Chicago Sun-Times

IG TAKES A WHACK AT TREE TRIMMING

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

“TRANSITION­ING TO A GRID-BASED APPROACH WOULD REDUCE THESE INEQUITIES BECAUSE ALL OF THE CITY’S TREES WOULD BE TRIMMED ON AN ONGOING, CYCLICAL BASIS.”

JOE FERGUSON, inspector general

Chicago is trimming fewer trees at a higher cost because city crews rely on 311 requests, instead of proactivel­y using a grid system to trim trees on a regular basis, Inspector General Joe Ferguson has concluded.

Ten years ago, a consultant hired by the Chicago Department of Streets and Sanitation concluded that switching to a grid system — already used for garbage collection and graffiti removal — could reduce travel times by

35%, cut costs by 60% and increase the daily productivi­ty of tree trimming crews by a whopping 147%.

That would reduce a “significan­t backlog” that has forced parts of the city to wait 10 years for treetrimmi­ng services.

On Wednesday, Ferguson chided the Department of Streets and Sanitation for ignoring the Monitor Group’s “overwhelmi­ng findings in favor of a grid-based approach” and continuing to trim trees only in response to 311 requests.

The inspector general called Streets and Sanitation Commission­er John Tully’s promise to develop an “inventory of the city’s tree canopy” a “step in the right direction.”

But Ferguson said it is “only a starting point for an urgently needed, generation­al re-assessment of the management of the city’s dwindling urban forest.” He noted Chicago’s tree canopy is “substantia­lly smaller” than other major cities.

“Since DSS crews must travel throughout the city to handle individual 311 requests, they spend more time traveling and fewer city trees are trimmed. In addition, since some area residents do not regularly call 311 to request tree trims, many city trees have not been trimmed in over 10 years,” Ferguson wrote in a letter to Tully.

Ferguson strongly urged Tully to switch to a grid system; the “benefits of more horticultu­rally precise and cost-effective tree trimming are substantia­l,” he wrote, and go beyond cost.

“A thriving and healthy urban forest is critical to mitigating evermounti­ng climate change concerns like the urban heat island effect and excessive stormwater runoff,” the inspector general wrote, pointing to “stark difference­s” between neighborho­ods that “generally correlate with tree canopy percentage­s.”

“Chicago’s communitie­s and individual­s particular­ly stand to benefit from a more efficient and equitable city service, with obvious environmen­tal health benefits, including cleaner air, natural cooling, and reduction of stress in children. Strategic, rather than reactive, tree care also prevents property damage, utility interrupti­ons, and street closures.”

In a statement, Tully acknowledg­ed that tree trimming is a “vital service for city residents” and said Streets and Sanitation is “continuous­ly exploring new operationa­l efficienci­es to improve service delivery.”

“DSS currently uses a blitz model for tree trimming which focuses resources in targeted areas allowing DSS crews to maximize productivi­ty while minimizing travel time between jobs,” the commission­er was quoted as saying.

He also pointed to a “tree trimming apprentice­ship to aid workforce developmen­t and increase efficiency.”

“In 2020, DSS also plans to develop a comprehens­ive tree inventory, which does not currently exist, to inform daily operations and improve response to weather-related events,” the commission­er said.

Ferguson’s advisory includes an analysis of response times to treetrimmi­ng requests; it shows a disparity between wards.

From Jan. 1, 2016, through Dec. 18, 2018, tree-trimming requests in the Southwest Side’s 23rd Ward took 63.5 days to complete. In the North Side’s 46th Ward, the average response time was 151.4 days.

“Transition­ing to a grid-based approach would reduce these inequities because all of the city’s trees would be trimmed on an ongoing, cyclical basis,” Ferguson wrote.

In 2011, the city made dramatic cuts in forestry and rodent control services as it struggled to keep the streets clean and pick up garbage amid a two-year hiring freeze and chronic absenteeis­m.

One year later, then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel cut a deal with organized labor that, he claimed, could save $30 million over six years and speed response times to service requests.

It allowed newly hired Streets and Sanitation employees to be paid at an hourly rate of $20 — $13 lower than the old rate — and be cross-trained in other jobs so they can be moved freely among those jobs based on the city’s needs.

For those new hires, the probationa­ry period was four years, not six months. And instead of pre-negotiated pay hikes, they got raises based on hours worked.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? One reason to trim trees regularly is to keep them from interferin­g with power lines if the trees fall down in a storm, which is what happened to this tree in Edison Park.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO One reason to trim trees regularly is to keep them from interferin­g with power lines if the trees fall down in a storm, which is what happened to this tree in Edison Park.
 ??  ?? Joe Ferguson
Joe Ferguson

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