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Olson: Trees toppled by regulations

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Turns out ComEd can’t really do much about it, either. The power lines that run along the nature trail are high-voltage. They carry power from power plants to area substations, which then distribute electricity at a lower voltage to homes and businesses. This particular line runs from south DeKalb up to a substation on the north side near Glidden and Twombly roads, and also links with Sycamore’s power grid.

High-voltage lines fall under Federal Energy Regulatory Commission guidelines, and those regulations have become tighter since the last time trimming was done in the area, ComEd spokesman Paul Callighan said.

“[They] require clearing out the trees completely underneath the high-voltage lines,” Callighan said. “So we were forced in the trimming cycle here to meet these requirements.”

Woodchippers will be humming in the area for another week or two, Callighan said.

Capek said park officials would keep an eye on what begins to grow in the clear-cut space beneath the lines.

“I think as it’s coming up, we’ll try to contain invasive species,” she said.

As for planting native grasses in the area, Capek said the park district would be watching to see what grows up in the spring and beyond.

“We’ll evaluate that and say, ‘Is that something we can seed?’ … and look at what begins to come up naturally,” she said.

Keeping perspective: To some degree, this is the price of modern convenience. If we can’t afford to bury power lines everywhere, then they must be respected.

We can’t complain when wind storms knock out power for days – remember the prolonged power outages after the “derecho” windstorm that hit in July 2011? – and then complain when the utility company cuts down trees to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

The trees being cleared aren’t exactly old-growth forest, and clearing them away presents an opportunity to restore the area to a more native state.

But whatever grows back in the spring and summer certainly won’t provide the shade and animal habitat that made the trail so special for many people either.

If people who care about the trail harness the anger they’re feeling now to help restore the ecosystem to a state that’s better than it was before this week, then something positive can come of this whole thing.


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