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Urgent: Please Donate!

Because of you, the tree still stands.

 

Keep up the good work:

Contact the Tumwater City Council and tell it to pass an emergency ordinance requiring the mayor to get

(1) a thorough risk assessment,

(2) a waiver from the Tumwater Historical Commission, and

(3) a consensus of three arborists saying removal is necessary.  

Council@ci.tumwater.wa.us,

(360) 754-5855

Please donate to help. We need $15,000 more for legal fees.  We are standing for the tree.

Save the tree. Move the road.

The healthy 400-year-old Davis Meeker Oak is in the sights of Tumwater Mayor Debbie Sullivan, who wants to expand Old Highway 99, and City Administrator Lisa Parks, who wants to expand the airport. The tree is an obstacle to airport expansion and apparently to road improvements that would support airport expansion. Sullivan and Parks say they only care about safety.

But their own arborist privately admitted the tree is not high risk. He then hired a second arborist who agreed. Outside arborists have found the city arborist's later removal recommendation to be baseless. The city arborist also lacks a tree risk assessment qualification (“TRAQ”). This qualification provides assurance that an arborist has the training needed to accurately assess risk. The city arborist's signature block claims he has this qualification and a memo to the city council by Parks claimed he has it too, but a website listing arborist credentials reveals otherwise

An unaffiliated arborist with the tree risk assessment qualification did an independent assessment on June 19, 2024, and found that the risk level was merely
moderate and could be easily reduced to low risk with selective pruning and a support system.

The tree has dropped branches in the past and the old city manager appropriately treated them as routine events. The danger narrative emerged only after the mayor hired Lisa Parks to be the new city manager. She started her job one month after the most recent branch dropped on May 16, 2023. A photo of the branch after it fell shows only the tip extending into the road.

Ms. Parks's prior employment was with the Port of Olympia, which owns the Olympia Airport where the tree stands.

The airport’s senior manager told the Tumwater City Council last year that by 2040, the forecast is for there to be 20,000 passengers per month flying in and out of the airport. He also said that if the airport does not expand to meet a forecasted deficit in aviation capacity, it will result in losing out on $31 billion in economic gains and jobs.

While preparing to have the tree removed, Ms. Parks told city employees to keep the plans a secret, presumably so the city could cut it down before the public and tribes had time to react. City Councilmember Joan Cathey remarked at a March 11, 2024, work session that the council should have been brought into the process earlier to give it time to consider options. Later, at the height of the controversy, the mayor canceled the tree board meeting.

The site is important to the tribes and cutting it down would violate the law because the city has failed to obtain (1) a waiver from the historic commission as required by TMC 2.62.060 and (2) an archaeology permit as required by RCW 27.53.

Meanwhile, the city council has the power to fix this problem immediately. Yet not a single councilmember has made a motion to pass an emergency ordinance. By contrast, the Bellingham City Council recently passed an emergency ordinance to save legacy trees there.

Please help save this tree by donating to the legal fund and contacting the city council to ask them to pass an emergency ordinance that requires the mayor to first obtain:

(1) a thorough risk assessment,
(2) a waiver from the historic commission, and
(3) consensus of three arborists who say removal is necessary.

Davis Meeker oak tree

"The tree has become more than just a tree. It has become a symbol for justice and transparency. The tree has brought the community together."

-- Marianne Tompkins, Olympia

A pair of American kestrels nesting in a nest cavity in the tree (Video courtesy of Michelle Peterson, 5/25/2024).

Latest News:

How You Can Help!

Learn

The 400-year-old historic tree has cultural importance, historic significance, and community meaning. The tree stands by the side of Old Highway 99 in Tumwater, next to the Olympia Airport. Hundreds of settlers on their wagons passed beneath it as they rode the Oregon Trail. Thousands of Native Americans passed beneath it before that, as they traveled the Cowlitz Trail.

 

Oak trees form hollow tubes with strong outer layers as they age. The tree hollows out the core to lighten the load and puts on new growth on the outside of the tube to strengthen it.

 

Ignoring input from experienced arborists who state that the tree is not a high risk, Tumwater's mayor wants to spend $90,000 to remove it, when pruning and cabling would cost a mere $6,000. That is a testament to her intense determination to cut it down. She even went around the requirement to get input from the tribes before taking action on this tree of important historical significance to them. Despite the fact that the council, and not the mayor, makes the laws, the council has stood by and done nothing. 

This tree, over a hundred years ago, was called the hanging tree. Tragically, this is because non-Indians used it to hang Native Americans. The tree should remain and be made into a memorial for the Native Americans who were murdered there. It should not itself be murdered in the same arbitrary and capricious manner by those in power.

Get Involved

We welcome individuals, organizations, and businesses to get involved in our cause. Whether it's through volunteering, organizing events, or spreading the word, there are numerous ways to contribute. By joining Davis-Meeker Oak, you become part of a passionate community dedicated to preserving our natural heritage. Together, we can create a powerful impact and secure a sustainable future for the Davis-Meeker Garry Oak.

Keep Updated

Our project is clear: to protect and preserve the Davis-Meeker Garry Oak. We are actively involved in organizing events and collaborating with local authorities to highlight the significance of this oak and the impact of its potential removal. Join us in our efforts to make a lasting difference for our community and heritage.

Review Documents

View documents that have been received through public records requests and other information. This information will be updated as time allows.

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