Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

CSPRCSPR

News

Connecticut’s governor plans to replace over 180 trees and thousands of bushes that were removed from behind his residence

Ned Lamont speaks at the State Capitol (Via Dean Bane/Shutterstock)

Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont was directed by his local inland wetlands agency on Thursday to replant more than 180 trees and thousands of bushes that were removed in November from land behind his Greenwich home.

The removal occurred on protected wetlands and property not owned by Lamont, involving his neighbor and a local organization. Despite this, Lamont, who is wealthy, has agreed to cover the entire cost of replacing the vegetation for the landscaping project, according to his lawyer Thomas J. Heagney.

“He made it clear some time ago that he would bear the full cost of this,” Heagney told The Associated Press following Thursday’s meeting of the Greenwich Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Agency.

Heagney attributed the illegal tree cutting, described by the agency’s director as “clear-cutting” in one of three affected parcels, to a misunderstanding between Lamont and the landscaping company he had hired.

The Supreme Court building (Via Jonathon Bell/Getty Images)

“It was mainly a matter of the governor giving general instructions to the landscaper, and the landscaper going beyond what was anticipated,” Heagney explained.

Lamont has faced accusations of removing the trees to improve his view of a pond, which he has denied. He stated that the original plan was to clear trees damaged by previous storms.

In November, Lamont and his neighbors received a cease-and-correct order after the sound of chainsaws was heard by a property manager overseeing part of the undeveloped land where the cutting occurred. According to documents from the Greenwich Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Agency, the work “exceeded the destruction of wetland vegetation.”

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

News

Rudy Giuliani, who served as mayor of New York City and as an attorney for Donald Trump, was formally processed on Monday as part...

News

TikTok plans to start identifying content made with artificial intelligence that comes from sources outside its own platform to combat misinformation. According to a...

News

Two men have been found guilty for their involvement in an armed standoff on a busy Massachusetts highway in 2021. The incident, which lasted...

News

Lawyers involved in a dispute over the release of documents related to a Nashville elementary school shooting in 2023 urged a judge on Monday...