Tree Concerns and Removal
Trees are the answer to many of the issues we face in an urban environment. Trees needs care and maintenance throughout their lives, but more as they mature. At times, it is appropriate to remove trees. Removing trees, even small ones, is very dangerous work. Therefore, it is important, and required by law, to hire an expert.
Why is it important to hire an expert just to remove a tree? In Maryland, anyone being paid to work on, evaluate, give advice about trees must be licensed through the Maryland Department of Natural Resources Forest Service. A Maryland licensed tree expert is required to have training and follow safety procedures. Further, in the event that something goes wrong and property is damaged, a licensed tree expert is required to be appropriately insured and bonded. Maryland offers tips on choosing a licensed tree expert (PDF) to remove or trim your trees.
Do I Need a Permit to Remove My Tree?
If you answer yes to any of these questions, you may need a permit to remove an individual tree:
Is the tree in the right-of-way of any roads?
If yes, contact the Maryland Department of Natural Resources Forest Service to obtain a " Roadside Tree Project Permit". A permit is required from Maryland for planting, pruning, or removing a tree from ANY right-of-way. This includes streets and roads maintained by villages, towns, cities, the County, and the State.
Is the tree in the right-of-way of any road maintained by Montgomery County?
If yes, contact the Montgomery County Department of Permitting Services (DPS) to obtain a permit. Anyone who applies for a building permit, a sediment control permit, or a permit to work in a right-of-way maintained by Montgomery County is required to comply with the Roadside Tree Law. This permit is in addition to a permit from the Maryland Forest Service. Both permits are needed to work on trees in rights-of-way maintained by Montgomery County.
Are you disturbing more than 5,000 square feet of canopy or soil?
If yes, contact DPS for a sediment control permit. Check with DPS about other requirements for obtaining a sediment control permit, including building a home or business.
What about the Canopy Conservation Law in Montgomery County?
Anyone who is required to obtain a sediment control permit from Montgomery County is required to comply with the Tree Canopy Law.
Is the tree in a conservation easement?
If the tree is in a conservation easement, then contact your Planning Team within the Montgomery Planning Department for permission to remove the trees.
Is the tree on a historic site?
If the tree is in an historic area designated by the Montgomery Planning Department, then contact them to determine if a Historic Area Work Permit is required to remove the tree.
Are you in an incorporated city, town, or village?
If yes, contact your city, town, or village officials directly before performing any tree work. Within Montgomery County, there are many incorporated cities, towns, and villages. Each of these may have their own codes and regulations regarding street trees and trees on private property.
Do you live in a homeowner’s association or civic association with rules or guidelines?
If yes, check with your home owner’s association or civic association directly.
Is the tree hazardous?
In all cases, if a tree is found to be hazardous by a Maryland licensed tree expert (LTE) or certified arborist, the hazard may be removed as soon as possible by an LTE. The LTE must notify, in writing, the appropriate agency within 14 days. Any work beyond what is needed to remove the hazardous condition must be completed with necessary permits. For example, a hazardous branch on a tree may be removed by an LTE without prior permission but all non-hazardous sections of the tree must remain until required permits are obtained.
Hiring a Tree Expert
Why is it important to hire an expert to work on your tree?
In Maryland, anyone being paid to work on, evaluate, or give advice about trees is required by law to be Licensed Tree Expert. To verify a license, visit the Maryland Forest Service or call 410-260-8531.
A licensed tree expert is required to be well-trained and experienced in how to care for trees, how to trim or remove trees, how to recognize hazardous trees, how to plant trees… all in such a way as to be safe and follow laws. Further, a Maryland Licensed Tree Expert is required to be appropriately insured and bonded.
5 Tips on Hiring A Maryland Licesned Tree Expert
Maryland offers tips on choosing a licensed tree expert (PDF) to remove or trim your trees.
- Ask to see their Tree Expert license. Any Licensed Tree Expert will carry a card that contains their expert number and verifies their status as being licensed. To verify it, visit Maryland Forest Service or call 410-260-8531.
- Ask for proof of insurance. A Licensed Tree Expert will have insurance coverage for personal and property damage, as well as worker’s compensation insurance.
- Ask for references. Find out where the company or person has done work similar to the work you are requesting. Don’t hesitate to check references or visit other sites where the company or individual has done tree work.
- Get an estimate in writing. Maryland Licensed Tree Experts are required to enter into a written contract with each client. Be sure to read the contract carefully and make sure it includes information on when the work will be started and completed, who is responsible for clean-up, and the total price and an hourly rate if more work needs to be done.
- Be wary of individuals who solicit business door-to-door. While these individuals may appear to be offering lower costs for tree care services, be assured it’s no bargain. A person soliciting business door-to door will often give a cell phone number and no other means of contact (this makes it very difficult to find them should a problem arise). All Maryland Licensed Tree Experts must maintain up-to-date contact information with the State.
Are there Other Certifications for Tree Experts?
Yes. In addition to the Maryland license required by law, there are several organizations who certify arborists and others who require certain qualifications for membership. Many arborists have more than one qualification. Here are some well-known tree-care organizations:
Neighbor Tree Disputes
If your neighbor’s trees are hazardous to you, there may be something you can do. Learn more at Trees and the Law: Neighbor-related Disputes.
What's Bugging your Tree?
Spotted Lanternfly
Spotted lanternfly is an invasive insect species introduced to Montgomery County. While spotted lanternfly will not likely cause long-term damage to forests and urban trees in Montgomery County, they will impact a few agricultural crops, especially grapes. The sticky honeydew they drop during feeding activities can turn black with sooty mold and may be a nuisance on decks, patios, or vehicles. Residents will likely see spotted lanternfly because they are large with bright colors and tend to congregate in large numbers.
More information is available through the University of Maryland Extension and the Maryland Department of Agriculture. Their websites maintain up-to-date information on spotted lanternfly’s spread throughout Maryland and its impact on homeowners, agriculture, and the wider ecosystem of the area.
What can you do? Residents are encouraged to report sightings of spotted lanternfly to the Maryland Department of Agriculture, physically kill adults and nymphs or egg masses, and remove their preferred host tree, Tree-of-Heaven ( Ailanthus altissima) . Also, it’s important to never move firewood, buy it where you burn it even when vacationing.
Emerald Ash Borer
The emerald ash borer (EAB) is an exotic insect pest from Asia that infests and kills ash trees, typically within 3 years of infestation. EAB is widespread in the Lake States and the Mid-Atlantic. Montgomery County is now in the late stages of EAB infestation. There are treatment options available to protect ash trees from EAB, but early detection and treatment is critical. Infestation is very hard to detect during the first few years, but in its later stages the canopy will thin and die back. Increased woodpecker activity and small D-shaped exit holes in the bark of the tree is indicative of EAB infestation. In Montgomery County, most untreated ash trees are infested with EAB and should be treated before they decline or removed before they become hazardous to nearby homes, playgrounds, parking areas, etc. Ash trees were an important street tree and were a significant portion of the trees found in the local parks, especially along local rivers and streams.
University of Maryland Extension and the Maryland Department of Agriculture have more information on EAB, infestation, and best management practices on their websites. For more information on EAB and Montgomery County street trees, check out the MCDOT Tree Maintenance Section’s website.
What can you do? Maryland published a ‘Homeowner’s Guide to Emerald Ash Borer’. Also, it’s important to never move firewood, buy it where you burn it even when vacationing.
Learn more about Emerald Ash Borer and how to protect your ash trees on our blog.
Spongy Moths (formerly Gypsy Moths)
The spongy moth is a very destructive invasive species to forests and urban trees in Maryland and much of the eastern United States. Spongy moth caterpillars eat the leaves of trees, especially oaks. When populations of caterpillars are high, they eat most of the leaves off trees, weakening trees and making them more vulnerable to other pests and diseases, as well as drought, heat and urban pollution. In many cases, damage by spongy moths kills mature trees.
Montgomery County participates in a program with both the Maryland Department of Agriculture and the US Forest Service. Check out the Maryland Department of Agriculture Spongy Moth Program for more information. They have several helpful brochures for homeowners.
Four things you can do:
- Destroy egg masses. In the fall look for spongy moth egg masses in the crevices of tree trunks, fencing, under patio furniture and in woodpiles. Remove the egg masses by scraping them into a zip-top plastic bag containing some water and detergent to kill the eggs. Then put the bag in the trash. Be careful when removing egg masses because the hairs on the mass can cause topical allergic reactions.
- Stop the spread. It’s required by federal law to check before traveling or moving from Maryland to non-quarantine areas.
- Never move firewood, buy it where you burn it even when vacationing.
- Report a defoliation. Call Maryland’s spongy moth program at 410-841-5922.
Eastern Tent Caterpillars and Fall Webworms
Eastern tent caterpillars and fall webworms are two species of moths native to the mid-Atlantic. Both species are active each spring. Fall webworms are also active in late summer and fall. Both species build silken weblike tents in the branches of trees. The caterpillars spend nights in the protection of the tents and come out to feed on leaves during the day.
Typically, these caterpillars do not cause significant long-term damage to trees. However, their tents are often large and unsightly, especially when they hang in tree branches through the winter.
More information on tent caterpillars and fall webworms can be found on the University of Maryland Extension Service website.
Read Maryland Department of the Agriculture's overview of eastern tent caterpillars including more information about how to control them.
Two things you can do:
- Tear apart or poke holes in the tents with a stick or a pole allows birds to feed on the caterpillars.
- Prune branches with tents with hand or pole pruners. Put the cut branches and tents in plastic bags and dispose of them in the trash. Do not try to burn the tents with fire because it is dangerous and causes more damage to the tree than the caterpillars.
Don’t worry about spreading or moving these two species.They’re native to most of the eastern United States.
Which is it? Spongy Moths, Eastern Tent Caterpillars, or Fall Webworms?
These caterpillars are often confused. This fact sheet explains the differences between spongy moths and eastern tent caterpillars. Eastern tent caterpillars are native and are not a serious threat like spongy moth caterpillars. The eastern tent caterpillar builds a web-like tent in the spring while spongy moth caterpillars do not build any type of tent.
Are you seeing web-like tents in the fall? Most likely, these are Maryland’s native fall webworm. Like eastern tent caterpillars, their tents are ugly but this insect is generally harmless to people or trees.
Credit: James B. Hanson, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org. Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 License.
Brown Marmorated Stink Bug and Boxelder Bug
Brown marmorated stink bug (BMSB) and boxelder bugs are two “true insect” species, in the Hemiptera family, that are often found congregating on trees or on houses.
Brown marmorated stink bugs (BMSB) is an invasive stink bug native to East Asia. It feeds on a wide range of agricultural crops on landscaping plants. BMSB was introduced to the mid-Atlantic in the mid-1990s and rose to prominence when it caused severe damage to orchard crops and vineyards in 2009-2010. Residents typically encounter BMSB during fall and winter when the insects seek refuge in heated buildings for the cooler months. BMSB does not cause significant damage to landscaping trees. Home gardeners of vegetables, fruit, and flowers can find more details on controlling BMSB on the University of Maryland Extension website.
Boxelder bug is a native insect to the mid-Atlantic, often observed congregating on trees and in and around homes. They typically feed on boxelder trees, a common native species to Montgomery County, and the closely related silver and red maple species (two of our most common trees). Boxelder bugs do not cause significant damage to shade trees, but they frequently congregate on the sunny side of buildings and often enter homes to hibernate during cold weather. For more information on boxelder bug, please see the University of Maryland Extension website for more information.
What can I do?
- Don’t let the bugs in! Caulking and weatherstripping windows, doors, and other cracks is the most effective method of keeping these bugs from entering your home.
- Eliminate hiding places around your home, like piles of wood or rocks.
- Vacuum or sweep up bugs, both inside and outside of your house. Discard them.