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Capitol Watch: April 20, 2021
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LAKESIDE
The county confirmed Monday that two dozen jacaranda trees will be removed by Friday in Lakeside, dashing hopes of the community that they could be saved.
San Diego County spokeswoman Donna Durckel said that the trees that line a vacant lot on Woodside Avenue are still scheduled for removal by a private contractor this week to make way for a new San Diego County library.
Grading started Monday for the 16,400-square-foot library, which will be three times larger than the nearly 60-year-old branch two blocks away. The new $19 million facility will have a community room for events, a bookstore and large spaces for children and teenagers.
LAKESIDE
The fragrant, violet flowers that annually bloom on nearly two dozen jacaranda trees on Woodside Avenue in Lakeside look to be on their way out.
And many residents of the rural East County community are feeling kind of blue about it.
The jacaranda trees were planted in 2012 on the vacant lot west of the Lakeside Sheriff’s station by a group of AmeriCorps volunteers under the watchful eye of unofficial Lakeside historian Betty “Scoop” McMillen and a group called “Mile of Trees Lakeside.”
Nearly 10 years ago, the Lakeside Garden Club donated $400 to purchase 24 trees and fertilizer. The Mile of Trees group bought small 5-gallon trees, only 3-feet tall, with hopes that the jacarandas “would grow really fast,” McMillen said.