Rochester, MN
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201 4th Street SE
Room 150
Rochester, MN 55904 (Map)
Rochester 311
Phone: 507-328-2311
TTY/TTD: More Information
Departments » Parks and Recreation » Forestry
Frequently Asked Questions
We currently have staffing to support a 20 year pruning cycle. This means that we will visit and prune every boulevard tree once every 20 years. High risk issues do come up, and these will be addressed prior to the 20 year rotation.
A call does not have to be made for routine prune work, that work will be part of our regular pruning cycle.
Once a call has been made, this is logged into the system and is being monitored until work is completed. Ongoing calls are not required.
The notice has a description of the violation. The most common reason for getting this notice is, vegetation originating from private property has grown into the public right of way, this includes brush or other woody vegetation not planned for the boulevard. Sidewalks should be clear 8 foot from edge to edge. Streets should have 14 foot clearance from edge to edge. The boulevard space can only contain turf grass or approved boulevard tree unless a Natural Landscape Permit is in place.
Information on this type of notice can be found on the Encroachment webpage.
Homeowners no longer pay a per panel price for repair. Please see info on the new sidewalk improvement district policy.
We do not remove trees because they are near sidewalks that have been marked for replacement. Rather we address the root issue when the sidewalk panel is replaced. A combination of root manipulation and using a larger aggregate as a base for the new panel which helps discourage new root development beneath the new panel. he cause of sidewalk panels being affected by roots is due to the lack of adequate grow space for the tree. We will offer to inspect the tree to make sure the tree is not a hazard
Please call 507-328-2311. If the limb fell in the Right of Way we will clean up the limb. If the limb failed onto private property, responsibility for clean up is on the property owner. Please report damage to your insurance company.
Please use the storm damaged tree guide to assist with this issue.
You may have noticed that the City of Rochester is no longer planting certain species of trees that we have historically planted a lot of over the past 30 years. For example, we are limiting the planting of Maple trees and Crabapple trees in public spaces. We will continue to restrict over planting of the same species throughout the City.
The City of Rochester’s Forestry Department manages over 100,000 trees in public areas within the City. Part of our management strategy involves managing species biodiversity. Currently, we strive to follow the 10–20–30 rule. That means we want to ensure that trees of the same species never make up more than 10% of our total public trees, tree species from the same genus never make up more than 20% of our total public trees, and that tree species from the same family will never make up more than 30% of our total public trees. Currently Maple trees, which are all in the same Genus, account for over 22% of our inventory, this surpasses the 10-20-30 rule and is why we are limiting Maple tree plantings.
In 2010, a canopy evaluation revealed that just one species of tree, Green Ash (Fraxinus pennsylvannica) made up over 15% of our total urban canopy. In 2016, the Emerald Ash borer, an invasive beetle that feeds on Ash trees, was discovered in within City limits and has since decimated the Ash population throughout the city and surrounding areas. We have lost thousands of Ash trees in the past 5 years, spent countless hours on tree removals and replants, and will continue to lose more each year.
The reason damage from the Emerald Ash Borer is so devastating in Rochester is because we had such a high concentration of Ash trees in our city. And that reason is why, moving forward, we are limiting the number of individual species, genus, or family of trees in our city. Just as Dutch Elm Disease was before Emerald Ash Borer, we don’t know what will be next. By having a diverse urban forest population, we can work towards being able to avoid the catastrophic losses of similar events in the past.
By increasing the biodiversity of our public trees, we will improve the urban forest’s health and increase its sustainability.
We now offer a virtual training that will allow citizens to prune 2" and smaller limbs on the tree in front of their home that could be blocking a sidewalk.
Why take the Tree Pruning Class?
With the certificate issued upon successful completion of this training, you will be allowed to prune limbs 2" and under on the public boulevard tree in front of your home. This way, you will not have to wait for the Parks and Forestry Divisions pruning rotation for the trees on your boulevard to be pruned.
The city will not allow the removal of a public tree with out sound justification. You may request the removal of a public tree by filling out a boulevard tree work permit. This will be reviewed by forestry staff. If approval is given, requester would be responsible for the cost of removal, grinding of the stump, and canopy loss fee where applicable.
If the tree is structurally compromised and deemed a hazard. The city will remove at no cost to the requester. If the tree is structurally sound the city may allow removal, however, the requester will be required to pay the canopy loss fee prior to approval of the permit.
The canopy loss fee is compensation for loss of the benefits trees provide to our community and the investment the city has made in the tree. The fee is established annually.
The answer to this depends on why the tree is being planted.
Park Dedication: If this is part of park dedication (i.e. new construction) you may not opt out of the tree planting. These trees are planted to help reach The City of Rochester's canopy goals outlined in the Urban Forest Master Plan and required by ordinance. Please note the Unified Development Code 60.400.60.
Community Planting: Yes, these trees can be opted out of, if it is within the timeframe in the letter sent to the property owner prior to the event. The property owner is the only person(s) whom can opt out of getting a tree in the public boulevard space. Additional notification for the plantings is in the form of door hangers at the property a tree would be planted. Once the tree is in the ground, it becomes city property.
The Unified Development Code is Rochester’s zoning ordinance. Chapter 60.400 establishes that certain types of development are required to plant boulevard trees as a condition of developing private property within the City of Rochester.
Tree planting details can be found in Section 60.400.60A.
- Boulevard trees shall be required for Type 3 final plats; Type 2 land subdivisions; conditional use permits (incentive development, restrictive development, and conventional conditional use permits); or site development plans.
- Boulevard Trees are required at 35 foot spacing for commercial zoned properties and 50 foot spacing in residential zoned properties. Prior to planting boulevard trees, a no cost tree planting permit is required, in accordance with RCO 9-4-4. As part of the permit process Forestry staff will review the landscape plan for species, locational criteria, and site conditions, as part of the permit approval process. A boulevard tree planting application, approved boulevard species list and planting information sheet is available. The approved tree planting permit will be required prior to the final certificate of occupancy being issued.
- Tree planting must be in accordance with Public Works Specifications and Standards Detail Plates for Tree Planting, Preservation and Protection
- Developers also have the option of paying the city to manage the planting of the required boulevard trees (Payment in lieu).The price per tree is established annually through a competitive bid process. Developers wanting to utilize this option can contact the Parks and Recreation Department.
The answer depends on where it landed.
When the tree or its parts land within the public right of way the city is responsible for clean up.
When the tree or its parts fall onto private property all portions of the tree that have fallen onto private property are the responsibility of the land owner to clean up. You may put debris from public trees that have fallen onto private property into the boulevard for the city to pick up. Please let us know if you piled debris from a public tree in the boulevard. Debris must not block the sidewalk or road.
If property damaged occurred, please contact your insurance company and use the private property damage guide.
The city will not pick up debris from privately owned trees.
City crews do not pick up or haul material from private property trees. Wood waste can be taken to an approved wood waste facility.
|
Entity Name & Address |
Contact |
Details |
|
Hathaway Tree Service (2555 50 Ave NW) |
507-282-4777 |
Commercial or Residential. |
|
JW Stump Dump (3535 Simpson Road SE) |
507-288-8284 |
Commercial or Residential. |
|
ProCutFirewood (2660 Broadway Ave N) |
507-280-7780 |
Commercial or Residential. Accepting wood 5" or larger, no brush. |
