Residents continue fight to save ficus trees
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June Casagrande
BALBOA PENINSULA -- Residents who want to save 25 ficus trees on Main
Street say they will take their cause to court.
A small battalion of impassioned speakers Tuesday took turns at the
lectern to plead both sides of the issue. They spoke for more than an
hour even though last month’s council decision to remove the trees is
basically irreversible, at least by the council. The courts, though, are
a different matter.
Residents who want the trees saved from imminent destruction say the
canopy, the shade, the beauty and the ambience the trees create make them
too valuable to tear up. This is especially true because some of the
trees are designated as “special” city trees, they say.
But others are just as passionate in their belief that the trees must
go. Members of the business community, as well as residents, say the
trees’ beauty doesn’t compensate for the costly damage the fast-growing
roots cause to sewer lines and even building foundations.
The warring camps turned out in hopes that a recent move by Mayor Tod
Ridgeway would allow the council to revisit the issue. But, as the city
attorney told Ridgeway, the matter has already been voted on and it’s
beyond council members’ power to call it up for reconsideration.
“I was beyond my authority,” Ridgeway explained to the residents who
turned out in hopes of saving the trees. “It has been heard, it has been
voted on.”
Their only recourse, Ridgeway explained: take it to the courts -- a
suggestion some are taking to heart. A representative of the newly
created Balboa Arbor Foundation spoke to solicit donations for the
group’s legal fund to fight the decision. Resident Jan Vandersloot, who
has led the charge to save the trees, demanded assurances from the
council that the trees would not be removed before Sept. 15. That date
has been set as the start of construction work on the second phase of
Balboa Village renovations. He said the group wanted assurance that the
trees would not disappear during the time they needed to take legal
action.
The public comment period of the meeting took on a circus-like air as
audience members applauded and booed opposing speakers. And the unruly
proceedings were topped off by a musical performance. Banging out the
tune of “Tie a Yellow Ribbon” on an electronic computer keyboard at the
lectern, Gabe Green sang custom-tailored lyrics sung from the perspective
of one of the Main Street ficus:
“I don’t mean to complain or whine, but my roots are here and that’s
the bottom line. . . . If the pipes are broke and leaking, it’s not
because of me, so tie a yellow ribbon ‘round the Main Street ficus tree.”
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