were
breaking up sidewalks or invading sewer lines.
Complaints also came from people living in view communities who
thought trees that were too tall or wide spoiled the reason they
moved near the coast.
Residents from several homeowners’ associations spoke in favor of
the policy changes.
Kay Mortenson of the Peninsula Point Homeowners’ Assn. said the
revisions will be an improvement.
“We see it as being more balanced,” she said. “We welcome a more
clearly defined role for the homeowners’ associations.”
But a few residents feared the new policy would make it too easy
to get rid of trees. City officials could declare certain trees to be
problems for any reason and then take them out and not replace them,
residents worried.
Jan Vandersloot, a member of the Balboa Arbor Society that filed a
lawsuit against the city in 2002 over the cutting of ficus trees,
said the organization still opposes the tree policy changes. Under
the new policy the city could remove more than 470 trees a year, he
said.
“Everything the view communities want to do is already in the
existing tree policy,” Vandersloot said.
The city probably could have grown a few trees in the time it
devoted to revising its tree policy. An ad hoc tree committee formed
in March 2003 to address the policy held seven public hearings and
took more than 16 hours of testimony, committee chairwoman Debra
Allen said.
Allen urged council members to approve the policy revisions, which
they ultimately did in a unanimous vote.
“I’d like the chance to see if we can make this thing work,
because I think we can,” she said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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