At Large Council Candidate - CM Fabian Bedne - Speaks for the Trees!

Photo - Fabian Bedne.jpg

CM Fabian Bedne

At Large Council Candidate

Nashville Tree Conservation Corps asked candidates running for Nashville’s 2019 election how they would solve some of our city’s most challenging tree canopy issues. See how they responded in the question and answer below!

CM Fabian Bedne Speaks for the Trees…


QUESTION #1

The Fort Negley clear-cutting and the NFL cherry-tree incidents illustrated something obvious: When it comes to the urban canopy, there is a breakdown of communication between the segments of Metro Government responsible for trees. The problem is that trees fall under the jurisdiction of many different departments (codes, stormwater, electrical, parks). What internal operational changes need to be made to better protect the existing canopy?

- Any time we want to accept or endorse a change we also need to look at its impact, in Nashville we haven’t created a process to look at changes that way. We tend to look at what the majority wants without looking at the longer term effect. There is also a silo mentality in running the city.

- There should be tests in place that puts the burden on whoever wants to make a change to demonstrate that it is appropriate. In this case and until we have a set of laws that protects our tree canopy Metro should have an independent ombudsman on environmental issues responsible to review and sign off on requests such as this.


QUESTION #2

Do you support the city’s first tree bill in over a decade (BL2018-1416) in its current form? If not, what changes do you want to see? Or should it be stronger and broader in scope? BL1416 impacts only commercial and multi-family land use types. Do you support enacting tree laws for single-family residential?

I support the bill.


QUESTION #3

Atlanta, Charlotte and Austin all have laws protecting a class of trees they consider to be “heritage trees; property owners must get approval for cutting them down and pay into a tree bank to offset the loss of a large trees in their communities. We feel this sets a tone that makes people more aware and respectful of the urban tree canopy. Do you approve of such legislation?

I do, but we should look at how to prevent a financial burden on low income residents.


QUESTION #4

TREES ATLANTA is considered by many to be the model for a public/private cooperative that works to protect urban tree canopy. TREES ATLANTA employees even help the city as on-site inspectors who follow up to make sure developers have complied with tree ordinances. What do you think of this model, or what would you do to strengthen the implementation and enforcement of Nashville’s tree code?

Absolutely.


QUESTION #5

How could we entice private property owners not to cut down mature trees? How can we encourage developers/builders to keep mature trees in the designing of the home and lot?

With bonuses. We already have such incentives in other areas and we should create them for tree canopy protection.


QUESTION #6

Metro Nashville has just 3 employees to oversee all of Davidson County trees, while other peer cities with less tree canopy coverage have 15 to 20 employees on staff for trees. As a result, the Nashville Tree Conservation Corps has cataloged countless incidents where developers eluded complying with tree codes, the city has hundreds of hazardous trees that need to be replaced, and staff have trouble keeping up with just their everyday responsibilities. Do you support spending the money to bring us up to a par with our peer cities? If not, how will you fix this issue?

- Enforcement is key and I support expanding it.

- State law prevents us from implementing much bigger fines, we should look at other ways to encourage people to protect our tree canopy.


BONUS QUESTION FOR COUNCIL CANDIDATES

QUESTION #7

How will you work to bridge the divisions we often experience when talking about advancing tree legislation in Nashville between the community-builder dynamic? How can we advance Nashville’s livability standards while avoiding the risk of State preemption?  

In the current climate we won’t be able to draft legislation that is not supported by the development community and survive State preemption. I think we need to engage with them and come up with a compromise that they will be ready to support. This may take time but it is possible.