Independent Neighborhood News & Talking Points
10 Feb
The City of San Jose’s Planning Department has released a draft preliminary Tree Removal Permit (PDF) for the Sycamore trees illegally removed last month, and input is being sought prior to the permit becoming official.
The document is very thorough in presenting the permit history of the property, including detailing extensive interactions with the prior property owner (The Holt Family acquired the property on December 13, 2006).
The revised Permit would require the property owners to replace each of the two ordinance-size trees with 10 trees (or 20 trees total), four of them at the corner of Willow & Camino Ricardo:
Of the 20 total required replacement trees: two 36-inch box native trees (Coastal Live Oak) will be planted on the site in the vicinity of the trees that were removed; two 36-inch box native trees (California Sycamores) will be planted adjacent to the site within the Willow Street public-right-of-way; and the remaining 16 24-inch box replacement trees will be provided in the form of a monetary contribution ($300 per tree) to the Our City Forest non-profit organization to facilitate tree planting in the surrounding community.
In an email to the WGNA eList (reproduced below), senior planner Erin Morris requests input from the community prior to the February 14 permit mitigation hearing, scheduled for 9:00 am.
4 Responses for "Sycamore Mitigation: 2 x 10 = 20"
—– Forwarded Message —-
To: elist@wgna.net
Sent: Friday, February 9, 2007 10:41:16 PM
Subject: [WGNA] FWD: mitigation for the removal of the sycamore trees.
… This draft Permit reflects Planning staff’s recommendation to our Director regarding this Tree Removal Permit. I am still coordinating with our Department management and other City staff to finalize the language of the draft prior to the hearing, but I wanted to get the draft out to the property owners (and the community) prior to the weekend. I would greatly appreciate it if you could share this information with others who may be interested.
The key element of the draft permit that may be of interest to you are the project conditions. We are obviously very interested in community feedback on the issues associated with this Permit and on our initial recommendation, and appreciate any comments that people would like to e-mail to us prior to the hearing or provide verbally at the hearing. …
It would be helpful if e-mails could be directed to me at erin.morris@sanjoseca.gov and/or Rebekah Ross, the project manager, at rebekah.ross@sanjoseca.gov. While Rebekah will be out of the office on Monday, I will be in and generally available all day, should you have any questions or wish to discuss the draft permit.
Erin L. Morris
Senior Planner
PBCE - Plan Implementation Division
ph 408/ 535-7846
fax 408/ 292-6055
erin.morris@sanjoseca.gov
As reported in today’s WG Resident, the City of San Jose has approved the official after-the-fact tree removal permit for the corner of Camino Ricardo & Willow Street.
The property owners are entitled to an appeal, if they choose. WGx will keep you posted …
From the March 16 edition of the WG Resident …
The appeal took place as scheduled on March 28, and the appeal was denied as scheduled as well.
In a rare and unusual “scoop” the first paper to carry printed word of the denial was the April edition of the Willow Glen Times. Unfortunately, the website for the monthly paper doesn’t include that story, so you’ll have to read the online report from the April 6 edition of the Willow Glen Resident instead:
Having long ago moved onto other, more depressing news from WG, the SJ Mercury News did not report on the appeal.
Leave a reply