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Council hears tree fund and canopy update; city reports $1.9 million in mitigation receipts and targeted replanting after Hurricane Helene

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Urban forestry staff told council the city’s tree mitigation fund has collected about $1.9 million since 2021, explained how mitigation fees are set and described post-Helene replanting and mapping work intended to guide future planting and open-space decisions.

City staff briefed Greenville City Council on the status of the city’s tree mitigation fund, recent canopy losses from Hurricane Helene and a multi-pronged plan to replant and better track the urban forest.

Edward (city staff) and Drew Smith (urban forestry staff) said the fund has received about $1,900,000 since the tree ordinance's 2021 inception and currently holds approximately $1.16 million after expenses. “All of this is done when developers come and they remove trees,” Edward said, describing the mitigation mechanism.

Why it matters: Council members pressed staff on whether the ordinance’s fee structure incentivizes replanting versus paying fines or mitigation payments. Staff said mitigation fees are currently set at about $50 per caliper inch, with higher rates applied to large or heritage trees and exceptions for diseased trees or properties that predate June 2021.

Key points from the presentation and Q&A

- Fund history and…

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