As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the meanings
indicated:
ALTERNATE HOST PLANT
One or more kinds of plants on which a pest must develop
to complete its life cycle.
ANSI A300
The American National Standard for Tree Care Operations -
Tree, Shrub and Other Woody Plant Maintenance - Standard Practices.
This is a document offering basic performance standards for tree pruning,
published in 1995 by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
or the same as amended from time to time.
BOROUGH
The Borough of Brentwood, Pennsylvania.
DISEASED TREE
A tree or part thereof which has become infected with pathogens
or has become significantly diseased.
EMERGENCY
Damage to utility systems, or to a public or private property
or an immediate threat to the welfare of persons, due to a storm or
other acts of God or other accident, which requires immediate attention
to alleviate the condition or complete repairs.
HAZARD
Any tree, public or private, with visibly defined structural
defects likely to cause failure of all or part of the tree, and be
a danger to public safety.
LICENSEE
A person with a valid contractor's license and/or tree
service certification as required by this chapter.
OWNER
The person in whom is vested the ownership, dominion, or
title of real property.
PAPER STREET
A road or street that appears on maps but does not exist
and was never conveyed to the Borough, i.e., there was never any formal
acceptance or use by the Borough. The abutting property owners own
the paper street to the center line. The Borough bears no responsibility
for the upkeep or the maintenance of the paper street. Thus, trees
and other conditions on the paper street are the responsibility of
the abutting property owners.
PERSON
Includes any natural person, association, partnership, corporation,
company or other legal entity recognized under the laws of Pennsylvania.
PEST
Any insect, disease or other organism harmful to trees.
PLANTING STRIP
That portion of the public right-of-way not covered by a
sidewalk or other paving lying between the property line and that
portion of the street or highway usually used for vehicular traffic
or parking.
PRIVATE PROPERTY
Any property owned by a person, firm, or corporation not
meeting the definition of public property and not under the ownership
of the state or federal government.
PRUNING
The practice of cutting tree limbs according to standards
contained in ANSI A300 and the NAA Guide.
PUBLIC NUISANCES
The following are hereby declared public nuisances:
(1)
Any tree or part thereof (public or private) which, by reason
of location or condition, constitutes a hazard to public safety as
determined by the Brentwood Code Enforcement Officer or assignee;
(2)
Any tree or part thereof (on public or private property) which
obstructs the free passage of pedestrian or vehicular traffic or which
obstructs public street lighting;
(3)
Any tree or alternate host plant or part thereof (on public
or private property) which harbors pests that may reasonably be expected
to injure or harm public trees.
(4)
Any tree or part thereof (on public or private property) which
encroaches onto the adjacent property and has a clearance of less
than 10 feet above the surface of the adjacent property or a horizontal
clearance of less than four feet from a structure located on the adjacent
property.
PUBLIC PROPERTY
Any property owned by, dedicated to, or deeded to the public
or for the public's use. Borough parks, public rights-of-way
and other publicly owned, controlled, leased or managed properties
are included in this definition. This definition excludes any federal-
or state-owned properties except where otherwise provided by contract
or law.
PUBLIC RIGHTS-OF-WAY
Improved or unimproved public property owned by, dedicated
to, or deeded to the public or for the public's use, for the
purpose of providing vehicular, pedestrian and other public use. Such
public property provides circulation and travel to abutting properties
and includes, but is not limited to, streets, sidewalks, landscaping,
provisions for public utilities, cut and fill slopes, and open public
space. For the purposes of this chapter, alleys and paper streets
are excluded from this definition.
PUBLIC SAFETY
The condition of being safe from bodily harm and/or property
damage resulting from tree conditions and/or failures while using
public property.
PUBLIC TREES/SHRUBS
Any tree/shrub (inclusive of roots within the critical root
zone) whose trunk is located, partly or in whole, on public property.
PUBLIC UTILITY EASEMENT
The right-of-way acquired by a utility or governmental agency
to locate utilities, including all types of pipelines, telephone and
electric cables and towers.
REPLACEMENT TREE
A street tree provided to or by the abutting property owner
and approved by the Borough for planting by the abutting property
owner as a replacement for a street tree removed from a particular
location in the public right-of-way.
SHRUB
A multiple-stemmed, woody plant whose height at maturity
is between three feet and 15 feet.
STREET
Includes any thoroughfare or area included within the definition
or connotation of the term "street" as used and defined under the
laws of Pennsylvania, whether intended for public use or private use,
and includes but is not limited to the cartway, sidewalk, gutter,
right-of-way areas and underground utility easement areas and any
part thereof.
TOPPING
Refers to "rounding," "heading back" or any other term that
can be described as severe cutting back of limbs as defined in ANSI
A300.
TREE
Includes any and all types of trees, bushes, shrubs and any
and all other vegetation, whether cultivated or domestically grown
or otherwise.
TREE LAWN
That portion of the public right-of-way lying between the
street and private property boundary lines which is generally unimproved
and planted with grass or other vegetation.
TREE SERVICE
Services provided for trees by a private individual or company,
including, but not limited to: planting, removal, topping, pruning
or engaging in technical arboriculture.
VANDALISM
The act of damaging, mutilating or destroying any part of
the woody structure of trees, that is above or below ground, that
affects the short- or longer-term health of the trees.
VISION CLEARANCE TRIANGLE
A method of providing adequate visual clearance for vehicular
and pedestrian traffic approaching a street intersection.