Level 6 -
Managing peri-urban and urban trees.
Reference: OCC0922
Status:
SOC 2020 sub unit groups:
Barcham The Tree Specialists Barrell Tree Consultancy Bartlett Tree Experts Beachwood Trees and Landscape Ltd Cleveland Tree Surgeons Cormac Ltd Dorset Council EOS Contracting GA Butler & Sons Ltd Glendale Services Ground Control Hi Line Kevin Patton Tree Surgeon Ltd London Borough Barnet London Borough Lambeth Martin Lennon Arboricultural and Forestry Consultancy Oxfordshire County Council Pryor & Rickett Ringrose Tree Services Rob Keyzor Tree Surgeons & Arboricultural Consultants Root and Branch Consultants Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Sedgemoor Tree Services Seed Arboriculture Ltd Skills & Education Group Street Tree Limited The Environment Partnership SSE Total Trees Tree Life Tree Maintenance Ltd Treework Environmental Practice Treetech Arboricultural Services Trueman Tree Services Ltd
This occupation is found in local authorities, highway authorities, private arboricultural consultancies, private commercial arboricultural companies, parks, arboretums, charities, housing associations.
The broad purpose of the occupation is managing peri-urban and urban trees including writing and implementing proactive strategic plans to enhance the environment to benefit people, air quality, biodiversity, amenity and the built environment, while mitigating risk to people, buildings and property from trees by coordinating proactive inspections and undertaking tree work operations within an appropriate time-scale.
An overarching focus of the role is being able to advise tree owners of how to ensure they are adhering to their Duty of Care while complying with relevant legislation, regulations and statute and common law. These include, but are not limited to, the Highways Act, Town and Country Planning Act, Countryside Act, Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, Occupier’s Liability Act and Local and National Policy. Developing tree policies and strategies that can be adopted to provide management guidance and plans for individual tree management and can be relevant to a large geographic area which incorporate management of a large number of trees (e.g. highways, parks, estates, housing sites, etc.). Strategies would include emergency planning for extreme weather events and outbreaks of threats to the immediate and wider tree population - such as the identification of a pest, pathogen or disease.
Another key function of a Professional Arboriculturist is designing and specifying tree planting plans and advising planning policy related to trees on development sites. In their daily work, an employee in this occupation interacts with colleagues, the general public, stakeholders, clients, landowners, lawyers, insurers, contractors, politicians and civil servants. Other professionals that a Professional Arboriculturist will have regular contact with are highways engineers; town planners; utility providers and contractors; landscape architects; ecologists; architects; and street lighting engineers to name but a few.
An employee in this occupation will be responsible for:
Barcham The Tree Specialists Barrell Tree Consultancy Bartlett Tree Experts Beachwood Trees and Landscape Ltd Cleveland Tree Surgeons Cormac Ltd Dorset Council EOS Contracting GA Butler & Sons Ltd Glendale Services Ground Control Hi Line Kevin Patton Tree Surgeon Ltd London Borough Barnet London Borough Lambeth Martin Lennon Arboricultural and Forestry Consultancy Oxfordshire County Council Pryor & Rickett Ringrose Tree Services Rob Keyzor Tree Surgeons & Arboricultural Consultants Root and Branch Consultants Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Sedgemoor Tree Services Seed Arboriculture Ltd Skills & Education Group Street Tree Limited The Environment Partnership SSE Total Trees Tree Life Tree Maintenance Ltd Treework Environmental Practice Treetech Arboricultural Services Trueman Tree Services Ltd
Provide advice and consultancy about trees including tree management, health, the law, risk and the role of trees in development to the public, clients, other professions and colleagues. Advise on amenity, peri-urban and urban tree planting and management; trees with special value (e.g. ancient, historic context, rare, visually important) and the impact of developments and new infrastructure in relation to trees.
Able to act as an expert witness on amenity, peri-urban and urban tree related matters.
Advocate for incorporating professional tree expertise in green infrastructure design and peri-urban and urban planning. Contribute to green infrastructure innovations and actively promote the benefits of trees within planning policy including air quality.
Research, collect and interpret data on trees by recording and capturing data related to site factors, plant health, amenity value, natural capital, ecosystem services, suitability, risk, community perspectives, threats and historical value.
Contribute to the development and implementation of tree management plans and strategies, where applicable, incorporating reference to legislation, regulation, policy and best practice (e.g. national planning policy, local and regional planning policy) including resilience and emergency planning for extreme weather events.
Lead on delivering proactive tree management that includes managing quality of tree works (in accordance with 'British Standard 3998 (BS3998): Tree work Recommendations'), community/stakeholder engagement, environmental impact and health and safety. Reference to Duty of Care, Highways Act and New Roads and Street Works Act.
Manage amenity tree survey and inspection regimes taking into account duty of care and foreseeable risk to people, buildings and property to determine appropriate mitigation options.
Survey and inspect trees in complex and unusual circumstances for example ancient or veteran trees, those that are rare, those that are of historical or cultural importance or those involved in subsidence.
Inform the development process by adhering to the Town and Country Planning Act while undertaking surveys and producing detailed 'British Standard 5837 (BS5837): Trees in relation to design, demolition and construction' reports, produce high quality plans and associated guidance for professional planners, architects and engineers in relation to trees, e.g. Tree Surveys, Arboricultural Impact Assessments (AIA), Arboricultural Method Statements (AMS), Tree Preservation Order and Conservation Area advice / guidance.
Utilise tree data via defined software (Tree Management Databases, Computer Aided Design (CAD), Building Information Modelling (BIM)) and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to inform strategic amenity tree management and policy to aid with influencing decision makers.
Evaluate and act in accordance with current legislation (statutory and common law), best practice, relevant case law and regulations related to trees.
Design and specify amenity, peri-urban and urban tree planting plans by incorporating ‘right tree, right place’ methodologies; identification of suitable sites; appropriate tree species selection; materials; planting and after care; biosecurity; provenance of tree stock; implementing knowledge of current National House Building Council (NHBC) guidance for trees in relation to buildings; and adhering to 'British Standard 8545 (BS8545): Trees: from nursery to independence in the landscape.'
Manage tree work operations such as felling, aerial pruning and planting; to include planning, resourcing, procurement (contract creation and tendering for contracts in line with UK and EU regulations and legislation) and management of contractors, health and safety, environmental considerations, access and quality enforcement with reference to BS3998, relevant legislation and regulations, Risk Assessment procedures and arboricultural best practice guidance.
Identify and manage tree pests, pathogens and diseases including prevention, management of spread and regulatory reporting. Identify and evaluate future threats to UK trees. Manage the impact of tree pests, pathogens and diseases on amenity trees, human health, ecosystems and the wider environment.
Manage the promotion of the organisation and its products and services. Manage relationships with members of the public, other professionals, other professions and key stakeholders.
Manage directly employed or contract workforce and volunteers, including work culture, workforce planning, motivation, quality, health and safety, skills, recruitment, retention, training and development.
Financial management to include budgeting, financial reporting and, where applicable, sourcing funding (for example Urban Tree Challenge Fund). Generate income including developing business cases, identifying market / audience, quality, customer service, managing targets and developing opportunities.
Manage systems and processes, including specialist tree management databases, to drive improvements and utilise relevant information to manage and influence organisational change, enhancing business performance and service delivery.
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