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£100k for tree survey while city swings axe



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Published Date: 27 June 2008
COUNCIL chiefs are spending £100,000 on a survey of Edinburgh's trees – at the same time as sweeping cutbacks are being made and school closures are being discussed.
All 28,000 trees in the city are being examined to build-up a database which can be used by the city's parks department.

The council insists it is important to find out the condition of trees to identify any potential safety issues. It also say
s the tree database will help inform future planning.

But questions were raised today over spending such a large amount on the project when so many other services are being cut back.

Creches at Kirkliston leisure centre, the Leith Victoria swim centre, Craiglockhart Tennis and Sports Centre and the Royal Commonwealth Pool were all due to close today, after funding to Edinburgh Leisure was cut by the city council.

A consultation is also being carried out on closing Bonnington, Lismore and Westburn primary schools, with more expected to follow as part of an ongoing review.

Creche campaigner Sam Anderson, 38, from Canongate, who has a 21-month-old daughter Sophie, said: "I would question the council's priorities.

"This is going to cost £100,000 and that is what they estimated it would cost to keep the four creches open for a year while alternative funding was found. It seems this council prioritises trees over families with young children."

Gail Ross, of the Lismore Parents Action Group, added: "I don't think it's a very good use of public money at all – it's disgusting.

"I can look at a tree and tell you whether it's in good health or not, at the end of the day they're only trees. There are much better ways of spending £100,000."

The council also said the survey would give it a much more complete picture of Edinburgh's trees, including which species grow on the city's streets, to help inform future planting.

The "arboricultural audit" – one of the biggest ever undertaken in central Scotland – started in February and will eventually provide a database covering the location, species, health and condition of all of the city's trees.

Forestry and landscaping company UPM Tilhill was contracted to carry out the 23-week survey, due for completion next month.

Inspectors have used hand-held computers to plot the exact location of the trees on an electronic map, which will then be tagged with all the relevant information such as species, height, width, age and condition.

Iain Whyte, the council's Conservative group leader, said the project would be beneficial but raised questions about the timing.

He said: "Given the council's finances, I can only think it's a difficult time to be spending money on something that might not be seen as essential – especially when we are talking about school closures. But at the same time, the public do value trees."

The cost of the work was confirmed today as £100,000. Councillor Robert Aldridge, the city's environment leader, insisted the survey was an important piece of work. He said: "Edinburgh has some of the best green spaces of any city in the country, due in no small measure to the hard work of our dedicated parks team.

"We have a responsibility to ensure these areas are safe and that they flourish. We are using expert tree surveyors to develop a record that will become central to the management of our valuable tree heritage. This important piece of work will allow us to focus our efforts and resources in the most effective way."

Comment: 'It's bad timing at best'
THERE will be plenty of parents left angry and bewildered by the council's decision to spend £100,000 on inspecting trees.

City leaders will try to justify the work through the long-term benefits it will have to our environment, but the truth is people value children far higher than foliage.

With schools closing and community groups facing cuts, no money for creches, and hot school dinners in nurseries replaced with packed lunches, it smacks of bad timing at the least.

People will understandably question whether councillors are out of touch with the public that elected them.

Officials will argue the money from schools and trees come out of different budgets, but this will not wash with taxpayers who are unconcerned with the intricacies of public funding.

It will make it even harder the next time the council tries to justify a cut by claiming poverty.





The full article contains 745 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 27 June 2008 3:37 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Environment
 
1

Brian M,

Edinburgh 27/06/2008 13:08:18
I blame the trams.
2

,

27/06/2008 13:34:59
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

Mike Hunt,

Edinburgh 27/06/2008 14:37:43
I'm sure this kind of survey has been done before, and for similar reasons, about 15 years ago. Some of the kerbside trees in Durham Road Portobello have little plastic numbers attached to them. I appreciate that things have changed in 15 years but does no one keep the record of these things up to date?
4

alex paterson,

edinburgh 27/06/2008 15:09:42
This has been done before,brown envelopes.
5

I love to eat Sellotape,

27/06/2008 16:00:30
"Sweeping changes"?
6

I love to eat Sellotape,

27/06/2008 16:00:41
After the leaves have fallen, I guess.
7

,

27/06/2008 16:01:49
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
8

Angus R,

27/06/2008 16:19:33
Tree-mendous use of funds
This use of funds should be investigated...by the special branch


I'm here all week.
9

Mallory,

Edinburgh 27/06/2008 16:30:03
Probably just looking to see which ones will need to be cut down to let developers crack on...
10

Labour Sleeze Reporter,

27/06/2008 17:47:27
tw@ts and tw@ttettes
11

A. Puschkin,

Edinburgh 27/06/2008 19:46:02

The government and the Councils have lost their Senior Housekeeper!!

There should be a Housekeeper of the Council purse and priorities have to be made......... children come before trees as do the elderly requiring Care.

Perhaps the Evening News could get hold of the proposed list of what the Council is about to spend its
reduced funds on??? and we couild advise them...
12

Jenny MacArthur,

27/06/2008 21:05:39
Gail Ross, of the Lismore Parents Action Group: "at the end of the day they're only trees". Ignorant idiot. Anyone who thinks we can survive in a sterile world without trees and the rest of nature is simply stupid. We're animals, and we need a living ecology to live in, and saying trees don't matter is like saying "who cares about having air to breathe?". This isn't green fundamentalism - it's pure science. Ask any biologist, botanist, zoologist, or indeed anyone with half a brain who understands the world beyond a moronic diet of soap operas and supermarkets. Gail Ross - you're an utter idiot.
13

PJ07,

27/06/2008 22:21:49
The negative comments come from morons.

Only some of the trees in the city were tagged previously. And guess what, other trees have grown bigger since then and also need to be recorded.

Older trees need to be removed before the fall on people. Other trees need to be removed because they are lifting up the roads and pavements.

Some people should think a bit more before commenting.
14

Julian.,

edinburgh 27/06/2008 22:52:25
#12 Jenny,

I have to disagree. The most idiotic part of what she said was:-

"I can look at a tree and tell you whether it's in good health or not"

Maybe we should send Gail out to do the job as she will obviously be able to do it quicker. Let's just hope she has good insurance and no conscience in the event that she gets it wrong and a branch falls off and kills a toddler.
15

celtic4,

USA 28/06/2008 00:50:43
I must say that is a great amount of money spending on a survey of trees, but they aren't ONLY trees. They are our life support in many places. However, when schools are closing and kids fed junk for lunches, and such why go to that expense for a survey of trees? A waste it seems,and the OAP are suffering, plus now the homeless will be when their money is cut. Why Now?
16

ten pound tourist,

Ausrtalia 28/06/2008 02:12:27

If there were no tree's then there would be no humans, our earth would be a polluted place where no -one could breathe
17

Julian.,

edinburgh 28/06/2008 03:29:26
#15 Celtic4,

If trees are our life support, might it not be a bad idea to slash the budget?

And don't blame the school closures on the council. Blame it on the lack of interest in procreation. Those 3 schools that are closing are running at 25% capacity. One of them only has 80 pupils.

Do agree with you about the school lunches. Though the blame for that lies mainly with money grabbing outside catering companies trying to cut costs by providing kids with cheap cr&p
18

Citylocal Fife,

Fife News 28/06/2008 08:50:29
Cost of necessary Trees = £100,000.
Cost of unnecessary Trams = err, 'slightly' more.

and you can thank Wendy and co for 'fouling the nest' before they were ejected!
19

Strathmore,

Angus 28/06/2008 16:25:32
Yet again a brilliant opportunity to get into consultation with Eddie Price and the Corstorphine group of Gardeners.
By the way he's not been mentioned lately is this deliberate??

 

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