Tree cutting now requires special Vancouver permit - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:28 AM | Calgary | -13.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Tree cutting now requires special Vancouver permit

Vancouver wants to protect the city's healthy, mature forest canopy by restricting tree cutting on private property.

City of Vancouver's tree canopy has declined 4 percentage points since 1995

Vancouver tree cutting restrictions

10 years ago
Duration 2:11
The city approved new rules severely restricting tree cutting

Vancouver approved a bylaw change Wednesday that will restrict tree cutting on private property in order protect the city's healthy, mature urban canopy

The bylaw change will force homeowners to get approval from an independent arborist if they want to cut down a healthy tree on their property.

Previously, homeowners could remove one tree a year without needing any justification or rationale.

The City of Vancouver approved a bylaw change Wednesday that will force homeowners to get the approval of an aborist before removing healthy trees on private property. (City of Vancouver )

The city says a review of Vancouver's urban canopy since 1996found that more than 23,000 healthy trees were removed for either private or public development.

That accounts for nearly half of the total number of trees removed over the past 17 years.

The review also found that 22.5 per cent of the city was covered bytree canopy in 1995. Today, it's only 18 per cent adecline of over four percentage points, or a netloss of roughly 20 per cent of the tree cover that existed in 1995.

The review notes most of Vancouver's trees are on private property.

Homeowner Karin Litzckewent to council to speak against the change.

She's taken down three healthy trees on or near her property and has spent the last 28 years in her Vancouver home "fighting with trees."

"The ability to remove trees from your property is being reduced dramatically and you basically have to beg , which is very degrading when you're doing the work of taking care of the tree," she said.

"The human element of living with trees is not factored into the process here."

Typically five people a day ask for permits to cut down trees.When it was announced last week that council was considering making it more restrictive to remove trees, 50 people showed up.

The city says retaining Vancouver's urban forest will pay off environmentally with mitigating climate change, cleaning the air, stabilizing the soil and supporting biodiversity.

With files from the CBC's Richard Zussman