I agree that. In fact its always a great relief when the amenity assessment
is such I don't have to consider the ins and outs of some report.
Also, there are far too many woodlands around which stop suddenly, that is
to say no transition between tall trees and other land use, where some
treatment of the edge will tick all the boxes, from neighbourliness right
through to nature conservation, via irregular silviculture.
Quoting Chris Hastie <Chris.Hastie@xxxxxxxxxx.gov.uk>:
Reply interwoven with original for context.
On 06 June 2006 10:13, Gordon Dewdney WRE Tree Inspector wrote:
Thanks Bill,
In fact shading isn't an issue here - and they have chosen
two immature specimens close to the property.
And what would be the amenity implication of the loss of these two
immature trees? If negligible, let them fell them. You don't have to be
doing so because of the subsidence issue - you are doing so because the
impact of the proposed work is not great. You are not setting a
precedent, other than that you'll allow work which has limited impact on
amenity.
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