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Bon Dao is worried three trees in a vacant lot behind his property will fall onto his home. (Brandi Kruse Photo/KIRO Radio)

Nothing city can do about trees endangering Kent family

In the middle of the night, Bon Dao was awoken by a loud noise.

It was around 4 a.m. when he went downstairs to investigate and discovered that the wind had blown a massive tree onto his home. Moments later, another one crashed to the ground.

When the sun came up he surveyed the damage. The trees tore down his fence, ripped into his siding and put a dent in his roof.

While one of the trees fell from his neighbor's yard, another came from a vacant lot adjacent to his property. Overgrown with bushes and littered with trash, the lot is an eyesore in the Kent neighborhood, which is full of well-kept, beautiful homes.

Dao, a father of two young children, set out to find the owner of the parcel as three more trees on the property are dead and in danger of falling as well.

"I'm scared, I'm very scared," he said. "My family cannot sleep at night."

But Dao has been unable to locate the owner of the property and the city of Kent said there is nothing they can do to help him. Because the lot is privately owned, the city is unable to cut the trees down.

"They cannot do anything and I cannot do anything either," he said.

David Galazin, an assistant Kent city attorney, said the only legal option for Dao is to take the owner of the parcel to court or ask for the right to remove the trees due to the imminent danger to his family.

"The neighbor cannot go onto the property, the city cannot go onto the property," Galazin said. "The constitution really is designed to protect the property interests of landowners, homeowners, and to prevent government intrusion."

Galazin said Dao could face a lawsuit if he were to cut the trees down without permission from the owner.

According to county records, the vacant lot is owned by a company called Dreamworks Construction. However, phone numbers for the business are no longer in service and addresses in Renton, Newcastle and Magnolia once associated with the company are dead ends, including an address where the company is registered for property tax purposes. Certified mail sent to the last known address for the business was returned.

Dao is concerned the trees will fall before he can get a court order to have them removed.

Brandi Kruse, KIRO Radio Reporter
Brandi Kruse is a reporter for KIRO Radio who is as spontaneous and adventurous in her free time as she is on the job. Brandi arrived at KIRO Radio in March 2011 and has already collected three regional Edward R. Murrow awards for her reporting.
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Comments (14)


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  • fartforce1 wrote...
    Share the address
    I am sure more than a few contributors to this sight would accidently fell a few of them for you while you are busy at work.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • Snout wrote...
    Bon Dao
    Why is it the governments responsibility? Get a lawyer and deal with the property owner. You can file a suit and get a judgement if the owner fails to respond. Done. And the rest of us don't have to deal with YOUR issue.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • Ye Olde Hagge wrote...
    Really?
    So now all of a sudden the city of Seattle and King county are concerned about private property??? I haven't laughed that hard in a while.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }