66°
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
7 Day Forecast
Follow our weather team on social media

Dead tree debate taking too long, could have saved homeowner money

5 years 2 months 2 weeks ago Wednesday, September 04 2019 Sep 4, 2019 September 04, 2019 6:29 PM September 04, 2019 in News
Source: WBRZ

BATON ROUGE - A dead tree is a topic of debate between the city-parish and a property owner for more than two months.

Kim Scarton's records show that she called the city-parish's 311 call center about a dead tree behind her fence line on June 26, 2019, and took down a work order. But it wasn't until 2 On Your Side got involved did she receive an answer from the city-parish about who it thinks should take responsibility.

"We requested removal, we got a work order number and they said they'd be in touch," said Scarton.

A couple of weeks went by. Scarton says her neighbor called the city-parish after a tree behind her house was damaged during Tropical Storm Barry. On July 15, 2019, she says a representative from the South Drainage Department came out to investigate and told her the trees were not on their properties, but in the city-parish servitude. On July 23, 2019, two city-parish arborists visited Scarton's home.

"We were told they're on city property and they'll be recommended for removal,"  Scarton said.

After following up a few times, Scarton said she didn't hear anything. Then on August 24, 2019, a branch fell from the tree onto Scarton's roof. Estimates to repair the damage exceed $3,500.

"So we contacted the city the following Monday to let them know this is an urgent matter, we've been telling them the tree is a safety risk," she said. "It's damaging our home, it's damaging our fence, no response."

Scarton says she heard from the city-parish Tuesday, Aug. 27, and was told a surveyor would be visiting to take a look.

"They've had more than enough time to address it," Scarton said.

Wednesday, the City-Parish responded to Scarton's situation. It says after doing its "due diligence through inspections and surveying," it has found the tree is on a private servitude. The city-parish says it's still working to determine which side of the private property line the tree exists.

The answer is shocking to Scarton who had no idea there was a private servitude and drainage ditch behind her home. She's not sure how to proceed next, as she waits to learn more from the city-parish.

Scarton says if she had known this information weeks ago, she might have had an opportunity to save her home from being damaged.


More News

Desktop News

Click to open Continuous News in a sidebar that updates in real-time.
Radar
7 Days