Showing posts with label Trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trees. Show all posts

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Update: Man Arrested For Preventing Parks Dept. From Removing Tree

Manhattan

A Brooklyn man was arrested yesterday in Tompkins Square Park for trying to prevent the Parks Department from cutting down a tree, NYC Park Advocates has learned.


William Talen, 64,  of Brooklyn was arrested by police who say he climbed on top of a Parks Department forestry truck and refused to move. 

The incident occurred yesterday at approximately 10:00 A.M.

Talen was brought to the 9th Precinct and charged with Obstructing Governmental Administration.  

The Parks Department said the tree presented a safety hazzard to the public. 

"Working with a professional arborist, Parks determined that the leaning elm tree in the center of the park was structurally unsound and posed a danger to the public," an agency spokesperson said in a statement. 

"Tomography tests and resistograph readings have shown that it was likely to fall under normal weather conditions.  There were significant cavities, decay and hollow conditions in the trunk of the tree which failed standard recognized arborcultural guidelines. Therefore, in the interests of public safety, the Parks Department had no alternative but to remove this tree. 

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Parks Department To Remove Thousands Of Sandy-Damaged Trees In Southern Brooklyn

Damaged — and potentially deadly — littered Brooklyn after Superstorm Sandy. Now many trees that are still standing will be cut down before they can strike again.
Damaged — and potentially deadly — littered Brooklyn after Superstorm Sandy. Now many trees that are still standing will be cut down before they can strike again.   (Mark Lennihan/AP)  

Brooklyn

The city will cut down 2,000 trees this fall in an attempt to stop the flora before it can kill or maim again.

The trees are the silent victims of Superstorm Sandy — so badly damaged by salt water inundation that they are likely to fall on residents during routine wind or rain, according to the New York Daily News. 

"It is a very sad time because these trees have been here for so long, but it is a necessity for safety," said Chuck Reichenthal, the venerable district manager for Community Board 13, which includes Coney Island, Sea Gate, and Bensonhurst, some of the worst hit in the borough.

"Everybody is hoping they make replacements because this is still Brooklyn, and this is where trees are grown.”  

Over 20,000 trees were destroyed in the hurricane last year, but brackish water from the storm surge infiltrated the southern Brooklyn soil, damaging root systems. 

The stand as sentinels, undead zombies that are still intact, but marred by brown leaves and thinning boughs.  

The city is hoping to avoid this kind of thing.
The city is hoping to avoid tree incidents like this.   (Photo: Marc A. Hermann/For New York Daily News)  

Many have dropped limbs and caused injuries and near-misses. 

A Coney Island resident, Martin Novitsky, suffered a concussion in July when he was struck by a falling tree branch while walking along the boardwalk. Novitsky survived but has since joined other tree advocates to push the city to fast track the cleanup post-Sandy.   

"Obviously it is very important to remove dead, decaying, or deceased trees for safety," said Geoffrey Croft, president of New York City Park Advocates, a watchdog group. "But the city really needs to increase the numbers of parks inspectors to prevent any such injuries from taking place." 

The Parks department began surveying 48,000 the decayed trees earlier this year. Another 4,500 will be re-inspected in the fall. 

The Parks Department said it has not yet determined a time frame for the removal of the trees. The agency promised to revisit the denuded areas this spring, during tree planting season.

"In the interim, we have been and will continue to remediate soil, as necessary, with compost and gypsum - both mitigate salt damage - to encourage the return of healthy biological functioning," said Meghan Lalor, a Parks Department spokeswoman.   

Read More:

New York Daily News - August 28, 2013 - By Tanay Warerkar  

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Brooklyn Man Injured By Falling Tree in Prospect Park To Sue City For $ 20 Mil.


Brooklyn

By Geoffrey Croft

A Brooklyn man injured by a fallen tree limb in Prospect Park two weeks ago plans on suing the city for $20 million according to a Notice of Claim filed last week.

The Claim cites unspecified "severe and permanent personal injuries," including "emotional injuries" to Jermaine Shell "as a result of negligence. carelesness, recklessnss and gross negligence of the City and Parks Department. " 

The claim says Mr. Shell was "seriously injured when he was struck by a fallen tree" whose "resulting injuries were caused solely by the negligence of the City, the Parks Department which we negligent in its ownership, supervision, management, maintenance and control" of the tree.

It says the city was negligent and carless in its failure to properly,  adequately and/or timely inspect, and maintain the public park and tree.

The Parks Department and the Prospect Park Alliance are named as defendants. 

Mr. Shell's lawyers are also demanding the Parks Department  preserve all evidence pertaining go the incident including maintenance, Inspection and Repair records. 

A motion was also filed in state Supreme Court demanding  the City and Parks Department preserve the tree itself, its maintenance records, and all materials removed from the scene of the accident. 
   
On the morning of July 27 around 7:30 am Shell was walking with three dogs when the tree hit him. 

He was taken by ambulance to Kings County Hospital.

The filing comes after a series of tree-related injuries in city parks and NYCHA properties including the tragic death this week of a 30-year-old pregnant woman in Queens as a result of a deceased tree.

On August 5th, Yingyi Li-Dikov, 30, was tragically killed after a large oak fell on her in Kissena Park on Sunday night.  

Thirteen people have been injured over an eight week period.  

Mr. Shell's filing was first reported  by DNAinfo. 

Read More:


A Walk In The Park - July 30, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft 

City Removes Destroyed Bench In Deadly Tree Incident That Killed 
Pregnant Yingyi Li-Dikov In Kissena Park
A Walk In The Park - August 9, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft 

Rotted Tree Killed Pregnant Woman In Kissena Park
A Walk In The Park -  August 5, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft 

Pregnant Woman Killed By Tree In Queens Park
A Walk In The Park - August 4, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft 



Friday, August 9, 2013

City Removes Destroyed Bench In Deadly Tree Incident That Killed Pregnant Yingyi Li-Dikov In Kissena Park





The city has removed the crushed park bench where Yingyi Li-Dikov, 30, was tragically killed on Sunday night in Kissena Park. She was sitting enjoying a beautiful evening when a large deceased Oak tree suddenly fell, taking the life of Mrs. Li-Dikov and her unborn child.  (Photos: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click on images to enlarge. 





Monday Morning -  Kissena Park. (NYC Park Advocates)


Rotted Tree Stump From Deadly Oak Tree. Fungal decay known as "butt root" significantly reduced tree wood strength at the trees most vulnerable point - the tree base.  Diminished is the ability for the tree to defy gravity and remain upright eventually failing under its own weight of close to 4-5 tons of tree mass. 



The remains of a hallowed tree stump few feet away. 

Read/View More:


Queens Residents Want Parks Department To Be More Proactive With City's Rotting Trees
NY 1 - August 8, 2013 - By Agnes Chung


Rotted Tree Killed Pregnant Woman In Kissena Park
A Walk In The Park - August 5, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft

Pregnant Woman Killed By Tree In Queens Park
A Walk In The Park - August 4, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft 

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Woman Struck By Large Branch In East Harlem - 9th Tree Injury In 7 Weeks

tree on woman
An East Harlem woman was struck and trapped by a large tree limb last night when it came crashing down while she was playing basketball at the Metro North Houses a NYCHA complex at 1st Avenue and 102nd Street last night around 8.:00 pm. (Screen shot via Eyewitness News)


This was the ninth person injured by a tree over the past seven weeks.


Manhattan


A woman was hurt when part of a large tree fell and hit her during a crowded basketball game in a Manhattan park Monday evening, officials say, accordng to WNBC. 
A huge tree branch fell down across part of a basketball court at 102nd Street and First Avenue in East Harlem at about 8 p.m., hitting the woman, according to the FDNY. 
Michelle Woods said she was getting ready to pass the ball to her friend when she realized her friend was trapped. The victim complained her back and neck were hurting her. 
"She was like, 'I am not all right,'" said Woods.
Neighbor Willie Agront rushed over when he saw the commotion.
"We heard a noise, we went over and saw the tree that was on the floor," said Agront. "And then we realized someone was underneath."
Woods, who works at a hospital, made sure others waited for the professionals to help the victim. 
"I didn't want anyone to touch her. When you move someone, you don't know what can happen," she said. "When they came, they did their job." 
The woman was taken to New York Cornell Hospital, where she was listed in serious but stable condition. 
Police cordoned off the basketball court and park as they investigated. 


Read/View More:


Woman Hurt by Falling Tree Branch in Manhattan Park: FDNY
NBC - July 29, 2013 - By Gus Rosendale

Woman Hurt By Falling Branch In East Harlem
CBS - July 29, 2013

Woman hit by tree branch in East Harlem
Eyewitness News - July 29, 2013

Prospect Park - Man Stuck In Head By Fallen Tree Limb - 8th Tree Injury In 7 Weeks
A Walk In The Park - July 30, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft

A Walk In The Park - July 20, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft





Prospect Park - Man Stuck In Head By Fallen Tree Limb - 8th Tree Injury In 7 Weeks

Brooklyn

By Geoffrey Croft


A man was struck in the head by a fallen tree limb in Prospect Park early Saturday morning, NYC Park Advocates has learned. 


EMS received a call for a trauma at 7:40am near the Center Drive and East Drive.

EMS transported Jermaine Shell to Kings County Hospital in unknown condition.

Further information was not available at this time.

According to one eyewitness account the victim had a gash on his head and the crown of his head was split open and there was a lot of blood loss. 

The victim was breathing wasn't visible conscious when he was finally put into the ambulance.

This was the eighth person injured by a fallen tree branch in seven weeks.
  
Read More:


A Walk In The Park - July 20, 2013 - By Geoffrey Croft





Saturday, July 20, 2013

Riverside Park: Teen Girl Hurt By Falling Tree Limb - 7th Tree injury In Six Weeks


Brooklyn Man Struck On Sunday In Union Square Park


Riverside Park - 81 St. & Riverside Drive near where a 13- year-old girl was struck by a fallen tree limb yesterday.   The Parks Department press office has refused repeated requests for information regarding the incident. 

At least seven people have been hurt by falling tree branches since June 3rd. (Photos: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click on images to enlarge.

Manhattan

By Geoffrey Croft

A 13-year-old girl was struck on her shoulder and back by fallen tree limb in Riverside Park, NYC Park Advocates has learned.

The incident occurred yesterday afternoon at 81st St. near Riverside Drive around 3:10pm.

EMS transported the girl to New York Hospital suffering from "multiple trauma" according to a spokesperson. 

The extent of her injuries is not known at this time. 


 Remains of yellow caution tape on a fence near where a girl was struck yesterday by a tree limb as a family relaxes nearby on an adjacent park bench.


The Parks Department press office has refused repeated requests for information regarding the incident. 

The Mayor's office also failed to respond.  

Last Sunday a 51-year-old Brooklyn man was hit by large tree branch in Union Square Park, NYC Park Advocates has also learned. 

Murat Calikusu,  was out with his family and friends relaxing under an Elm tree trying to escape the heat when a 15-20 foot long branch came crashing down, falling three stories stricking him in the shoulder and neck.


On Sunday a Brooklyn man was hit by fallen tree branch from this Elm tree in Union Square Park.  The adjacent area had been cordoned off with mettle barricades and a large dead tree limb was clearly visible dangling above. The day after Sunday's incident Parks Department forestry employees removed the dead limb. 


The incident occurred at 3:00 on the northern section of the park in a crowded sitting area on the lawn area where lime green tables and chairs are put out.

The man suffered lacerations to his shoulder,  a separated bone in his neck, bruising and scratches on his back and was treated at Beth Israel Hospital said his 17-year-old daughter who was shaken up by the incident.

"I felt so scared, I was going to cry. He couldn't breath," she said.

"He couldn't see things at first, and then he was going to faint. He couldn't talk and his blood pressure was high. His neck was in pain. 

"Thank God, it could have been his head,"  she said. 

His daughter had just left him and was on her way to Starbucks to get drinks when she recived a call and came rushing back. 

She said her father was going to lose two weeks of work.

Early the next morning Park Department's forestry division removed a large dead branch which had been dangling two stories up a few feet away from where Sunday's incident occurred. The area under that dead branch had been barricaded off earlier in the week.

The same day in Bronx Park a 5-year-old boy was hit by a fallen tree limb but was not seriously injured.

This follows a series of tree injuries over the last six weeks.  

On June 20, an elderly man and a teen girl were struck by a falling branch in the NYCHA Ingersoll Housing development.  

On June 12th a 59-year-old tourist  from Indiana was hit by falling tree branch in Central Park. 

On June 3, a 46-year-old man was struck by a tree limb on 96th and Central Park West at 7:00am.

The City and the Central Park Conservancy recently settled two high profile tree injury cases for a total  $ 14.5 million dollars.   

Read More:

A Walk In The Park -  June 20, 2013

A Walk In The Park - June 12,  2013 - By Geoffrey Croft 

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Two Hurt By Fallen Tree Branch - 5 Tree Injuries In Two Weeks

Officials tend to the victims of a falling branch in Brooklyn.
An elderly Asian man and an African American teen are treated by EMS employees in Brooklyn this afternoon after they were struck by a falling branch in the NYCHA Ingersoll Housing development.    At least five people have been hurt by falling tree branches since June 3rd. (Photo: Frank Rosario)

Brooklyn

Two people were seriously hurt after they were hit by a tree branch in Brooklyn this afternoon, authorities said, according to an article in the New York Post.
The branch fell about 3 p.m., and hit a man and woman in the Ingersoll Housing Development on Monument Walk, according to an FDNY spokesman and witnesses.

"He looked like he was in bad shape, sprawled out on the ground," said Gladys McMillian, 66. "The man looked like he was bleeding really badly from his head.

The poor man just couldn't move. He couldn't talk."

McMillian added that a young woman was soaked in blood, and crying.

"She had bruises on her arms, and it looked like she had a hole in her head," she said.

EMS rushed to the scene, and took the two to Kings County Hospital for treatment, the spokesman added.

Read More:

2 injured by falling branch in Brooklyn
New York Post -  June 20, 2013 - By Frank Rosario and Rebecca Harshbarger

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Central Park: 59-Year-Old Tourist Hurt By Falling Tree Branch

061113treefall.jpg
A 59-year-old woman lays on the ground this afternoon in Central Park after being struck by a tree limb (left) on her head.  She suffered a broken arm chipped teeth as a result from falling. 

A dog walker was also struck by a tree limb today in Carl Schurz Park in Manhattan earlier today witnesses said.  (Photo: Courtesy @charleylhasa via Gothamist)

Manhattan


By Geoffrey Croft


A 59-year-old tourist  from Terre Haute Indiana was hit by falling tree branch in Central Park this afternoon, the second person to be struck in the park by a tree limb in less than a week.


Sharon Reese was walking with her husband when a 3 inch in diameter branch from an Oak tree suddenly snapped and fell three stories hitting her in the head city sources said. 

She was transported to St. Lukes Roosevelt Hospital. 




















The damaged Oak tree. (Photo: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click on images to enlarge



The incident occurred  inside the park on an asphalt path about 50 yards from a park entrance at West 86th Street and Central Park West just after 3:30pm.

The woman temporarily lost consciousness and initially could not remember what had happened to her according to  city sources. 

"It's scary," said jogger Penelope Clark who saw the victim shortly after the incident. 

"I saw a woman lying on the ground. She had a bandage wrapped around her head, a giant branch on the ground.  She had blood on her head." 

Central Park Conservancy workers quickly loaded the broken limb into the back of a pick-up truck and carted it away. 

Ms. Reese was listed in stable condition this evening. 

On June 3, a 46-year-old man was struck by a tree limb on 96th and Central Park West at 7:00am.

It was revealed last week that the City and the Central Park Conservancy settled two high profile tree injury cases for a total  $ 14.5 million dollars.   


By late afternoon, caution tape and barricades surrounded the tree.


Read/View More: 


CBS - June 11, 2013  - By Derricke Dennis



New York Post -  June 12, 2013 - By Erin Calabrese and Jamie Schram 

NY1 - June 12, 2013 

gothamist - June 12, 2013 -  By John Del Signore  


WABC - June 11, 2013 -   By Jeff Pegues 

WNBC - June 11, 2012 - By Gus Rosendale  

New York Times - June 11, 2013 - By Joseph Goldstein and Randy Leonard

WPIX - June 11, 2013 - By Nicole Johnson   

Fox 5 -  June 11, 2013 - By Stacey Delikat


Am-New York - June 11 - By Tim Herrera  


WCBS - June 11, 2013 -  By Derricke Dennis 

The Wall Street Journal - June 11, 2013  

Falling Tree Branch Injures Woman In Central Park
gothamist -  June 11, 2013 - By John Del Signore






Monday, June 3, 2013

Central Park: Man Hit In Head By Fallen Tree Limb

Manhattan

By Geoffrey Croft

A 46-year-old man was hit in the head by a fallen tree branch this morning NYC Park Advocates has learned.  

The incident occurred shorty after 7:oo am on 96th Street and Central Park West. 

EMS transported the man to Roosevelt Hospital with minor injuries to his head according to an FDNY spokesperson.

A large tree limb fell yesterday morning at the same location sources said. An 18 inch in diameter  tree branch feel after 9:30am at 96th Street and Central Park West. No one was hurt.

It was revealed yesterday that the City settled two high profile tree injury cases for a total 
$ 14.5 million dollars. 

Balir-Goldensohn, 33 was injured on the morning of July 29, 2009 when a large rotted tree branch fell and struck him in the head in Central Park. The case was quietly settled in August for  $ 11.5 million.  

On February 25,  2010,   Elmaz Qyra  46  an Albanian immigrant living in Brooklyn was killed by a fallen American elm tree near 69th Street while walking through Central Park.  That case was settled in April for $ 3 million dollars as the jury was being selected.




Sunday, June 2, 2013

Central Park Tree Lawsuits: $11.5 Million Payout As City Quietly Settles Google Engineer Tree Injury Suit- $ 3 Million For Albanian Immigrant Living in Brooklyn Killed.


Sasha Blair-Goldensohn receiving physical therapy from physical therapist Jodi Brangaccio and aide Lydia Soto-Kohen, right, (cq) at the Helen Hayes Hospital in Rockland on Sept. 27, 2010.

Mr. Balir-Goldensohn, 33, a father of two-was injured on the morning of July 29,  2009 when a large rotted tree branch fell and struck him in the head in Central Park. The case was quietly settled in August for  $ 11.5 million.  




Less than six months later,  on February 25,  2010,  Elmaz Qyra,  46,  an Albanian immigrant living in Brooklyn- also a father of two - was killed by a fallen American elm tree near 69th Street while walking through Central Park.  That case was settled in April for $ 3 million dollars as the jury was being selected. (Photo:  Robert Stolarik for The New York Times)

The city - including then parks commissioner Adrian Benepe attempted to blame Mr. Qyra's death on  "wet,  unusually heavy snow."   

There were four tree incidents within a year in Central Park, two resulted in fatalities. The City has paid out tens millions of dollars over the last  5 years alone stemming from what plaintiffs say is the city's neglect in properly maintaining its trees.  

The Parks Department has less than 100 Climber & Pruners for more than 2.6 million trees. The vast majority of their time is spent dealing with street trees not in parks. Long gone are the agency's preventive tree maintenance programs. 

Multiple lawsuits against the City are still pending.


Manhattan

By Geoffrey Croft

The City and the Central Park Conservancy have quietly settled the lawsuit brought by the family of a Google engineer who was seriously injured in Central Park by a fallen tree limb NYC Park Advocates has learned.

The case was settled in August 2012 for $11.5 million dollars but had not been previously disclosed publicly. The incident has attracted a considerable amount of media attention. The suit was filed in December 2009 in State Supreme Court in Manhattan. 

Although the Central Park Conservancy maintains the park under contract with the City it was indemnified by the City and not required to contribute to the settlement.

Sasha Balir-Goldensohn, 33, a father of two- was injured on the morning of July 29,  2009 when a large rotted tree branch fell and struck him in the head in Central Park between the West 63rd Street park entrance (above- below) and the West Drive.  (Photos: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates) Click on images to enlarge.

 

















On the morning of July 29,  2009 Google engineer Sasha Balir-Goldensohn,  33,  was injured when a large rotted tree branch fell from a Pin Oak and struck him in the head.  He was walking alone between the park's West 63rd Street entrance and the West Drive when the limb fell "36 or 37 feet from the ground," according to the suit. 

Mr. Balir-Goldensohn, a computer engineer was transported to New York-Presbyterian Hospital Weill Cornell Medical Center where he was in a coma. He sustained brain damage,  spinal-cord damage resulting in paralysis, spinal fractures and respiratory and other serious injuries.  He underwent multiple operations.

The suit claimed that the City of New York and the Central Park Conservancy were negligent and should have properly inspected and maintained the park trees.

Nicholas Papain the victim's attorney told the New York Times in 2009 that the City and the Conservancy should have seen the accident coming. 

"An examination of the tree limb, after this terrible incident, revealed that it was dead and rotted and in real danger of breaking and falling for a long period of time prior to the incident," he said in a statement.

“The limb’s condition should have been readily apparent to the city and the Central Park Conservancy, who were responsible for the maintenance of the park.”

Rebecca Min, Mr. Blair-Goldensohn’s wife, was also a plaintiff in the case. She sued for loss of her husband’s services and support.  They have two young children and live on the Upper West Side. 

Dr. Rajiv Narula was jogging through Central Park on Wednesday when he was jolted by the sound of a gargantuan tree branch snapping, followed by an ear-splitting scream. Narula craned his neck and spotted a man lying on the ground, motionless, 20 feet away.

"I ran across the street to check on him," Narula, 48, told the Daily News. 

"He was breathing. He had a pulse. But his neurological status was pretty bad. He wasn't reacting to anything. He was totally out." Narula also noticed that the injured man, Google engineer Sasha Blair-Goldensohn, 33, was bleeding profusely from the back of his head.

It was squirting out, with every pulse," said Narula, a family doctor.

Elmaz Qyra,  46, Killed

Elmaz Qyra,  46,  an Albanian immigrant living in Brooklyn was killed by a fallen American elm tree near 69th Street while walking through Central Park.  The case was settled in April for $ 3 million dollars as the jury was being selected. (Photo: Dan Brinzac)


Less than six months later,  on February 25,  2010,  Elmaz Qyra,  46,  an Albanian immigrant living in Brooklyn, was killed by a fallen tree limb while walking  alone through Central Park.

Mr. Qyra, also a father of two, had just finished his busboy shift at the New York Athletic Club.

That case was settled three weeks ago for $ 3 million dollars as the jury was being selected.

He was struck by a 20-foot branch from an American Elm tree that was heavy with snow while walking along Literary Walk in Central Park the City Comptroller's office confirmed. 

That suit also claimed the City and the Conservancy were negligent for not maintaining the tree.

Despite repeated claims by the Parks Department at the time that the tree branch was healthy and it was the weight of snow that caused the tree limb to fall,  court papers revealed that park officials including the Central Park Conservancy had prior knowledge of the limb's dangerous condition but did not act in a timely manner. 

The branch was inspected on December 13 more than two months before the fatal accident and labeled its dangling branches and deteriorated condition as "Priority 1 Immediate Attention," according to court papers. 

This information directly contradicts repeated statements made by then Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe and press representatives at the time of the incident which were widely reported. 

The city - including then parks commissioner Adrian Benepe attempted to blame the incident on  "wet,  unusually heavy snow."  

Mr. Benepe told the NY Times the only way to completely prevent trees or branches from falling was to cut down all the trees.  

"There is no reason to believe that anything else might happen like that, ” he said,  referring to the accident that killed Mr. Qyra.

“Having trees and large limbs come down simply because of the weight of the snow is a phenomenon that has been very rarely witnessed. I can’t recall anything like it,” Benepe said.

Adrian Benepe was called out on the false tree safety claim at the time. 


6-Month-old Baby Killed

On June 26, 2010, 6-month-old Gianna Ricciutt was killed and her mother seriously injured in Central Park by a fallen tree branch.

The mother,  Karla Del Gallo,  was posing for a photo holding her daughter in her arms when the limb fell 25 to 30 feet from a 50-year-old honey locust tree. They were standing near the zoo’s Sea Lion exhibit,  just feet from the Parks Department’s headquarters. Del Gallo was put in a medically induced a coma.  

A year later the family filed suit against the City,  the Central Park Conservancy,  the Wildlife Conservation Society, and Beucler Tree Experts which the society had hired to perform tree-pruning work. The suit claimed that the parties were aware of the limb’s dangerous condition for weeks before the incident. The suit seeks unspecified damages.
http://awalkintheparknyc.blogspot.com/2011/06/couple-sues-over-central-park-death-of.html

According to the lawsuit,  the  injuries were caused "by the negligence, carelessness, and recklessness" of the defendants,  who had a duty to inspect,  prune,  and care for the tree. The limb was in danger of falling prior to its snapping on June 26,  2011,  when the family was struck due to its "dead, rotted, diseased, decayed and/or otherwise unsafe and dangerous conditions." 

The lawsuit alleges “written notice” of the tree’s dangerous condition was given to the tree-pruning company,  which did not act “within fifteen (15) days after the receipt of such notice.”

That case is still pending. 

On May 31, 2010  three people were reportedly hurt when a tree branch fell near 74th Street and the East Drive Central Park.  

Recent Cases 

October 29, 2012. Tony Laino,  30,  Mr. Laino was killed when a large tree fell into his home  at 47-36 166th Street in Flushing Queens during hurricane Sandy.  Police found the man pinned in his bedroom on the second floor. The victim's family has filed a notice of their intent to sue the city claiming the tree was not properly maintained.  

May 27, 2012 - Randall's/Wards Island.  East Harlem resident Guanda Betancourt, 62,  was picnicking with her family including grandchildren and nieces and was almost killed when a 26-foot-long dead tree limb struck came crashing down on her head.  She was hospitalized.  Ms. Betancourt sustained "severe and permanent injury to various part of her body" according to the suit.  She is he is blind in one eye has vision problems in the other eye,  she suffered facial fractures,  back and neck injuries.   The suit alleges she was struck by a "falling dead, dilapidated and diseased tree limb." 

Despite having thousands of trees on the island NYC Park Advocates has learned that the Parks Department did not have a single work order in for pruning. Over the next few days after the injury they pruned dozens of dead tree branches. 

Feb. 25, 2010- Central Park. Elmaz Qyra, a 46-year-old busboy and father of two, is killed when a branch snaps on a tree designated to be removed. 

May 31, 2010 - Central Park. Two women, Roberta Colores-Martinez and her daughter, Carmen Cardoso, are injured when an oak drops a big limb. Case pending.

June 26, 2010 - Central Park. Gianna Ricciutti, a 6-month-old girl, is killed by a falling branch outside the Central Park Zoo. Case pending.

July 29, 2009 -Central Park. Sasha Blair-Goldensohn, a computer engineer at Google, is badly injured when a dead limb from an oak overhanging a walkway falls more than 30 feet. Case pending.

July 16, 2007 - Stuyvesant Square Park. Alexis Handwerker, a social worker, is seriously injured when a limb crashes from one of the city's largest trees. The city settled for $4 million in February 2012.

Aug. 30, 2007 - Riverside Park. Sohaib Qureshi, a senior in high school, sustains brain damage when a limb falls as he plays catch. Case pending.

Aug. 2, 2006 - Pelham Bay Park, Bronx. A disabled cyclist, Rodolfo Guevara, is injured when a rotting tree falls across a bicycle path. The city settled for $92,500 in January 2012.

July 20, 2004 - Union Square Park. A Manhattan woman, Betty Luh, is struck by a limb from a Siberian elm while sitting on a park bench. The city settled for $500,000 in 2009.
July 22, 2003 - Avenue J in Brooklyn. The canopy of a maple collapses, killing Hinda Segal, a grandmother. A jury awarded $2.95 million in 2007; an appeals court approved $1.6 million in 2009.

Aug. 10, 2002 - Union Square Park. A tree limb crushes the legs of Hyman Schermer, a pedestrian. The city settled for $1.5 million in 2006.








Friday, November 9, 2012

Queens Trees Hit Hardest By Hurricane Sandy


November 4, 2012. A fallen tree in front of 161 27th Avenue (corner of 12th Street) - Queens. About half of the 20,000-plus calls to the city’s 311 line for downed trees and branches as well as hanging limbs came from Queens after Hurricane Sandy.   (Photos: Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates)  Click on images to enlarge.

Queens

The majestic trees of Queens that help make it the city’s leafiest borough toppled in record numbers after the one-two punch of Hurricane Sandy and this week’s nor’easter.

About half of the 20,000-plus calls to the city’s 311 line for downed trees and branches as well as hanging limbs came from Queens after the super-storm, according to the New York Daily News.

And roughly 2,000 of the 3,000 requests received after the nor’easter were also traced to Queens.

Forestry crews from the city Parks Department — along with teams of outside contractors — have been working feverishly to clear blocked streets and remove trees from homes and cars.

“This is the worst I have ever seen,” Queens Parks Commissioner Dorothy Lewandowski said of the destruction left in Sandy’s wake. “This was spread all across the borough in every community board.”

Lewandowski said the trees were even more vulnerable because they were still full of leaves.

“Leaves act like a sail,” she said. “They allow that extra gust of wind to uproot the trees.”

Lewandowski said priority is given to trees in roadways.

“We need to clear all the streets first so we have a route for emergency vehicles if needed,” she said.

On a recent day, one crew tackled a fallen oak tree in Holliswood. Workers used chainsaws to chop the trunk and branches and a log loader to haul it away.

“Every day we get a map,” said Shawn Maerz, deputy director of Queens forestry for the Parks Department. “First we go to the streets that are impassable and we open them up.”

Astoria Park. A 75-year-old oak lays on the ground, one of approximately 18 trees the park lost as a result of the hurricane. 
























But sometimes crews are delayed by hanging wires and other electrical hazards.

“We call Con Ed and wait for them to turn them off,” he said. “That’s the most dangerous part of this job.”

Workers also use large cranes to remove trees that have fallen into homes.

The painstaking job will take months to complete.

As of Friday, crews had cleared 2,943 of the 10,324 calls about downed trees and limbs reported in the borough.

On top of that, they received an additional 2,150 calls after Wednesday night’s nor’easter.

“We were hit the hardest in Queens,” Maerz said. “We always are.”

Along with oaks, the crews picked up maples, London planes and many other species of trees.

While the fallen wood may look pristine and ripe for home improvement projects, all of it is off-limits.

“This is a quarantine zone for the Asian longhorned beetle,” said Maerz. “It all has to get chipped.”

Some of that work is done at nearby Cunningham Park, which can accommodate large chippers and equipment.

Lewandowski urged people with downed trees and other problems to continue to call 311 or go to the city’s website www.nyc.gov and report them.

“People might be frustrated by the backlog but it really tells us what’s going on out there,” Lewandowski said. “We certainly have our challenges before us. It will take a few months before we fully clean up.”

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