[HISTORY: Derived from Secs. 24 and 25 of Ch. IV and Art.
III of Ch. VI of the Charter and Ordinances, 1974, of the City of
Buffalo; amended in its entirety 5-27-1997, effective 6-9-1997. Amendments noted where applicable.]
The Common Council determines that trees are an exquisite and
valuable resource and that Buffalo's urban forest needs nurturance
and the protection of law. The Council further determines the following:
A.
Buffalo is aiming to once again become known as the "City
of Trees," with beautiful, mature trees the norm in our City rather
than the exception. For that reason, the preservation of existing
tree assets and the early planting of new and/or additional trees
on site is an important part of development.
B.
A mature tree provides beauty, shade, oxygen, air cleansing,
the dampening of visual and auditory pollution, drainage, protection
from wind, microclimate moderation and natural habitat.
C.
A mature tree represents an enormous investment of energy,
water, light, nutrients and time by the natural world.
D.
The urban forest increases the value of property in our
City and is a collectively beneficial resource; as such, the public
has an interest in the preservation of healthy trees.
E.
Healthy trees should not be cut down without due consideration
of the value of the tree; and when due consideration yields an overriding
reason to destroy a tree, the health of the urban ecology demands
that the resources represented by the tree are replaced through plantings.
F.
A sapling, even when properly planted, does not replace
the ecological, social and economic resources of a mature tree, particularly
in light of the fact that the survival rate for saplings is diminished
in an urban environment.
G.
The convenience of clearing all trees from a piece of land
and planting trees and shrubs at the end of the building process must
be weighed against the resources that are destroyed in the process,
and this Council wishes to foster a building process that conserves
trees where possible.
H.
Commercial establishments do not have an overriding right
to destroy or prevent the growth of trees that interfere with the
sight lines between their signage and passersby. Such a right has
not existed for neighborhood businesses along Buffalo's great
streets of commerce and exceptions should not be made for new businesses.
I.
Parking lots can create climatic, aesthetic and environmental
problems, such as oppressive heat in summer and harsh wind shear in
winter, large, unsightly aesthetic voids and increased contaminated
runoffs. Trees and other vegetation can enhance the visual environment,
moderate the parking area microclimate, increase drainage and decrease
the nuisances of noise and glare.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
The Commissioner of Human Services, Parks and Recreation.
Diameter at a height of four feet.
One who applies for a permit for an action that may involve
the destruction of live trees.
An agency, such as a City department, which is not required
to obtain a permit from the City of Buffalo for work within the City.
A tree of a species that is expected to grow to a height
of at least 25 feet at maturity.
A tree planted in the public right-of-way of any street within
the City of Buffalo.
A.
Without authorization from the Commissioner of Human Services,
Parks and Recreation, no person, firm or corporation shall:
B.
This section shall apply to any tree, shrub or plant in
the City of Buffalo on any public street, public park or public property,
including those trees, shrubs and plants in the City of Buffalo between
the public sidewalks and public street curbs.
C.
D.
Citizens shall be allowed to perform routine maintenance,
i.e., trimming, pruning and mulching if the following conditions have
been met:
The Commissioner of Human Services, Parks and Recreation is
hereby authorized to offer and pay a reward for not less than $100
nor more than $1,000 for any information leading to the apprehension
and conviction of any person violating any provision of this chapter
or of any other chapter of the Code of the City of Buffalo relating
to the abuse and mutilation of trees, shrubs and plants.
Any person, firm or corporation violating any of the provisions
of this chapter, upon conviction for each violation thereof, shall
be fined in an amount not exceeding $1,500 or be imprisoned for a
period not exceeding 15 days, or both such fine and imprisonment.
A.
A separate fund is hereby created to be known as the "Buffalo
Urban Forest Fund," which shall be used to receive moneys given to
the City for the planting and protection of trees. This shall include
moneys received in the course of administering and carrying out the
provisions of this chapter. The Commissioner of Human Services, Parks
and Recreation shall direct how the funds are spent. Such expenditures
shall be directly related and limited to the procurement of trees
and the necessary materials and labor to plant them.
B.
This fund shall be separate and distinct from the City's
general fund but shall be maintained on the same fiscal year as that
of the City.
Without authorization from the Commissioner of Human Services,
Parks and Recreation, no person shall cut, remove, plant, break or
injure any tree, plant or shrub in any of the streets and public places
of the City; nor shall any person injure, misuse or remove within
two years of placement any device placed and intended to protect any
tree, plant or shrub in any part of the streets or public places in
the City; nor shall any person fasten or attach any signs, markers,
ropes, wires or other objects or tie any animal to such trees, plants
and shrubs nor place paving or other hard surfacing over the area
surrounding the roots thereof in such a manner as to deprive said
tree, plant or shrub of necessary light, air and water. A conviction
for a violation hereof shall not preclude a civil action brought by
the City to recover full damages for the loss of or injury to such
tree, plant or shrub.
A.
Process.
(1)
For any action requiring a City permit that may involve
the destruction of live trees or for actions for public uses that
may involve the destruction of live trees, the permittee or public
agency must prepare a site plan showing the location of all existing
trees which are of a maturity of having grown to three inches of diameter
and a height of four feet (dhff). The plan shall include the location,
species and dimensions of such trees. The plan will also show the
species, size and location of all new trees and related vegetation.
A landscaping plan and planting schedule shall be made part of the
plan. The City shall reserve the right to require or undertake verification
of this site plan before any work can be done on the site. The site
plan shall be forwarded to the Commissioner of Human Services, Parks
and Recreation, who shall have five business days from the date the
site plan is submitted to the Permit Office to object to any removals
or proposed plantings. The removal of any trees of greater than 10
inches dhff requires express written permission from the Commissioner
of Human Services, Parks and Recreation.
[Amended 6-24-1997, effective 7-7-1997]
(2)
If the removal of trees is not objected to by the Commissioner,
the permittee or public agency must provide on-site, replacement trees,
for which the combined diameter at a height of four feet (dhff) breast
height, must be at least equal to the combined dhff of the trees removed.
The Commissioner is hereby authorized to keep a table showing the
number of replacement trees of various widths necessary to assure
this requirement is met, using six-inch increments of dhff. If the
site cannot accommodate the number of trees hereby required as replacements,
the permittee or public agency shall be required to pay to the Buffalo
Urban Forest Fund an amount determined by the Commissioner of Human
Services, Parks and Recreation to be equal to the value of the difference
between the dhff of the required replacement trees and the dhff of
the trees replaced on site. The accidental killing of a tree during
the course of construction activity shall be a removal. Nothing contained
herein shall prevent the Common Council from requiring additions or
revisions to the landscape plan for the development.
(3)
The permittee or public agency shall undertake, at his
or her expense, the planting of trees as soon as excavation work,
if any, is finished and no tasks remain to be done that require vehicles
to traverse the point where trees are to be planted.
B.
Specifications.
(1)
On public property between the sidewalk and the curb,
trees shall be planted and shall be spaced not more than 30 feet apart,
depending on the tree variety used. The tree(s) shall be centered
between the walk and the curb and shall be spaced to maximize the
number of trees planted on the property. The types of trees to be
planted will be as designated for the street under the master planting
programs on file with the City Forester's office.
(2)
To maintain functional and aesthetic values, a tree (or
trees) must exist or be planted on the front of each lot in the space
between the sidewalk and the curb. However, should it be shown that
there is already a well established tree planted between the building
and the sidewalk or in the space between the sidewalk and the curbline,
whose crown already reaches over the greenspace to be planted, and
it can be shown that this will cause overcrowding of the new tree,
and may result in deforming the symmetry of the tree crowns as the
tree approaches maturity, this space may be permitted to remain unplanted.
(3)
To eliminate upheaving of sidewalks and curbs, appropriate
species should be chosen if the tree lawn (planting strip) is less
than three feet wide. No tree shall be planted if the tree lawn is
less than 14 inches wide, in which case the Buffalo Urban Forest Fund
can be used at the Commissioner's discretion to pay for plantings
on adjacent properties.
(4)
Whenever it is feasible, trees shall be planted at the
earliest possible time by the permittee or public agency in front
of all vacant lots when they are prepared or improved for development.
The decision whether to plant trees shall take into account the anticipated
use of any heavy equipment or other activity that would likely endanger
a newly planted tree.
(5)
On corner properties the Tree Layout Guide for Intersection
Visibility, a copy of which shall be kept in the Permit Office, shall
be observed, so that no tree shall be planted nearer than 50 feet
to an intersection on one side of the street nor nearer than 30 feet
to an intersection on the other side of the street in order to allow
a clear path of visibility for traffic approaching the intersection.
(6)
Trees shall be planted so that they will not conflict with utilities, such as water mains (taps), sewer lines, lamp standards, fire hydrants, etc., or with road or utility improvements planned or under study. Utility contractors shall be responsible for all damage to trees, including the roots. Accidental killing of trees by utility contractors shall be considered a removal as detailed in § 467-7.
(7)
Any tree contractor planting trees in the City of Buffalo
shall do so complying with specifications set forth by the Commissioner
of Human Services, Parks and Recreation. The Commissioner of Human
Services, Parks and Recreation may specify how much additional topsoil
shall be added to a tree planting to overcome inadequate topsoil at
the planting location. The nursery supplying the trees shall be certified
by the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets, Division
of Plant Industry. Trees should be transplanted stock. Collected stock
or field-grown trees shall not be allowed.
(8)
Trees that are normally brittle, short lived, rapid growing
or fibrous rooted shall not be planted as street trees. The Commissioner
of Human Services, Parks and Recreation shall maintain annually updated
lists of acceptable trees for various types of plantings, taking into
account maintenance concerns, costs, habitat concerns and the desirability
of using native species. The Commissioner shall make copies of lists
of acceptable trees available upon request.
[Amended 6-24-1997, effective 7-7-1997]
It shall be the duty of the Police Department, the Community
Development Department, the Human Services, Parks and Recreation Department
and the Administration and Finance Department (Bureau of Administrative
Adjudication) to enforce this chapter. In addition, any project which
fails to comply with the requirements of this chapter, the project
site plan or other agreements made relative to trees shall be deemed
to be in violation of this chapter and may be subject to the suspension,
revocation or nonrenewal of licenses or permits issued by the City
as well as any other penalty applicable by law.
Appeals for exceptions to the provisions of § 467-8 must be submitted to the City Planning Board, which shall make a recommendation on the appeal to the Common Council. Exceptions must be consistent with the legislative intent of § 467-1 and must be approved by the Common Council. Appeals under this chapter for trees on City-owned property can give weight to the City's role in financing and administering the City's tree planting program.