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HomeMy WebLinkAbout19- Council Office CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO — REQUEST FOR COUNCIL ACTION From: Susan Lien,Councilwoman 2"d Ward Subject Resolution of the City of San Bernardino designating and commemorating the historical Dept: Council Office significance of the River Red Gum Eucalyptus tree located at 1850 Waterman Avenue. Date: January 4, 2000 Ci 3 I M t I ,f n L Council Meeting Date:January 7,2000 Synopsis of Previous Council Action GIN AL 7 None Recommended Motion: Adopt Resolutionr� Susan Lien Contact person: Susan Lien,Councilwoman Phone: 5222 Supporting data attached: Staff report/Resolution Ward: Second Ward FUNDING REQUIREMENTS: Amount: $500.00 Source: 001-404-5111 Materials and Supplies Finance Council Notes: Agenda Item No.�_ t CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO — REQUEST FOR COUNCIL ACTION STAFF REPORT SUBJECT Resolution of the City of San Bernardino designating and commemorating the historical significance of the River Red Gum eucalyptus tree located at 1850 Waterman Avenue. BACKGROUND The River Red Gum Eucalyptus tree located at 1850 Waterman Avenue has been a part of the visual landscape within the City for over one-hundred years, and as such, contributed to the historical setting within this neighborhood. This tree had a height of 80 feet and a diameter at the base of 82 inches, making the a significant example of the species. Over the last year,the Public Services Department's Arborist has been monitoring the deteriorating condition of the tree. The tree experienced an infestation of Red Gum Lerp Psyllid,a parasite that significantly weakened the tree's health and resulted in a significant decline in the tree's ability to sustain itself. Repeated efforts to eliminate the parasite were unsuccessful;the Lerp Pysllid is an imported pest from Australia with no known natural enemies in this area. On November 11, 1999,the tree was inspected and assessed by Michael T.Mahoney, a registerd Consulting Arborist specializing in Arborculture and Urban Forestry. According to Mr. Mahoney's report dated November 19, 1999 (attached) the tree was quite advanced in it's decline and was not expected to live. Because of the close proximity to both Waterman Avenue and a convalescent hospital and the potential for adverse impact on the public safety,the Director of Public Services directed that the tree be removed;this was accomplished the week of December 13, 1999. Due to the tree's historical significance,dominating presence and contribution to the setting within the neighborhood,there is a strong desire within the community to commemorate and designate the tree's existence. As such, I am requesting that the site of the River Red Gum Eucalyptus tree be designated as historically significant; and that an appropriate commemorative plaque shall be prepared and placed at this location. It is further recommended that the Development Services Department prepare appropriate drawings and develop costs to establish an appropriate commemorative site and to submit these to the Mayor and Council for review and approval; and that the Public Services Department is directed to acquire a suitable replacement River Red Gum Eucalyptus tree at a cost not to exceed$500.00 to be planted in the same location. The new tree will be called the "Milenium Tree" linking the past to the future. FINANCIAL IMPACT It is suggested that a separate Trust Fund be established, and that donations be solicited from the community to cover the cost of establishing a commemorative public area. A Millenium Tree Committee will be established by Councilwoman Lien to raise additional funds from the business, civic, and private community to pay for the materials and construction of the commemorative site. The City will waive the permitting costs. Funds for the replacement tree are available within the Public Service Departments Street Tree Division in the amount of$500,. If financial assistance from the City is required in excess of the above, a request will be placed before the Ways and Means Committee to consider possible resources. RECOMMENDATION Adopt attached resolution. a- Michael T. Mahoney INDEPENDENT CONSULTANT- SPECIALIST IN ARBORICULTURE AND URBAN FORESTRY 425 30Th STREET,SUITE 28•NEWPORT BEACH,CALIFORNIA 92663•949.673.5199•FAX 949.6715197 NOVEMBER 19, 1999 Dennis Garrahan, Arborist CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO 300 North D Street San Bernardino, California 92418 RE: River Red Gum at 1850 Waterman Avenue Dear Mr. Garrahan, I am writing to report to you the results of my inspection and assessment of the very large River Red Gum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) situated at 1850 Waterman Avenue in the public right of way. The tree has recently lost its leaves in conjunction with the severe Red Gum Lerp Psyllid infestation and concern has been expressed for the health of the tree and for public safety. This letter represents my complete report as of this date. I visited the location on November 11, 1999. A crew from West Coast Arborists, the City's tree care contractor, met me there and supplied an aerial lift to assist with the inspection. I proceeded to inspect the canopy, the branching architecture, the trunk and the surrounding environmental array. For reference purposes I prepared a sketch of the site and took photographs for documentation. The sketch and several of the images are included in this report. I measured the diameter of the tree trunk at a height 41/2 feet up from the natural grade and found it to be 82 inches; this is a very large tree. The sidewalk is 14 feet wide along this section of Waterman Avenue. It is an especially wide sidewalk but with the tree growing from an elliptical opening that is 11 feet in width. The paving shrinks down to 4 feet on the property side and only 2 feet on the street side. The ellipse is 22 feet long. A plan-view site sketch of the tree and ellipse also contains some annotations. The tree rises to a height of about 80 feet. Its trunk and canopy have developed with directional biases that influence the form and shape of the tree, possibly inciting potential impacts upon the surrounding environment. The canopy leans to the southwest in a direction that is roughly parallel with the sidewalk and street. Most eucalyptus species have a rotational grain pattern in the wood. This tree spirals markedly in a clockwise direction making it necessary to compensate for the relative position of the canopy above and the associated conductive tissues that connect it through the branches and trunk down to the root zone below. River Red Gum Assessment- 1850 Waterman Avenue NOVEMBER 19, 1999 PAGE 2 A routine inspection of the canopy reveals that the tree is in trouble. Much of the foliage is dead and only a small portion on the south side appears green and growing. Over the past 6 months loss of foliage has been observed on this tree and others from the same species and several other species of eucalyptus. This damage is the result of aggressive and repeated attack by the Red Gum Lerp Psyllid — an insect pest recently introduced to southern California from its native realm: Australia. In our region there are no natural enemies to keep the Lerps in check. A period lasting up to 2 years may be required while entomologists import tiny wasps that we hope are effective at preying upon the pest. Typical methods such as chemical and biological controls have not been found effective in abating the lerps due, in part, to certain of their defensive habits. Meanwhile, vigorous trees are expected to survive multiple episodes of unnatural defoliation and less vigorous trees are likely to die and thus be culled from the landscape. (Eucalypts are evergreen plants —they do not naturally shed their entire canopy all at once; deciduous plants lose their foliage each year and renew the entire canopy in spring.) New energy is manufactured in the tree's green foliage. After it is produced, energy is stored in reserve, primarily in the root zone. As needed, energy is allocated within the physical structure according to internal patterns and protocols determined by the tree. Energy is used to fight attacks by pathogenic organisms as well as produce new leaves, new cambial materials, and other chemicals and compounds. Close inspection of the base of the tree and, with the assistance of WCA's aerial tower close inspection of the large scaffold limbs 40 feet or so up in the canopy, it is apparent that extensive dieback has occurred in major portions of the tree. This dieback is found in the cambial zone — a "glove' of tissues covering the entire woody portion of the tree just under the bark but on top of the wood —that portion of the tree's physical anatomy where vitality is essential if the tree is to overcome injury. Damage to cambium tissues cannot be repaired except by new cambium growing over the dead portion. This kind of repair requires time and energy and orderly allocation within the tree's internal physical system. Live cambium is growing only over about 1/3 of the circumference of this tree. Judging from the extensive dieback in the canopy less than 1/3 of the tree remains alive at this point in time and the tree is still declining further. Furthermore, major root damage is evident all along the street side of the planter and the opposite side is living but in soil with high moisture. Over the years a large gall has formed and continued to develop on the south side of the trunk at the base of the tree. The growth is currently about 4 feet by 4 feet. While not particularly threatening to a large healthy eucalyptus, poorly organized cells such as these in an unhealthy specimen contribute to dysfunction. Large streaks of kino (phenolic compounds utilized by eucalyptus in a variety of defensive strategies to counter internal dysfunction) are observed as stains on the bark in the spiraling conductive tissues beyond the gall. River Red Gum Assessment- 1850 Waterman Avenue NOVEMBER 19, 1999 PAGE 3 Further up the trunk a number of large, old pruning wounds can be observed. There is decayed heartwood visible within these wounds. One large wound over the roadway has conks (fruiting structures of a fungal pathogen) of the sulfur fungus (Laetiporus sulphureus). This aggressive pathogen causes deterioration of the heartwood. It is typically active within the plant for years before it bears seasonal external conks. Sulfur fungus conks are generally considered a "red flag" indicating a tree in potential danger of structural weakness and biological dysfunction. Still further up the trunk a study of the basic architecture of limbs reveals that the canopy has deteriorated in a pattern consistent with an orderly decline of the tree. Portions of the canopy behind the living cambium spiral have weakened and were cut back over a period of many years. Branches within the living cambium spiral are the tallest and most intact— reaching to the southwest and the strongest direction in an arch of life-giving sunlight. It is my belief that the tree is quite advanced in its decline and there is little if anything that can now be done to rehabilitate this tree. The following bullet items are presented here to summarize the defective character of the tree or to validate the lack of reasonable treatments. • The tree has numerous major defects that cannot be remedied within reason. • The tree is exposed to severe climatic conditions that would predispose the defects to failure. • There are numerous threats and potentially hazardous exposures for the public: consider the convalescent hospital in the fall line of the tree, the public sidewalk used with frequency and regularity, and the busy roadway with lanes of travel and a parking lane immediately adjacent to the massive tree. • Roots that evolved over time as counter measures to the lean of the tree are damaged —they were a major component of the structural support system. Structurally less significant roots on the down lean side or diagonal to the down lean side are providing the only biological support for the spiraling ribbon of cambium. • Moist soils in the vicinity of living roots do not provide substantive anchorage for the remaining live root system. • Reducing the canopy to encourage new shoots might have been a strategy to renew the tree, however, the portion of the trunk diameter with living cambium is so small that it is not possible for the tree to stabilize its internal structure and protect against ruinous deterioration. • The 2/3s of the canopy that has died will not recover. • Increasing the fertility to force the tree to sprout new leaves would cause it to deplete its final resources leaving it defenseless to protect against pathogenic attack and diminishing beyond the already depleted stage its ability to produce new roots, cambium, or chemical compounds. River Red Gum Assessment- 1850 Waterman NOVEMBER 19, 1999 PAGE 4 1 hope this information meets your immediate needs. I am available to discuss this material in greater depth if necessary. Please contact me at the telephone number and office address indicated on this report. Thank you. Sincerely, C MICHAEL T. MAHONEY, -' Registered Consulting Arborist Enc: Site sketch (1 page) Photo references (4 pages) Phobo References F f� r 4. I' a % s The bole of the River Red Cure at 1650 Waterman Avenue Photo taken from the farm of Waten>an convalescent hospital on the south side of the tree looking ratveasC The red arrow Indicates the point where live carnblurn meets dead rarnhium. Uve tissue is present to the left of tia arrow for a distance appro)dma" 1/3 the ci rcumference of the tree. The Cambium to the right of the red arrow dp is dead and cannot be rehatilib6ed. The black arrow indicates the large gab at the base of the tree. Smager gabs are found hlgW on the trunk In this area. e I • • . 3.: 52 x S,. s; y ev a p l �1 .#h> � + r.,• �.e `�s t p2� 1 •. r a:. « `°I'7� m t{t 5 �Yi{5 \ p,4 •t 1 'F(� qp 3` � y �'y4 t `y°�.' .4 at •V ' fI� h•4S + �� v: 4 ,x MV •r ' r. •.• • -r i • • r. • r a. x i , t l ♦ 5 F } yt' 4 C: €.. yyyppp r • alit�.Zp � a f �.3 Entryway Waterman Hospital n ry VVTWT�17 Photo References I W- 01 IF 3 y .Q. d.f . .. V". _.e A depiction of the River Red Gum tree at 1850 Waterman Avenue. Photo taken from aCr=the street south of the location looking nort viest. Note the tree's bias bward the south. most of the live foliage is in the middle of the image, slightly to the left of center. There are soars live branches in the upper left of the picture but the majority of the limbs that make up the canopy are dead. I Resolution No. 2 RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO DESIGNATING AND 3 COMMEMORATING THE HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE RIVER RED GUM EUCALYPTUS TREE LOCATED AT 1850 WATERMAN AVENUE 4 5 WHEREAS,the River Red Gum Eucalyptus tree located at 1850 Waterman Avenue has 6 been a part of the visual landscape within the City for over one-hundred years, and as such, 7 contributed to the historical setting within this neighborhood; and, 8 WHEREAS,this tree was recently infested with Red Gum Lerp Psyllid,a parasite which 9 significantly weakened the tree's health and resulted in a significant decline in the tree's ability to 10 sustain itself; and, 11 WHEREAS,in November 1999,the City of San Bernardino retained a professional 12 specialist in arboriculture and urban forestry to assess the health and vitality of this tree; and, as a 13 14 result of this assessment, it was determined that the health of this tree had declined and that little if 15 anything could be done to rehabilitate the tree; and, 16 WHEREAS, as a matter of public health and safety,the Director of Public Services 17 determined that the tree posed a significant safety hazard to the community and directed the 18 removal of the tree in early December 1999; and, 19 WHEREAS the City of San Bernardino wishes to designate and commemorate the tree's 20 significance to the community. 21 THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE MAYOR AND COMMON COUNCIL OF 22 THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO AS FOLLOWS: 23 SECTION 1. That the site of the River Red Gum Eucalyptus tree be designated as 24 historically significant;and that an appropriate commemorative plaque shall be prepared and 25 placed at this location; 26 27 28 ley 4,2000 t 1 RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO DESIGNATING AND 2 COMMEMORATING THE HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE RIVER RED GUM EUCALYPTUS TREE LOCATED AT 1850 WATERMAN AVENUE 3 4 SECTION 2. That the Development Services Department is directed to prepare 5 appropriate drawings and develop costs to establish an appropriate commemorative site and to 6 submit these to the Mayor and Council for review and approval; 7 SECTION 3. That the Public Services Department is directed to acquire a suitable 8 replacement River Red Gum Eucalyptus tree at a cost not to exceed $500.00 to be planted in the 9 same location. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Jar 4,2000 2 1 RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF SAN BERNARDINO DESIGNATING AND 2 COMMEMORATING THE HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE RIVER RED GUM EUCALYPTUS TREE LOCATED AT 1850 WATERMAN AVENUE 3 1 HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing resolution was duly adopted by the Mayor and 4 5 Common Council of the City of San Bernardino at a meeting thereof, held on 6 the day of 2000, by the following vote,to wit: 7 Council Members: Ayes Nays Abstain Absent 8 ESTRADA 9 LIEN 10 McGINNIS 11 SCHNETZ — — 12 — — SUAREZ 13 14 ANDERSON — 15 MILLER 16 17 Rachel Clark,City Clerk 18 City of San Bernardino 19 The foregoing resolution is hereby approved this day of 20 2000. 21 Judith Valles,Mayor 22 City of San Bernardino Approved as to form and 23 Legal content; 24 James F. Penman,City Attorney 25 BY: 26 27 28 IJanuary 4,2000 3