Yorkshire Post

Inquiry into tree- felling scandal and council failings may be held

- CHRIS BURN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: chris. burn@ jpimedia. co. uk ■ Twitter: @ chrisburn_ post

SHEFFIELD COUNCIL will consider ordering an independen­t inquiry into what caused the multiple failings around its controvers­ial policy to fell thousands of street trees, one of its most senior politician­s has said.

Cabinet member for streetscen­e Mark Jones told The Yorkshire Post such an inquiry could be part of the “healing process” following a damning report by the Local Government Ombudsman

earlier this week which found the council had misled the public, misreprese­nted expert advice and acted with a “lack of honesty” over the issue.

He said: “I think we can’t take anything off the table or we risk going back to where we were before. Whatever we do going forward, it needs to be real and genuine. Whatever we do needs to be genuinely a reconcilia­tion process, not looking for revenge.”

Around 5,500 trees – 2,000 of them healthy but deemed to be damaging pavements and road surfaces – were chopped down and replaced with saplings under a £ 2bn highways project called Streets Ahead that started in 2012. Felling work was paused in spring 2018 as growing protests against the work attracted internatio­nal condemnati­on when dozens of police officers and private security guards were sent to support the operations and multiple arrests were made.

The council also made attempts in court to have a number of demonstrat­ors jailed for breaching a protest injunction, with three given suspended jail sentences.

A new strategy has since been introduced following lengthy talks with campaigner­s and hundreds of previously at- risk trees have now been saved from the axe through solutions such as kerb repairs.

One of the key findings of the

Ombudsman’s report was that prior to the change in approach, the council had taken the “unacceptab­le” decision to publish official strategy documents which said its contract Amey would consider 14 possible fixes before removing any tree.

Thecouncil­repeatedly­claimed in public that removing trees was a “last resort” but the Ombudsman found the 14 fixes were never part of the contract and Amey “would never use some of the ‘ solutions’ referred to”.

Coun Jones, who was elected as a councillor in 2016 and took up his cabinet post last year, said he was unable to explain what had gone so wrong.

“That is the bit I can’t quite get my head around,” he said. “The desire was to develop better roads and somewhere along the way we seemed to lose sight that the trees are not just something that damaged them but have value in themselves. At some stage that seems to have got lost. I don’t know how that happened.”

The Ombudsman has given Sheffield Council three months to respond to explain what action it plans to take.

Whatever we do needs to be genuinely a reconcilia­tion process. Mark Jones, Sheffield Council cabinet member for streetscen­e.

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