TREE TRIMMING
Our
urban forest is important to the well-being of our city. We value
the shade and beauty of trees. They have an enormous dollar value
benefit for everyone living in Hastings by controlling erosion and storm water, lowering air
conditioning costs, and providing wildlife shelter. However, trees
that interfere with power lines can cause power outages that
interrupt service. That creates potential danger for you and your
property. But that danger can be avoided by not planting
tall-growing trees under or near electric wires and by routine tree
trimming. The following are answers to the most commonly asked
questions concerning Hastings Utilities' tree trimming policy:
Will Hastings
Utilities Trim or Remove Trees?
Trees that interfere with or have the potential
for interfering with existing utility lines or trees that obstruct
the route of new lines will be trimmed or removed. There are
however, two exceptions:
1. Trees that interfere with
service wires (wires from utility poles to the customer's house or
building) will not normally be trimmed or removed. Arrangements can
be made to have these wires temporarily removed to permit the
property owner or contractor to trim or remove the tree. If you want
electric service wires temporarily disconnected to trim or remove a
tree, contact Hastings Utilities several days in advance to ensure
the availability of a utility crew at the desired time. This service
is available at no charge during normal working hours, but may be
delayed due to emergency work. If the work must be done after normal
working hours, but may be delayed due to emergency work. If the work
must be done after normal working hours, weekends, or holidays, a
service charge will be required.
2. Hastings Utilities will not
trim trees near streetlight or yardlights to improve illumination.
If Hastings Utilities requires that a tree be
trimmed or removed, all branches and wood cut from the tree will be
removed from the property by Hastings Utilities. The property owner
may keep any portion of the wood desired. However, Hastings
Utilities will not cut wood to uniform length nor stack the wood.
Trees to be removed will be cut as close to ground level as
possible. Hastings Utilities will remove stumps if they are
accessible.
Fallen trees or limbs that have fallen from
standing trees are the responsibility of the property owner. The
property owner is also responsible for the disposal of all limbs and
wood resulting from the trimming of storm-damaged trees for Hastings
Utilities service restoration effort.
Is Permission of
the Property Owner Necessary Before Doing Tree Work?
Provisions of right-of-way easements grant
Hastings Utilities the authority to trim trees without
property-owner permission to provide for a safe and reliable
electric system. However, Hastings Utilities respects the property
of its customer-owners and will notify the property owner of the
need for tree work before trimming is done. In unusual or emergency
situations, it may be necessary to trim trees without first
notifying the property owner in order to restore service or
eliminate safety hazards.
Hastings Utilities recommends the removal of
trees that will require extensive trimming on a regular basis.
However, trees will not be removed without the property owner's
permission.
What About The
Care And Removal of The Terrace Trees?
The maintenance of trees located on the public
terrace is the responsibility of the property owner.
The Hastings Parks and Recreation Department will
remove any dead trees located on the public right-of-way.
All fallen limbs are the responsibility of the
property owner. Stumps shall be removed by the Park & Recreation
Department staff, provided they are accessible.
Property owners may not remove, or cause removal
of, any living terrace tree without the permission of the Hastings
Parks & recreation Department.
PLANTING TREES
The
National Arbor Day Foundation
encourages thoughtful practices that help preserve community trees
while also serving a utility company's customers.

This drawing demonstrates effective planting, placing the right tree
in the right place. Trees properly placed can lower line clearance
costs for utility companies, reduce tree mortality, and result in
healthier community forests. Trees can add value to your home, help
cool your home and neighborhood, break the cold winds to lower your
heating costs, and provide food for wildlife. Tall trees surrounding
your home, such as maple, oak, pine and spruce, provide summer shade
to lower cooling costs and keep out cold winter winds. Medium trees,
40 feet or less in mature height, might include Washington hawthorne
and Golden raintree, while smaller trees suitable for planting
beneath utility lines might include Redbud, Dogwood, and Crabapple.
When planting near utility lines, consider a 25 foot maximum mature
height and 20 foot spread.
Tree Facts:
-
A tree can grow to
manufacture five pounds of pure oxygen per day, consume carbon
dioxide to fight the "greenhouse effect" that threatens our
survival, and provide the cooling equivalent of ten room-size
air conditioning units.
-
A tree, over a 50-year
period, will generate $31,250 worth of oxygen, provide $62,000
worth of air pollution control, and recycle $37,500 worth of
water.
-
Trees conserve energy,
reduce soil erosion, clean the air we breathe, and help protect
rivers and streams. If trees are to provide all these benefits,
we need to care for the trees we have, and to plant more.
For more information on trees, including punning
and planting guides, go to the
National Arbor Day Foundation website.
If you are planning to plant new trees near power lines, we would
like to help you select the right tree and location. Contact
Hastings Parks & Recreation at 461-2324.
Remember, anytime you are planting trees you need
to call the
Diggers Hotline of Nebraska at
1-800-331-5666 to determine the location of any underground utility
lines.
Back to the
Electric Department