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For Immediate Release June 9, 2024

Hashtag: #tumwateroak


Citizens Gather to Continue to Support the Historic Garry Oak in City of Tumwater


OLYMPIA— On Saturday, June 8, 2024 from 4pm to 7pm, more than 50 concerned citizens gathered at the Davis Meeker Garry Oak on Highway 99 in Tumwater, WA.


The event was a celebration of this week’s success, an opportunity to spread the word, and a chance to discuss steps toward permanent protection. People of all ages came out to admire the tree and share stories about its meaning to the community.


The Davis-Meeker Oak was granted a reprieve from a planned removal ordered by the Tumwater Mayor after an overwhelming number of citizens appealed to the city council on Tuesday evening. The action is on hold while a new assessment of the health of the tree is conducted. “We are here and the tree still stands,” said Wendy Eisler, a concerned Tumwater resident who came to show her support.


The gathering was quiet but positive, as people reviewed the emotional week. “It’s been really hard, but I think we are in a good place,” said Shani Duncan, a member of Save the Davis-Meeker Gary Oak (SDMGO) citizens group.


Several families with children attended the event. It was a beautiful day to admire the oak and wonder at how many generations of children have lingered under her branches.

Teri Graves, a member of the Cowlitz Indian Tribe, shared stories of the meaning of the Davis-Meeker Oak to her people. And with her encouragement, red prayer flags were tied to the fence surrounding the tree. “The trees are our first teachers,” said Graves. “The Ancestors can see red.”


On Thursday day a pair of kestrels was confirmed to be nesting in the tree by Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. These small raptors are protected by the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act, so no action can be taken that could disturb the tree until the fledglings leave the nest.


Spread the word! Join SDMGO and help save The Davis-Meeker Oak. Visit www.davis-meekeroak.org for more information, donate at gofund.me/ab467b73, and follow Save The Old Oak Tree, The Davis Meeker Garry Oak Tree in Tumwater WA on Facebook to find out about the next gathering and volunteer. Everyone is welcome in this community.


Penny and Nani Stewart from Rainier, WA   Wendy Eisler, photographer
Penny and Nani Stewart from Rainier, WA Wendy Eisler, photographer

Savanna and Phoenix Stewart from Tenino  Penny Stewart from Rainier (no relation)  Wendy Eisler, photographer
Savanna and Phoenix Stewart from Tenino Penny Stewart from Rainier (no relation) Wendy Eisler, photographer

(from right to left)  Art and Barbara Wuerth from Tumwater  Stewart Hartman from Lacey  Chad Kramer from Tumwater  Michelle Peterson’s two dogs  Nani Stewart from Rainier  Tom Oliva from Tumwater  Marles Blackbird from Olympia  Chris Kautsky, photographer
(from right to left) Art and Barbara Wuerth from Tumwater Stewart Hartman from Lacey Chad Kramer from Tumwater Michelle Peterson’s two dogs Nani Stewart from Rainier Tom Oliva from Tumwater Marles Blackbird from Olympia Chris Kautsky, photographer



Cowlitz Tribe members Teri Graves of Carbonado and Sahra Forespring of Tacoma stand in front of the Davis Meeker oak wearing t-shirts that state "Not Today Colonizer." and "Respect Existence or Expect Resistance. "
Not Today Colonizer. Respect Existence or Expect Resistance. Cowlitz Tribe members Teri Graves of Carbonado and Sahra Forespring of Tacoma stand in front of the Davis Meeker oak. June 8, 2024. Photo by Ronda Larson Kramer


Marles Blackbird of Olympia ties a red ribbon at the oak tree. The Davis Meeker oak is a headstone for the Native Americans buried there. According to some tribes, red is the only color the ancestors can see. June 8, 2024. Photo by Ronda Larson Kramer
Marles Blackbird of Olympia ties a red ribbon at the oak tree. The Davis Meeker oak is a headstone for the Native Americans buried there. According to some tribes, red is the only color the ancestors can see. June 8, 2024. Photo by Ronda Larson Kramer


Protect Living History. Marles Blackbird of Olympia holds a sign while Chad Kramer of Olympia (with dog Gus) and Stewart Hartman of Tumwater watch on, next to the Davis Meeker oak and the historic hangar. June 8, 2024. Photo by Ronda Larson Kramer
Protect Living History. Marles Blackbird of Olympia holds a sign while Chad Kramer of Olympia (with dog Gus) and Stewart Hartman of Tumwater watch on, next to the Davis Meeker oak and the historic hangar. June 8, 2024. Photo by Ronda Larson Kramer


Rob Stewart and Phoenix Stewart of Tenino in front of the Davis Meeker oak  June 8, 2024. Photo by Ronda Larson Kramer
Rob Stewart and Phoenix Stewart of Tenino in front of the Davis Meeker oak June 8, 2024. Photo by Ronda Larson Kramer




 

For Immediate Release June 3, 2024


Court and background documents at https://www.davis-meeker-oak.org/ Media Resources




Hashtag: #tumwateroak


Court of Appeals Declines to Hear Davis Meeker Gary Oak Plea


Olympia—An appeals court Monday declined to take up the issue of the imminent death of the historic Davis Meeker Garry Oak next to the Olympia airport.


The healthy 400-year-old oak lies on a trail used for millennia by Indigenous people and later also by settlers. It supports a variety of wildlife including the federally protected migratory kestrels currently nesting in it.


The citizens’ group Save the Davis Meeker Garry Oak on Friday sought emergency review by the Washington State Appeals Court (Div. II) after a lower-court judge dissolved a protective order the group obtained on May 24.


Thurston County Superior Court Judge Anne Egeler issued a ruling, also on Friday stating that the court was giving the citizens’ group "reasonable time" to do an "emergency motion on appeal". But there is no such thing as an “emergency motion” to start an appeal in

Washington state courts.


This procedure does not exist. It is unclear whether Judge Egeler was aware that such a procedure does not exist.


She was appointed to the bench in January 2023 after having practiced appellate law for many years at the Washington Attorney General’s Office. Because the procedure does not exist, the Court of Appeals issued a ruling on Monday summarily rejecting the citizens’ group’s request for emergency review.


With the ruling, the city can begin to cut the tree down on or after Wednesday, June 5 at 5:01 p.m. Tumwater Mayor Debbie Sullivan has vowed to do so.


“To actually have a reasonable time for an appeal, Judge Egeler would have had to give us months to do the appeal, not days,” said Ronda Larson Kramer, attorney for the group. “She gave us false hope.”


The group will be out in force Tuesday evening at the Tumwater City Council, asking the council to take action to override Mayor Sullivan’s determination to kill the tree and the ecosystem it supports.


The meeting will be held at the Tumwater City Hall on Tuesday, June 4 at 7:00 p.m. 555 Israel Rd. SW, Tumwater, Wash. 98501


Go to http://www.zoom.us/join and enter the Webinar ID 867 2542 1395 and Passcode 325962.

“I don’t want to erase history,” said Michelle Peterson, a lifelong Olympia-Tumwater resident. “This tree is viable and the city has not been listening to its residents. It will be up to the council to act.”


The case against Mayor Sullivan rests on four points:


  1. Mayor Sullivan gave the tribes only two weeks’ notice of her plan to cut the tree, though she received the flawed report she relied on seven months earlier in October of 2023. This violates requirements to offer early and appropriate consultation with tribes.

  2. Because the oak is listed in the historic register, (Tumwater Municipal Code 2.62.060) a permit is required for removal. Mayor Sullivan claims that the code allows an exception to the permit requirement if an emergency exists. The code clearly states that the emergency exception only allows repairs, not destruction (TMC 2.62.030(K)). Cutting a tree down is not a repair.

  3. There is a mating pair of kestrels in a cavity in the tree. The Federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act prohibits interference until the chicks have fledged.

  4. The city relied on an arborist’s report that was flawed, both as to the risk the tree posed and to the recommendation to cut it down. A subcontracted expert arborist who did an analysis of the oak’s trunk concluded that pruning, rather than removal, was the recommended action.


Attorney Larson Kramer said the group is considering its legal options.


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For Immediate Release June 2, 2024


Fight to Save Historic Oak Tree Moves to State Appeals Court


A citizen’s group on Friday sought emergency review by the Washington State Appeals Court (Div. II) after a lower-court judge dissolved a protective order for a healthy 400-year-old oak tree on old Hwy 99 next to the Olympia airport.


At issue is the fate of the named Davis Meeker Garry Oak and the wildlife it supports, including a nesting pair of migratory kestrels.


With the dismissal of the temporary restraining order, the city can begin to cut the tree down on or after Wednesday, June 5 at 5 p.m. The emergency appeal to the state appeals court aims to reinstate protection.


“I don’t want to erase history,” said Michelle Peterson, a lifelong Olympia-Tumwater resident. “This tree is viable and I don’t understand why the city is in such a hurry to get rid of it.”


“I was astonished by Judge Egeler’s ruling. I do not think she fairly considered all arguments and I have faith that the court of appeals will do so,” added Peterson, a member of Save the Davis Meeker Garry Oak organization.


A string of court orders began on May 24 after Tumwater Mayor Debbie Sullivan overrode the city’s Historic Preservation Commission’s refusal to remove the tree from its historic register. Removal was necessary to cut the tree because of its historic designation. Sullivan instead made an administrative decision to destroy the Garry oak, a state-protected species. The city council chose not to override the mayor.


A temporary order restraining the mayor’s action was issued on May 24 by Judge Sharonda Amamilo of Thurston County Superior Court to SDMGO.


A court order dissolving the TRO was issued May 31 by Judge Anne Egeler of Thurston County Superior Court.


The same day, the emergency appeal to the appellate court was filed by SDMGO attorney Ronda Larson Kramer.


Indigenous people for millennia used the old Cowlitz Trail along which the tree is located. Later settlers traveled the route as a branch of the Oregon Trail; the tree became a landmark for them. Eventually, it was named for pioneer settler Ezra Meeker, and later still, after environmentalist Jack Davis, who spearheaded a movement to preserve the tree from highway encroachment in 1984.


The tree was also known at one time as the hanging tree, according to a court declaration submitted by an elder of the Cowlitz Indian Tribe, as it had been used by white vigilante groups to hang Native Americans.


“Judge Egeler’s decision is procedurally and substantively flawed,” said Larson Kramer. “She failed to acknowledge the rights of the tribes to be sufficiently notified of such a drastic action. She ignored a letter placed in the record from the state archaeologist stating that a permit from them would be required to cut the tree. She relied on an out-of-date report on the tree’s health and she dismissed the requirements of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, relying on a version of that Act that expired three years ago when President Biden eliminated a Trump-era change.”


“The Davis Meeker Garry Oak, with its history, its immense ecological value, and the wildlife living in it deserves a full and fair hearing under the law,” said Larson Kramer.


The case against Mayor Sullivan rests on four points:


  1. Mayor Sullivan gave the tribes only two weeks’ notice of her plan to cut the tree, though she received the flawed report she relied on seven months earlier in October of 2023. This violates requirements to offer early and appropriate consultation with tribes.

  2. Because the oak is listed in the historic register, (Tumwater Municipal Code 2.62.060) a permit is required for removal. Mayor Sullivan claims that the code allows an exception to the permit requirement if an emergency exists. The code clearly states that the emergency exception only allows repairs, not destruction (TMC 2.62.030(K)). Cutting a tree down is not a repair.

  3. There is a mating pair of kestrels in a cavity in the tree. The Federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act prohibits interference until the chicks have fledged.

  4. The city relied on an arborist’s report that was flawed, both as to the risk the tree posed and to the recommendation to cut it down. A subcontracted expert arborist who did an analysis of the oak’s trunk concluded that pruning, rather than removal, was the recommended action.


Attorney Larson Kramer said she expects the appellate court to rule before the timeline on the tree’s protection expires at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, June 5.


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