School Street trees not imperiled. Yet ...Middle East

Ukiah Daily Journal - News
School Street trees not imperiled. Yet

A hastily launched online petition drive is triggering a community outcry over a suggested possibility that iconic Chinese Pistache trees along School Street may fall as part of a larger downtown improvement project to overhaul sidewalks and shore up aging underground infrastructure.

About 2,300 people have signed the petition as of Friday, according to Change.org, the online site.

    “The City of Ukiah is planning an ‘improvement’ project that will mean the removal of beloved trees along School Street,” proclaims the petition drive that was launched by Dennis O’Brien, a local resident.

    O’Brien did not respond Friday to requests for comments on a petition drive that is alarming local residents. The fear is that the city is prepared to remove six-decade old trees that have provided downtown shade on sizzling summer days, and colorful Fall displays.

    City representatives, however, say the petition drive is premature.

    Assistant City Manager Shannon Riley said Friday there is no immediate plan to cut down the 60-year-old trees, and there is no funding yet available to implement any downtown improvement project that might call for the trees to be replaced with a more compatible variety.

    As issue is despite their beauty and the welcome shade they provide during hot Ukiah summers, the existing Chinese Pistache trees have roots wrapped around city water lines, are threatening the foundations of aging downtown buildings, and are resulting in downtown sidewalks to buckle.

    “Is tree replacement one of the options being evaluated? Of course,” said Riley.

    Riley acknowledged that replacing the Pistache trees with a more adaptable variety is among the options being considered in the year-long planning study surrounding a future downtown improvement project. The work, if state funding is secured, would also include replacement of aging sidewalks, water and sewer lines, possible parking changes, and conversion of a portion of School Street into one-way traffic.

    “We received a grant to do planning studies. Nothing further has been submitted, and there is not at this time any money available to begin a project,” said Riley.

    Riley said two community meetings have already been held, and a third and final one scheduled for December.

    “This project has been very widely publicized and has been going on for a year. There have been two public workshops, walking tours with engineers and other experts, interviews with business owners and other stakeholders, a project webpage, an interactive online tool for people to submit their likes/dislikes/ideas/comments, a survey, and more. We plan to have one more workshop in December,” said Riley.

    Riley said the brouhaha created by the online petition drive is unfounded but understandable.

    “We have overwhelmingly heard that our community loves School Street and doesn’t consider it “broken”. We get that,” said Riley.

    Riley, however, stressed that “If we don’t invest in infrastructure upgrades that will allow us to preserve and enhance the things we love about it, it will start to fail.”

    Riley listed a litany of city, downtown business, and shopper concerns:

    Currently, it’s nearly impossible to make the sidewalks level.

    The underground utilities are being destroyed by tree roots, impacting businesses.

    Some buildings have even been structurally impacted, with doors that won’t open correctly and other issues.

    The city’s ongoing study, a preliminary to securing possible state grants, is an “opportunity for us to gather all the feedback about the things we love, gather all the ideas about how it could be improved, study all the ways to make that happen, and seek funding that allows it to become a reality,” according to Riley.

    Riley said, “Nothing has been done in a bubble and there are no preconceived outcomes here.”

    Local resident Cassie Taaning said when she learned of the possibility that the existing trees being removed, she too was upset.

    In a subsequent online post to the community, Taaning took issue with the petition drive.

    “I also loved the Autumn colors and was upset when I first heard about their removal,’ said Taaning.

    Since, however, she has learned key facts surrounding the issue.

    “The trees were planted 60 years ago, and they live about 150 years. The species is way too big for sidewalk urban use. They keep growing into the buildings so they have to be trimmed regularly,” wrote Taaning.

    Also, Taaning said she learned that as the trees mature, their roots keep “pushing up the sidewalk making it dangerous especially for elders.

    Taaning said, “In my opinion sidewalks need to be fixed and the trees replaced with a species that has beautiful Autumn foliage. Pistache isn’t the only tree with this color.”

    Taaning said there is no doubt city officials should do their due diligence with community meetings before implementing what they already plan to do, which may be making School Street one way, and widening sidewalks with landscaping like the recently revamped State Street.

    “Beneficial, long-term planning is a thing. Not so much 60 years ago. Live and learn,” Taaning concluded.

    Riley said replacing the existing trees is among the options being studied, including the possibility of a new variety planted to get established before removal of the old.

    “This project has been very widely publicized and has been going on for nearly a year. There have been two public workshops, walking tours with engineers and other experts, interviews with business owners and other stakeholders, a project webpage, an interactive online tool for people to submit their likes/dislikes/ideas/comments, a survey, and more,” according to Taaning.

    Riley said, “Every tree has a lifespan, and the Downtown Streetscape has shown us that trees planted in ideal environments—with larger tree wells, irrigation, engineered soil that prevents root spread, and smart planning—can thrive without destroying their surroundings.”

    Riley noted that newly planted trees in the larger downtown core are “only three years old, and some are already taller than the buildings!”

    Another session for public input is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Dec. 11 at the Ukiah Conference Center.

     

     

     

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