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Re: A leafy threat: Trees growing into power lines - making at least one homeowner very nervous.
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Home away from home
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Maybe its probably time for underground utilities like real cities. Underground electrical cables have their own issues. Much harder to repair when there is a problem (remember when a huge chunk of Astoria was without power for a week in 100-degree heat? The crews could only work in short shifts underground because of the unbearable heat). Just think of all the kvetching about closed streets and loss of parking spaces on JC List when they have to dig up a street to repair power lines!
Posted on: 2008/11/7 15:01
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Re: A leafy threat: Trees growing into power lines - making at least one homeowner very nervous.
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Home away from home
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Maybe its probably time for underground utilities like real cities.
Posted on: 2008/11/7 14:41
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A leafy threat: Trees growing into power lines - making at least one homeowner very nervous.
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Home away from home
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A leafy threat: Trees growing into power lines
Friday, November 07, 2008 By TOM SHORTELL JOURNAL STAFF WRITER Several thick-branched, flowering pear trees dot York Street in Downtown Jersey City and they are making at least one homeowner very nervous. Down the block from Anne Barry, wind gusts from the Oct. 27 storm sheared branches off a tree. Entangled with power lines, when the branches went down they took the power lines with them and caused a building to catch fire across the street. "It's a catastrophe waiting to happen," said Anne Barry, pointing to the pear tree branches in front of her house that weave in and out of power lines. "If a tree goes down, it affects the whole neighborhood." Jersey City Fire Director Armando Roman acknowledges the danger. "It certainly can be dangerous," he said. "You have a big rainstorm and the trees get heavy, then a wind storm and there is a possibility the branches will snap." Barry said it took three days of phoning to the city's Division of Parks and Forestry to schedule an appointment to get the pear tree by her house scheduled for a trim this month. The division, which has a staff of eight, cares for thousands of trees in Jersey City. "The last count was like 74,000 trees," said Rodney Hadley, the division's director. For bigger jobs like tree removals, contractors are sometimes hired, he said. Roman would like to see all the trees trimmed, too, but the reality is that there's not enough workers to get to them all. "Even just from a standpoint of monitoring which trees need the most trimming, that is colossal job," he said. Residents can report trees they think need cutting on weekdays, between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. The trees are inspected within a week, and if it's agreed they need trimming, the work is done within two to three weeks, officials said. Many of the trees in the city are aging sycamores, so the schedule could get even more packed in the coming years. "We will be busier than normal," Hadley said. Hadley did not know how many power outages in the city have been due to downed trees or tree branches, and Public Service Electric & Gas didn't return phone calls seeking comment. To contact the Division of Parks and Forestry call 201-547-4449.
Posted on: 2008/11/7 13:57
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