‘City of trees’ fires arborist

Nope, not Charlotte. Atlanta. The New York Times tells us Atlanta’s “defender of trees” got the ax. Many people speculate it’s because he’s more vigorous about citing developers for tree-cutting infractions than the other people in his office.

This got my attention: “Builders must pay hundreds of dollars for every tree they uproot, even with the city’s permission. … The penalty for violators is far heftier: One developer was recently fined $24,000 for illegal tree clearance, and Tyler Perry, the movie actor and director, was penalized $177,000 for unauthorized deforestation on his property.”

Atlanta’s fired arborist said he had issued 70 citations for illegal tree removal this year, while the five other arborists in his division issued a total of 29 citations. This does not sound like Charlotte, does it?

I called Laura Brewer, Charlotte’s senior urban forestry specialist. Charlotte’s tree ordinance doesn’t make builders pay if they uproot trees except for city-owned trees in city right-of-way. Even then, unless it’s a big tree they’re usually allowed to plant a replacement tree as compensation. That’s one reason for the slow loss in the city’s tree canopy.

As far as private development, Charlotte’s ordinance protects only a few of the trees on private development. On single-family developments a 10 percent tree save is required, although a developer can plant new trees instead of saving existing ones. On commercial development, only the trees in the setback must be saved, if they’re 8 inches or larger in diameter.

I asked Brewer if the city had fined any tree ordinance violators in the past year. “I don’t believe we have.” The city would rather have trees than fines, she said: “Usually, what we’ve done in the past is require mitigation.”

She said a new ordinance is being proposed that would require commercial developers to save 15 percent of the trees on site, rather than those in the setback.

A study in 2003 by American Forests found the total acreage of trees in Charlotte fell almost in half between 1984 and 2003, from 63,000 to 33,000.