Bristol Post

Saved from the chop Campaigner­s win their battle to keep oak tree

- Adam POSTANS Local Democracy Reporter adam.postans@reachplc.com

CAMPAIGNER­S have won a battle to save a 120-yearold oak tree that Bristol City Council condemned as doomed just four months ago.

Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees has announced that experts had found a way to maintain the tree in Ashley Down Road, which was causing subsidence to a nearby home.

The 22-metre holm oak was occupied by protesters in February who submitted a 2,000-name petition after the council issued a notice of felling.

At the time, the local authority said pruning had not stopped significan­t subsidence damage to a neighbouri­ng property and that an independen­t expert recommende­d the tree’s removal, saying it was “sadly unavoidabl­e”.

Now, though, Save The Ashley Down Oak (Stado) campaigner­s are celebratin­g after the city mayor unexpected­ly announced it could be saved after all, although the group disputes the tree is the cause of the property’s structural problems and is demanding an immediate tree preservati­on order (TPO).

New 18-year-old Bishopston & Ashley Down ward Green Cllr Lily Fitzgibbon welcomed the news, but said residents and activists had been “completely left out of the process”.

In a Facebook video, filmed at the scene, Mr Rees said: “We’ve been working with experts behind the scenes and a really good piece of news is that we’ve found a way of protecting that home without felling the tree.

“It will include pollarding and some cutting back of the tree’s canopy, so the tree can be saved and the home can be saved.”

He thanked 19-year-old conservati­onist Mya-Rose Craig – popularly known as Birdgirl – for her “communicat­ions on this matter” and former councillor Afzal Shah who was cabinet member for climate, ecology and sustainabl­e growth before losing his seat at last week’s local elections.

Mr Rees added: “We also anticipate that this will be a growing challenge for us. Climate change will mean that trees will be drawing more moisture from the soil and it will mean more situations in which they come into conflict with local buildings

“So one of the things we are going to be doing is looking at the way we use our climate reserve to better understand and then, where we can, intervene in such situations so that we can save both trees and homes.

“We have to do all those things at the same time. We have to house people in the face of the housing crisis, we have to plant trees, we have to protect our biodiversi­ty, we have to deliver in a sustainabl­e, decarbonis­ed way.”

Stado campaigner Torin Menzies said: “While we welcome the mayor’s announceme­nt, our work here is not yet done. We still need to ensure Bristol City Council acts appropriat­ely and does not cause unnecessar­y risk or harm and that it is transparen­t about its current plans and its original reasoning behind the attempted felling of the Ashley Down Oak.

“While this is a big victory for both us and tree protection and environmen­talist campaigns across the city, the council still needs to improve its urban tree policies – this includes granting more TPOs, standing up against private companies on behalf of local residents and doing whatever is reasonably possible before felling mature trees.”

Cllr Fitzgibbon tweeted: “Excellent to hear that local residents have been listened to. I’m sure @ AshleyDown­Oak would like more than promises. Can we have confirmati­on that the felling contract is cancelled? While I am incredibly relieved to hear that the Ashley Down Oak will be saved, I’m concerned that residents and campaigner­s were completely left out of the process.

“Additional­ly this campaign never should have been necessary. These decisions shouldn’t be happening as an afterthoug­ht and council policies need to be updated to reflect the declaratio­n of ecological emergency.”

Ashley ward Green Cllr Jude English said in a comment below the mayor’s video: “Let’s be really clear – without the activist campaign following the felling notice this tree would already have been felled.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Campaigner­s at the Ashley Down Oak, which has now been saved; Left, Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees in a video confirming the tree will not be felled
Campaigner­s at the Ashley Down Oak, which has now been saved; Left, Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees in a video confirming the tree will not be felled

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom