Each morning as I leave my Suiter Street home for my walk, I
notice one eye-sore, the Mulberry trees on West, Haydon, A, B and
Powell streets haven’t been pruned in two years.
The city purchased a new line of equipment two years ago for the
purpose of maintaining all city trees. Mulberries grow at least 20
feet per year, so these are at least 40 feet out of control.
The city was to develop a specific yearly route for assuring
proper maintenance of all tress. What happened? Don’t know how to
schedule?
Is your idea of scheduling picking and choosing your special
neighborhoods with small ornamental trees? I think so. Large trees
require more maintenance so hop to it.

“Each morning as I leave my Suiter Street home for my walk, I notice one eye-sore, the Mulberry trees on West, Haydon, A, B and Powell streets haven’t been pruned in two years.

The city purchased a new line of equipment two years ago for the purpose of maintaining all city trees. Mulberries grow at least 20 feet per year, so these are at least 40 feet out of control.

The city was to develop a specific yearly route for assuring proper maintenance of all tress. What happened? Don’t know how to schedule?

Is your idea of scheduling picking and choosing your special neighborhoods with small ornamental trees? I think so. Large trees require more maintenance so hop to it.”

“This is an answer to Joe P. Thompson of Tres Pinos. If he is so worried about the cannery pulling out after what they’ve been saying for about 20 years and haven’t done anything except make more noise and cause more harm and make more people’s lives more miserable, let him move his house right next to the cannery and see how he likes it. It’s so friendly, they can find a more business friendly confines and go someplace else and it would be more reputable for Hollister to have a nice quiet community again, and not to have him around here.

Why doesn’t he move back into town? If he doesn’t like what people are saying about the cannery, the jobs, why doesn’t he come and apply for a job himself and see if he can get a job.

Eighty percent of the workers are from out of town and go on unemployment and come back into town every two weeks after they are done with the cannery season.

The stink and smell are getting worse and worse every year. Thank you Mr. Joe Thompson.”

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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