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  1. Published on: 11/05/2018 05:56 AMReported by: roving-eye
    Review of Network Rail’s tree cutting and vegetation management has been announced.



    tree felling to be suspended during current nesting season
    study will focus on safety, performance and minimising harm to wildlife
    Tree Council and RSPB are part of consultation

    A review of Network Rail’s tree cutting and vegetation management has been announced by Rail Minister Jo Johnson.

    The Rail Minister has asked Network Rail to suspend all felling during the current bird nesting season, except where safety critical.

    The review will consider how Network Rail can best ensure the safety of our railways, while also protecting wildlife and preserving trees.

    It will also build on areas of existing best practice in vegetation management within the organisation.

    Network Rail is the fourth largest landowner in the UK and in the past 4 years has made significant progress in improving the management of trees alongside train tracks. But last year alone there were an estimated 1,500 incidents involving trees and bad weather which caused widespread travel disruption to rail passengers.

    Jo Johnson, Rail Minister, said:

    How we manage our trees and vegetation — and protect the wildlife that lives in and around them - is an important issue.

    It is right that Network Rail are able to remove trees that could be dangerous, or impact on the reliability of services. In the last year, vegetation management and related incidents have cost the railway £100 million.

    But I also understand that cutting back trees can alarm people who enjoy these environments — and can especially raise concerns over the effect on birds during nesting season.

    That is why I am commissioning this review. In the meantime I have asked Network Rail to suspend all felling during the current nesting season, except where it is safety critical.

    The review will look at whether Network Rail has the capacity and capability to manage vegetation in a way that minimises harm to wildlife. It will also look at whether staff need more training — for instance in identifying approaches to managing them that would be better than felling.

    In launching it, the Department for Transport has consulted with the Tree Council and the RSPB. The review will report its findings to the minister in the summer.

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  3. Little Londoner says:11/05/2018 09:09 AM
    Trees on lineside banks only appeared after steam finished as the banks were regularly burned by the red hot cinders discharged from the loco's. From October to December the railway lines become skating rinks from the mulch caused by crushed leaves adhering itself to the rails and it costs a fortune sending out Rail Head Cleaning trains to blast the rail head with high pressure water to clear the mulch.

    The trees not only cause the above problem they also block the view of signals and in severe weather fall across lines bringing down overhead cables and in the worst case causing severe damage to trains and injury to crew and passengers.

    The fact is they are a fairly modern problem and although it seems drastic there isn't much of an alternative other than to cut them down.

  4. cotton man says:11/05/2018 06:28 PM
    Quote Originally Posted by Little Londoner View Post
    Trees on lineside banks only appeared after steam finished as the banks were regularly burned by the red hot cinders discharged from the loco's. From October to December the railway lines become skating rinks from the mulch caused by crushed leaves adhering itself to the rails and it costs a fortune sending out Rail Head Cleaning trains to blast the rail head with high pressure water to clear the mulch.

    The trees not only cause the above problem they also block the view of signals and in severe weather fall across lines bringing down overhead cables and in the worst case causing severe damage to trains and injury to crew and passengers.

    The fact is they are a fairly modern problem and although it seems drastic there isn't much of an alternative other than to cut them down.
    Interesting and makes perfect sense when one thinks back in time.

  5. Alikado says:11/05/2018 06:41 PM
    I was astounded on a recent trip to Manchester by the devastation, they seem to be operating a 'scorched earth' policy. They are not pruned but chopped off at the ankles, trees overhanging from adjacent land are also hacked back to the boundary line, many are quite some distance from the track.


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