Supported by the Arborcentre

UKTC Archive

Top 21 Gardening Sites
tree-care.info for tree advice

RE: Highway tree responsibility

Subject: RE: Highway tree responsibility
From: John Flannigan
Date: Sep 05 2008 17:51:34
______________________________________________________________________
         Have you helped out on 'Ask an Arborist' lately?

                  http://www.tree-care.info/ask
______________________________________________________________________

Hi Ben - it seems rather straightforward to me. 

If the branch was not high enough it would not have survived to become what
it is today. Tell the highways lot to get a life and worry about stuff that
needs worrying about.
John 

-----Original Message-----
From: ben riches [mailto:treecraft@xxxxxxxx.co.uk] 
Sent: 05 September 2008 15:21
To: UK Tree Care
Subject: Highway tree responsibility

______________________________________________________________________
         Have you helped out on 'Ask an Arborist' lately?

                  http://www.tree-care.info/ask
______________________________________________________________________


A group of mature trees form a 'tunnel' over a well used country 'B' road.
This group is protected by a Group TPO.
A mature beech in this group has a large limb over the highway which gives a
clearance of 4.8m at the edge of the carriageway, less than the 5.2m
requested by the highways department. The limb is so significant that the
loss of it will mean the whole tree will have to be remove due to its
'unique' (wind battered) form.
 
The Highways Dept. have also requested 0.6m clearance in from the edge of
the carriageway be maintained. This would result in the loss of
approximately 4 more mature trees and a significant feature in this small
part of the world.
 
If a high-sided vehicle collided with this limb or any of the trees, who
would be responsible? The driver for driving without due care and attention,
the Highways Dept. for not maintaining a clear carriageway, or the tree
owner for allowing the tree to pose a hazard?
 
I guess as Highway Regs over-rule TPO protection that there is not a lot can
be done to protect these trees, or is there?
 
Regards
 
Ben
 
_________________________________________________________________
Win New York holidays with Kellogg's & Live Search
http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/111354033/direct/01/


-- 
The UK Tree Care mailing list
To unsubscribe send mailto:uktc-unsubscribe@xxxxxx.tree-care.info




-- 
The UK Tree Care mailing list
To unsubscribe send mailto:uktc-unsubscribe@xxxxxx.tree-care.info

Current thread