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Resident urges preservation of large trees at Huber Park, warns replacement will take decades

June 09, 2025 | Reynoldsburg City Council, Reynoldsburg, Franklin County, Ohio


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Resident urges preservation of large trees at Huber Park, warns replacement will take decades
A resident addressing Reynoldsburg City Council on June 9 urged the city to preserve large trees that were removed as part of the Huber Park project and argued the loss harmed creek habitat, shade and erosion control.

The commenter, citing a letter from Kurt and Susan Kalia, said the mature trees along Black Lick Creek "had been limiting erosion, creating habitat for fish and other creatures, providing shade that was vital to the creek's well-being, filtering creek water and reducing runoff," and noted that newly planted trees will take decades to reach the size of those that were cut. "In Huber Park, it will take 30 to 50 years for the newly planted trees the size of the large trees that were cut down," the commenter said.

The public comment also cited research on health and educational benefits associated with trees, and urged the city to prioritize tree protection in future projects. Council responded on the record, with at least one council member noting that city staff, the mayor and the city attorney had met with the concerned resident (Mr. Kerr) and others to address the community's concerns about the Huber Park project and that city officials felt they had taken actions "to the best of the ability that we could" to address those concerns.

Why it matters: park trees along streams provide ecological services (shade, habitat, bank stabilization) and mature trees can take decades to replace; residents pressed the council to consider long-term environmental and community impacts when approving or implementing park projects.

What the council recorded: this was part of the public comment period; there was no council vote or formal action on the Huber Park matter during the June 9 meeting. Council members said they and staff had met with concerned residents previously to discuss the project.

What to watch next: residents and council may seek further tree-protection measures or future agenda items if the public pursues formal remedies or additional mitigation; no follow-up action was directed by the council during the June 9 meeting.

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