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Editorial: Help Elect Cedar Key News` Board of Directors
April 13th, 2003

Editorial: Cedar Key News: A Progress Report
March 11th, 2003

Editorial: Mercedes Meets the Mud
February 28th, 2003

Editorial: Happy New Year to All
December 29th, 2002

Editorial: Letter to the Editor - Thank You C.K. Police for Doing Your Job
December 15th, 2002

Editorial: Poll Results: Fact, Fiction, or Propaganda?
December 4th, 2002

Editorial: WANTED
November 27th, 2002

Editorial: 1,2,3,4 What Are We Fighting For?
October 10th, 2002

Editorial: Do We Really Want Law Enforcement in Cedar Key?
August 15th, 2002

Editorial: Levy County Emergency Management
July 26th, 2002

Editorial: We Have Our Own Heroes
July 17th, 2002

Editorial: Take a Little Time!
July 3rd, 2002

Editorial: Water Management District Trying Its Best
June 26th, 2002

Editorial: Bribery and Misuse of Public Office
June 25th, 2002

Editorial: Police Officer`s Improper Conduct Case Fades Away
June 24th, 2002

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The "Tree Ordinance"

The "Tree Ordinance"

Editorial

Two of Cedar Key`s more prominent citizens were ticketed recently for speeding, a violation of State law. Speeding cases are usually straightforward, unless maternity is about to occur. (Neither case will be able to use that defense.) But some of Cedar Key`s ordinances appear to be harder to enforce than the State's speed law.


Three problem areas: The noise ordinance, the golf cart ordinance and the "tree" ordinance. Measuring air boat noise and determining jurisdiction are being studied by the city`s attorney. Also, as reported weeks ago, Cedar Key`s golf cart armada is on a collision course with Florida law. City Attorney David Coffey is working on the problem. Perhaps less inflammatory, but no less problematic, is the Cedar Key ordinance regarding felling of trees with a trunk diameter of more than eight inches.


The "tree" ordinance says that cutting a tree of more than eight inches in diameter requires a permit. What happens when a tree is cut without a permit? Some people believe that pine trees are exempt. Some people say that the tree ordinance is erratically or selectively enforced. Some people say that the punishment for illegal cutting of a tree is determined by the Cedar Key Garden Club.


A careful reading, or even a cursory reading, of the tree ordinance makes it clear that pine trees are not exempt. If the ordinance is clear it should be enforced, and without selectively doing so. If City officials do not want to enforce the tree ordinance they should take it off the books. Meanwhile, there is a recent case in which four large pine trees on one lot were cut without a permit. This may require a special meeting of the Cedar Key Garden Club. Nevertheless, this case brings the validity of the tree ordinance into question.

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