TERRE HAUTE —
A combination of city funds and a state grant is allowing TREES Inc. and the city of Terre Haute to plant 100 trees next year to replace a storm-destroyed street-tree canopy in the Collett Park neighborhood.
Friday will mark the one-year anniversary of a major storm that felled more than 60 trees onto homes and crushed cars around Collett Park. The 100 new trees will be planted in an area bounded by Fourth Street, 13th Street, Linden Avenue and Fort Harrison Avenue.
“The storm damage was so severe, to go up some of these streets north of Collett Park that used to be so beautifully shaded, but now are just open to the sun, is really shocking,” said Barbara Brugnaux, president of TREES Inc., a not-for-profit, all-volunteer urban forest council.
“Almost immediately after the storm, TREES truly did get questions about ‘What is TREES going to do about it?’ It was very obvious to us that the community was looking to us to be a leader in trying to restore the tree canopy in this neighborhood. We are really delighted that we will be able to do something next year,” Brugnaux said.
TREES Inc. received a $10,000 grant Community and Urban Forestry grant from the Indiana Department of Natural Resources. The grant was matched by the city with $10,700. TREES Inc. will provide volunteers to plant the trees as part of an in-kind match.
The trees will be deciduous and shade trees, with the exact tree type and location to be determined by the city’s urban forester.
In some areas in the Collett neighborhood, tree rows are very narrow, Brugnaux said, and replacement trees may be smaller than an original tree, to prevent tree roots from tearing up a city sidewalk.
A list of preferred trees to be planted in the city can be found at www.treesinc.org. Property owners interested in requesting a replacement tree can call Terre Haute’s citizen contact center phone number — 311. Use the term “replacement tree” to route your telephone call to the city’s urban forester.
“I appreciate TREES Inc.’s efforts to continue to be successful in getting grants and help us do the planting each year,” said Mayor Duke Bennett. “There have been two or three storms in the past 10 years that have hit Collett Park. This will replace some of the trees lost, and we hope to do more in the future.”
Brugnaux said homeowners should consider location of trees. If electric wires, other than street light lines, are overhead, a tree cannot be planted at the site. “We don’t want a tree to be butchered by a utility company in 30 or so years,” she said.
A tree row must be at least three feet wide, measuring from the back of the sidewalk to the curb, for a tree to be planted. A tree cannot be planted on private property. If there is no tree row, the city’s urban forester will evaluate the available right of way to determine if a tree can be planted, according to TREES Inc.
The Collett Park neighborhood includes the 110-year-old, 21.1-acre Collett Park, which is on the National Register of Historic Places.
Reporter Howard Greninger can be reached at (812) 231-4204 or howard.greninger
@tribstar.com.
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Grant money will help replace Collett Park area tree canopy
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