Busy beavers raising concern in Staten Island community

Stacey Sager Image
Friday, December 15, 2017
Busy beavers raising concern in Staten Island community
Stacey Sager reports from Staten Island.

RICHMONDTOWN, Staten Island (WABC) -- In some spots, it looks like vandalism. In others, more like a wood carving exhibit. But there's no doubt, the culprits here in Staten Island are beavers.



Residents say the population is dramatically increasing along this stretch of the Bluebelt, a city owned creek in Richmondtown designed to manage water runoff. There are some big concerns.



"The trees! The trees!" said long-time resident Joe Palladino, who has watched hundreds of trees along the creek near his block, Saint Andrews Road, chewed down by the beavers.



"Once they're finished with these trees, what's next? The trees in front of your house?" he said.



Carlo Salimeni, who lives up the block, is already watching the tree in his front yard slowly dying. "One morning, I woke up and this is what I found," he told Eyewitness News.



If the tree falls, he is concerned about the power lines nearby. Salimeni also says he hears the beavers all night, chewing.



"Rattling, like chopping wood, chopping wood," he said.



The other big concern is flooding. Back in October, some of the beaver dams and debris caused the creek to flood heavily.



"This was a lake", Palladino said.



Fixing the problem isn't so easy. The beaver is New York State's official mammal. And residents who remove the dams could receive a summons. Also, conservationists who value wildlife on Staten Island say the beavers deserve a living space too.



The City's Department of Environmental Protection, along with the state's Department of Environmental Conservation, have been actively clearing out the debris to prevent more flooding. And the colder temperatures mean the beavers will be less active.



Still, residents say so far, they've lost about 600 trees. And without a long term answer, they fear they'll lose more. They also remain baffled as to how the beavers arrived here in the first place.



"Well I invited them to go live in Central Park", Palladino chuckled. "But they don't want to do that."

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