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Tree Board

The purpose of the Tree Board is to protect the public health and welfare by improving and preserving the beauty of the city as it relates to street trees and park trees. The Board administers and updates a plan for the care, preservation, pruning, planting, removal, or disposition of trees and shrubs in parks, along streets, and in other public areas. The City Council and the Planning Commission may also request the Tree Board's expertise in special matters which come within the Board's scope of work.

The Tree Board and Tree Warden's duties are spelled out in Section 13-301 of the City's Code of Ordinances, which was first adopted in 1972, as well as 24 V.S.A. Chapter 67.

The Tree Board's scope of responsibility includes studying, investigating, counseling, and developing and/or updating annually, and administering a written plan for the care, preservation, pruning, planting, removal, or disposition of trees and shrubs in parks, along streets and in other public areas. Also, if requested by the City Council, the Board must consider, investigate, make findings, report and recommend upon any special matter of question coming within the scope of its work.

Interested in volunteering???
Tree Board members help plant, weed, prune and water street trees. We could even use people with enough training to help with doing a street tree inventory, including the types of trees and their current condition.


 
Members & Terms
 
Members
 
Term Expires
Wendy Blakeman, Co-Chair
Apr. 2013
Clare Rock, Co-Chair
Apr. 2011
John Snell
Apr. 2010
Carole Naquin
Apr. 2010
Abby Colihan
Apr. 2012
Jean Jolley
April 2011
John Van Deren
Feb 2013

 Sarah Mitchell

Feb 2013
The Tree Board is comprised of nine members, citizens and city residents appointed by the City Council for a period of three years. In the event a vacancy occurs during the term of any member, his or her successor is appointed for the unexpired portion of their term.

Conditions of term:
Any member may be removed from the board for cause. Cause shall include but not be limited to excessive absences from scheduled board meetings and clearly identified conflicts of interest. (Removal of a member from the board requires a majority vote of the remaining members and the concurrence of the City Council.)

Tree Board Meetings
 1st Thursday of each month, Memorial Room in City Hall, at 5:30 P.M.
 
Tree Warden
The Tree Warden is a City official with complete authority over all trees, shrubs, or plants in the public right of way of the city that are not under the jurisdiction of the Parks Commission or Cemetery Commission. The Tree Warden may remove or cause to be removed any tree which is in an unsafe condition, presents a hazard to the general public, infected by insects, or is affecting public utility improvements. The Tree Warden also advises the Tree Board and regulatory boards of the City in matters of tree health, care, and maintenance. The Tree Warden can be contacted at the Montpelier Parks and Tree office, 223-7335.



Norway Maple Tar Spot Alert
The Burlington area has experienced a significant outbreak of giant tar spot on Norway Maples. If Montpelier residents notice tarspot please notify the Tree Warden at 223-7335. Residents can also read and act on the research done by Scientists at Cornell University who have done research on the disease. The website for the fact sheet is:
http://plantclinic.cornell.edu/FactSheets/tarspot/tarspots.htm

In a nutshell, the key points of the fact sheet are:

1. Tar spot is rarely a serious enough problem to threaten the health of the tree.

2. Infection occurs just as the leaves are unfolding, though you may not notice the problem until later in the season.

3. The best management approach is to rake up the leaves and destroy them, but this has to be done throughout the neighborhood, not just in your yard. The spores from next door will affect your tree next year if conditions are right.

4. Mulching leaves is okay IF, the pile is covered with soil or a tarp or something and leaves are turned under or not open to the air before new leaves begin to emerge in the spring. So as long as you know the leaves with spores are buried under other debris or compost, it is okay to compost them. However, if you put the infected leaves in a pile uncovered, the spores will disperse next spring. Considering the wide distribution of Norway maple in the area, it will be difficult to eliminate all of the infected leaves even if you clean up your own yard. The best hope we have is to have a dry spring next year, which will not favor the germination and spread of the spores.

Contacts

As of March 2006, the City's Tree Warden is:
Geoff Beyer, Montpelier Parks Director
The Tree Warden can be contacted through the
Montpelier Parks Department (802) 223-7335.
Email:

 



News View All

January 19, 2012

City of Montpelier now accepting online Credit/Debit Card and Check payments

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January 13, 2012

FY2013 Propsed Budget Documents Updated

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January 06, 2012

District Heat Contracts Recommended for Approval

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Events View All

Feb 06, 2012 7:00 pm

Development Review Board meeting

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Feb 08, 2012 7:00 pm

City Council Meeting

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Feb 13, 2012 7:00 pm

Planning Commission Meeting

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Notices View All

Follow Up On the Lost Money - Press Release - Oct 12, 2009

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Deep Financial Water - Press Release - Oct 9, 2009

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