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Olson: Trees toppled by regulations

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Workers have cut a swath through the trees lining the Nature Trail between Sycamore Road and First Street in DeKalb to keep high-voltage power lines free from interference. A ComEd spokesman said the clear-cut is the result of new federal regulations; nature-lovers say it’s a disaster. (Eric Olson – eolson@shawmedia.com)

They still were at it Friday morning, chopping away half the nature from the Nature Trail between Sycamore Road and First Street in DeKalb.

We received several calls this week about the work going on. Reporter David Thomas visited the scene and wrote a story about it that appeared in Wednesday’s Daily Chronicle.

“A lot of people are very upset,” said Ron Cress of DeKalb. “People were crying earlier in the week.”

I decided to check out the clear cut beneath the power lines for myself Friday, and I met Ron walking on the trail. He exchanged shrugs with a woman who rode past on a bicycle as we walked through the work zone.

You can see why people were moved to tears. One side of the path was a tangle of trees and brush; on the other, power lines towered above a bed of woodchips.

This upsetting episode might be an opportunity, though. I put this to Ron, who volunteers with the Nature Conservancy at the Nachusa Grasslands in Franklin Grove.

“The only hope for this area is to do what they’re doing in some respects,” Cress said. “If you really would like to get the land back to its native state, you have to get rid of all the junk stuff, the honeysuckle and grapevines.”

Simply clear-cutting through the tangle won’t do the job by itself, Cress said. If the idea is to create a prairie landscape, someone’s going to have to plant those specimens and care for them, too.

Based on the way that the undisturbed landscape looks on the other side of the path, there hasn’t been a lot of landscape maintenance.

Maintaining the vegetation along the path is a labor-intensive proposition, said DeKalb Park District Executive Director Cindy Capek.

The park district maintains the Nature Trail, and Capek said she runs on the trail every day, but the matter is out of the district’s hands.

“We can’t do anything to stop it,” Capek said.

That’s because ComEd, which owns the power transmission lines, has a 24-foot right of way on either side of the power poles where they can do whatever cutting necessary.

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