Trees Planted by the City in East Portland Two Years Ago Are Dead Because the City Didn’t Water Them - eviltoast
  • Dee@lemmings.world
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    1 year ago

    Schafer says watering trees is outside the bureau’s scope: “We only trim trees for visibility and clear brush. We simply are not set up for nor have the skills for tree maintenance beyond that.”

    Watering is too hard? Wtf?

    … plant about 30 saplings in a grassy triangle in the East Portland neighborhood…

    … at least 25 of the trees in the triangle appeared beyond salvation last week.

    So almost a complete loss, beautiful.

    PBOT’s failure to water its 30 trees in the traffic median is the second time this year that government officials have failed to protect tree canopy. An ongoing street-widening project along a 67-block stretch of Southeast Powell Boulevard means the state is currently chopping down 570 trees lining the road, WW reported in June.

    What the FUCK?!

    This article is infuriating tbh

    • garrett@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      I truly cannot understand how watering the tree is beyond the capability. They can’t get some water out there???

  • Willow.@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    The City of Portland used to have a contract with the Friends of Trees non-profit, which provided tree care as well as tree planting, but that contract was terminated several years ago.

    • crowsby@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      From Jun. 29, 2022:

      In a joint statement, Commissioners Carmen Rubio and Mingus Mapps, who oversee Parks & Recreation and the Bureau of Environmental Services respectively, said the move was meant to streamline what had been a disjointed system.

      The two bureaus “have been working together to strategically align disparate tree planting and tree care responsibilities across both bureaus. That fragmentation has led to inefficient and uncoordinated work,” the commissioners said.

      “With support and direction from both of our offices, both bureaus have come to an understanding and scoping of work that we believe will not only be more effective, but will ultimately result in more trees, larger tree canopy, and increased greening of our city,” they said.

      …in case we wanted someone to point fingers at.

      The other notable difference is that the Friends of Trees program was opt-in. You want a tree, you contact them, they bring you a tree. The city program is actually opt-out, and only eligible in certain designated neighborhoods. So you miss a postcard in the mail and the next thing you know, you’ve got a crew in front of your house digging up your yard.