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Feb 5th, 2009 06:30 PM #1
City Trees on My Property
I have a tree in my front yard that was planted there by the city because there is an electrical box at the small lawn portion by the street so there was no room for the tree. Now it's in the middle of my front lawn and I don't mind it so much but since I want to do some landscaping this spring.summer, the tree is in the way.
What are my chances of getting rid of this tree?
I have the original document that states the tree planting from the city of Mississauga. It said: The City of Mississauga's Urban Forestry Section will be planting street trees in your neighbourhood this season. Due to an obstruction or space limitations, we cannot plant a tree on city property in front of your house. As a courtesy to residents not eligible for a street tree on city property, the Urban Forestry Unit will arrange to plant a tree om your private property. There is no charge to the homeowner for this service and homeowners are under no obligation to have a tree planted.
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Feb 5th, 2009 06:33 PM #2Deal Addict




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Feb 5th, 2009 06:36 PM #3Deal Addict
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Yeah it goes on about calling to get a free tree and to make sure that it's planted NOT on city property
I have a feeling that if it IS on city property (by the curb), the owner CANNOT remove it but I think if it's on MY property (my front lawn), I can remove it?
I will have to call and ask. It did say that: Tree planted on private property become the property of the homeowner once the teo (2) year warranty period is over. All tree maintenance including pruning, watering and replacement becomes the responsibility of the homeowner.Last edited by speedyforme; Feb 5th, 2009 at 06:47 PM.
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Feb 5th, 2009 08:02 PM #4Deal Addict




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Call the Forestry section and tell them you do not want the tree placed on your front lawn.
Trees get damaged by neighbourhood kids, and cars driving over boulevards in various locations every year. So there is a waiting list of property owners waiting for replacement boulevard trees.
I am sure there is someone else that would be very glad to receive it.
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Feb 6th, 2009 01:27 AM #5_______________
You have enemies? Good. That means you stood up for something sometime in your life!
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Feb 6th, 2009 01:30 PM #6
Call Urban Forestry at (905) 615-4100 and tell them you don't want it. If they give you a hassle then just yank it. You are allowed to remove up to 4 trees of any size per year from your property without a permit or need to get permission or pay the tree removal tax. You can take down an unlimited number of immature (diameter less than 15 cm) without permit.
Private Tree Removal Bylaw and Tree Permit Bylaw
Either way the tree is going to be gone - just a matter of whether its done by the city or you.
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Feb 6th, 2009 04:23 PM #7
if it's been 2 years (tree can't be that big now), get rid of it. Use it for the fireplace/camping!
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Feb 6th, 2009 04:29 PM #8Deal Addict
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It's been 6 years since it has been planted. So it's not a baby.
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Feb 6th, 2009 04:31 PM #9Deal Addict
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Feb 6th, 2009 07:29 PM #10Deal Addict




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Feb 6th, 2009 07:41 PM #11Deal Addict
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Sorry, it was planted from the original owner. The home is 6 years old, I just owned it since Sept 2008.
If it was me, I would NEVER have the tree planted in the middle of my lawn, lol.
And since I am planning somehow redoing the lawn (new grass), I figure I might as well get rid of the tree altogether as well.
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Feb 6th, 2009 07:48 PM #12_______________
Too many people spend money they haven't earned to buy things they don't want, to impress people they don't like. -- Will Smith
Growing older is mandatory. Growing up is optional.
Stay hungry, stay foolish.
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Feb 6th, 2009 07:52 PM #13Deal Addict
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I hate the tree, well I don't hate it, I just hate the location, so I might consider now just moving it to a location on the lawn that's better since I will be redoing the lawn anyway.
I mean it's in the middle of the yard, I plan on putting plants/shrubs etc closer to the front door by the porch and the distance between those potential plants and the tree would be less than 1 metre which would look ugly. So the tree either goes bye bye, or I guess I could move the tree back so it is part of the new greenery.
PS: this preludes my new thread come spring when I ask about lawn and plant care and species and other fun things...
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Feb 6th, 2009 11:43 PM #14
Be thankful OP you purchased in Mississauga, Brampton has a bylaw that prevents us from removing mature trees unless they are hazardous or located within 5m of the home. I have a tree that I would dearly love to get rid of but I can't.
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Feb 7th, 2009 02:05 AM #15
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