PART 3PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES AND EXCEPTIONS

Trees in conservation areas – exceptionsI115

1

Section 21113 (preservation of trees in conservation areas) shall not apply to—

a

the cutting down, topping, lopping or uprooting of a tree—

i

in the circumstances mentioned in regulation 14;

ii

by, or on behalf of, the Forestry Commissioners on land placed at their disposal in pursuance of the Forestry Act 196714 or otherwise under their management or supervision; or

iii

by, or on behalf of, a local planning authority;

b

the cutting down of a tree in accordance with a felling licence granted by the Forestry Commissioners under Part II of the Forestry Act 1967 (Commissioners’ power to control felling of trees);

c

the cutting down of a tree in accordance with a plan of operations or other working plan approved by the Forestry Commissioners, and for the time being in force, under a forestry dedication covenant entered into under section 5 of the Forestry Act 196715 (forestry dedication covenants and agreements) or under the conditions of a grant or loan made under section 1 of the Forestry Act 197916 (finance for forestry);

d

the cutting down or uprooting—

i

of a tree whose diameter does not exceed 75 millimetres; or

ii

where carried out for the sole purpose of improving the growth of other trees, of a tree whose diameter does not exceed 100 millimetres; or

e

the topping or lopping of a tree whose diameter does not exceed 75 millimetres.

2

For the purpose of this regulation—

a

where a tree has more than one stem at a point 1.5 metres above the natural ground level its diameter shall be treated for the purposes of paragraph (1)(d)(i) and (e) or paragraph (1)(d)(ii) as exceeding 75 millimetres or 100 millimetres respectively, if any stem when measured over its bark at that point exceeds 75 millimetres or 100 millimetres respectively; and

b

in any other case, the diameter of a tree shall be ascertained by measurement, over the bark of the tree, at a point 1.5 metres above the natural ground level.