Work to cut down approximately one-quarter of the trees in Vancouver’s Stanley Park is facing growing opposition from advocates who say the city’s plan is doing more harm than good.

The Vancouver Park Board began cutting down an estimated 160,000 trees killed by an ongoing western hemlock looper moth infestation last summer, and says the plan will help limit “imminent” fire and public safety risks in the four-square-kilometre park.

Drought and the moth infestation have weakened the trees’ root systems and left them dry, making them more easy to set alight or tip over onto paths and power lines, according to Joe McLeod, the park board’s director of urban forestry.

  • corsicanguppy
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    6 months ago

    So the dead and non-kiving trees will be cut so they don’t fall down or kindle a fire.

    And a group wanting to save the Dead trees wants that prevented.

    I say put up a few mil as a bond against damage and fire response and we have a deal. If they’re going to contravene what the experts say, they need to address the risk we’re incurring for their love of dead trees.

    • Pyr_Pressure
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      6 months ago

      Plus it will be a lot faster for new trees to grow once the old ones are gone. There’s no benefit to keeping a giant stand of dead trees.

      Keep a few as wildlife trees but most of them should go.