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Saturday, December 11, 2010

Ingraham HS Trees Vigil - Saying Goodbye

Update! Due to the "pineapple express" rain in full force this morning (12/12) this event is postponed,
Pine Branches holding raindroplets
photo credit-Janet Way

with a Rain Check for a future event to be scheduled. 

For now, please note that the Ingraham HS Trees are doing their jobs, retaining the stormwaters and don't mind the rain at all.

Thanks, everyone!  We will let you know when the rescheduled event is taking place.
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Ingraham HS Tree Grove
  


An announcement from Steve Zemke of Save the Trees Seattle


It is with sadness that we announce that we have reached the end of our efforts to save some 29 mature Douglas fir, western red cedar and madrone trees at Ingraham High School. We recently lost our appeal before King County Superior Court Judge Teresa Doyle and are unable to continue with an appeal to the Appellate Court because of the cost and potential liability if we lose on continued appeal.

Save the Trees - Seattle has succeded in reducing the trees to be cut in the NW Grove from an initial 70 to less than 30.  The 29 trees to be cut down represent about one quarter of the trees in the NW Grove. We also succeed in saving a mixed conifer madrone grove of the trees on the east side of the school that  had been protected for 50 years in an agreement with the Parks Department but which the Seattle School District had targeted for a parking lot.
Our efforts to save the NW Tree Grove helped to get the City to pass a stronger interim  tree protection law which currently protects tree groves from future development. We also originated the idea and worked to pass legislation to create the current Urban Forestry Commission. And we are working now to fight the proposal by the Mayor and his Department of Planning and Development to deregulate tree protection in the city that would send us back to the roar of chainsaws clearcutting what trees remain in Seattle's reduced tree canopy which has been reduced by half since the 1970's.
The time to appeal expires as of Dec 9th so we expect the Seattle School District to rev up their chainsaws and cut the trees down as early as this weekend. We urge you to stop by and say good-by to the 29 trees condemned to die because of the City's and the Seattle School District's  blindness to environmental and ecological values.
  If the trees are gone when you come by, we urge you to pay homage to the 70 plus years of service they provided the city by reducing stormwater runoff, cleaning our city's air, producing oxygen for us to breathe, providing a park area for the school and the neighborhood, providing habitat for birds and squirrels and insects and other animals and plant life, for being part of the last 50 plus acres of an uncommon plant habitat in Seattle (a conifer madrone forest), and for just being there for their beauty and serenity.
This  Sunday (Dec 12th) at 10 AM we will hold a Citizen's Memorial Service on the North side of the tree grove to honor the trees for their 70 years of service to our neighborhood and city and to say good -by.  

The street is N 135th between Ashworth Ave N and Meridian Ave N. Please come by and bring something in writing or a sign or flowers or something to post on the wire fence circling the grove. Bring a poem or words or a picture to share with others as we grieve for this unnecessary loss of part of our city and our neighborhood and our green urban forest infrastructure.
And vow to write to the Mayor and the Seattle City Council, urging them to reject efforts to eliminate all protections for existing trees as the Mayor proposes.Urge that they strengthen our tree laws to protect trees like those being cut down at Ingraham.

And if you are able to - please donate to Save the Trees to help pay off our legal bills and support our efforts needed over the next year to get a much stronger tree protection law passed. Contributions can be sent to Save the Trees-Seattle, c/o Steve Zemke, 2131 N 132nd St, Seattle, WA 98133.  If you have questions or would like to help in our fight, you can contact us at stevezemke@msn.com or call 206-366-0811.
We want to thank everyone who has helped over the last three years. Your support has keep us going. While we have not saved all of the NW Grove, we have reduced the impact and loss overall. We as a group are dedicating ourselves to strengthening our City's tree laws so that other trees in our city can avoid the fate facing those trees being cut down at Ingraham. On Sunday we will pay homage to those trees that are dying an unatural death despite their long service of 70 years to our city.  We hope you will join us in saying thanks on Sunday.
Steve Zemke
Chair - Save the Trees-Seattle



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1 comment:

  1. It is sad that we must struggle to save the trees which provide the very air we breathe. Yet now we must mourn the loss of twenty-nine forest elders.

    Trees that have lived there entire lives’ together for decades are being needlessly sacrificed en masse.

    My thanks to all who have worked to save the trees that, along with us more mobile mourners, must stand by as their life long companions are struck down - unable to silence the murderous chain saws.

    These trees which remain will now become living sentinels of what came before as they bear witness of the short-sighted actions being taken.

    Trees have great capacity to perceive that some of us share in the loss of fallen. It is my hope that in some small way our human grief provides solace to ease the pain of both the trees being sacrificed and those who can do nothing more to stop it.

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