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🌳 Tree Protection/Heritage & Protected Trees

Heritage & Protected Trees: Kentwood vs Wyoming

How do heritage & protected trees rules compare between Kentwood, MI and Wyoming, MI?

Kentwood, MI

Kent County

No data available yet for Kentwood.

Wyoming, MI

Kent County

Some Restrictions

The City of Wyoming, Michigan does not maintain a dedicated public heritage-tree registry in its Code. Specimen and notable trees are protected indirectly through Chapter 82 (Trees and Weeds), Article II of the Wyoming Code of Ordinances and through tree-preservation conditions imposed during subdivision and site-plan review under Chapter 90 (Zoning). Wyoming's public-park trees and right-of-way trees are managed by the Wyoming Public Works Department. Voluntary preservation tools include Kent Conservation District programs and conservation easements through regional land trusts such as Land Conservancy of West Michigan.

View full Wyoming rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactKentwoodWyoming
Heritage Registry-No separate City registry
Default Protection-Planning-Commission-designated plan trees
Designation Path-Site-plan or subdivision approval (Ch. 90)
Notable Resources-Lemery, Battjes, Pinery, Marquette Parks
Voluntary Tool-Land Conservancy of West Michigan easement

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Kentwood FAQ

No FAQs available.

Wyoming FAQ

Does Wyoming, MI have a heritage-tree registry?

The City of Wyoming does not maintain a standalone heritage-tree registry in its Code. Specimen and notable trees are most commonly protected through Planning Commission conditions on approved subdivision plats and site plans under Chapter 90 (Zoning) - once designated on an approved plan, removal requires Planning Commission consent under Chapter 82, Article II.

Are trees in Wyoming city parks protected?

Yes. Trees on Wyoming-owned property, including Lemery Park, Battjes Park, Pinery Park, Marquette Park, and the Buck Creek corridor, are managed by the Wyoming Public Works Department and may not be removed by the public. Damage to a City tree may trigger restitution for the appraised value of the tree under ISA tree-appraisal methodology plus code-violation penalties.

How can I protect a notable tree on my Wyoming property?

Voluntary options include a conservation easement through Land Conservancy of West Michigan (https://naturenearby.org/) or another regional land trust, which creates an enforceable restriction surviving sale of the property. The Kent Conservation District (https://www.kentconservation.org/) offers habitat and tree-preservation guidance, and the Michigan DNR Urban and Community Forestry program provides additional resources.

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