logo
Chicago woman says rotting berries from neighbor's tree are feeding rat problems in Lincoln Square

Chicago woman says rotting berries from neighbor's tree are feeding rat problems in Lincoln Square

CBS News22-07-2025
A woman from Chicago's Lincoln Square neighborhood said a giant tree's sweet berries are causing a sour situation, feeding into the neighborhood's rat problem, and no one will listen to her concerns.
"That's why I chose to contact Channel 2 News," she said. "I need someone to listen to me."
Jane, who did not want to share her last name, never fancied herself a farmer. But for the last 28 summers, she has gotten quite the haul of rotten berries landing in her backyard.
CBS News Chicago met Jane as she was scooping rotten berries out of nets hanging between garages on her property and collecting them in plastic bags. The daily harvests add up.
"Since I've been gathering them and weighing them, since June 14, I'm over 215 pounds of berries, just this year" Jane said.
The nets don't catch all the berries; even more are piled up on the ground and nearby garages. They are not edible for humans.
"You can't use these for cooking. You can't use these for donating to anybody," Jane said.
Instead, the berries make a delicious meal for pigeons, bees, fruit flies and, most frustratingly, rats.
Jane has taken plenty of pictures of the rats the berries attract. One mother rat was spotted carrying her baby as she stopped for a snack earlier this month. Jane says the berries are creating an unsanitary, slippery and smelly situation.
"There is rat feces everywhere," Jane said.
The berries fall for about six weeks straight, and end up rolling around in the nets and on the ground.
Jane can't control the decaying fruit because it is not coming from her yard. It is coming from a gigantic mulberry tree on her neighbor's property. The tree in question is so big that some of its branches are held up with metal.
"If we get a sudden downburst, that chain's not going to hold anything," Jane said.
Jane shared her concerns with 47th Ward Ald. Matt Martin, but was told the city can't do much because the tree is on privately owned land.
"It is your right to take down the branches that encroach on your property line, but I know you mentioned the problem is with the entire tree," Martin's staff wrote. "Our office does not have the capability to compel your neighbors to take down the tree."
The "take matters into your own hands" advice when it comes to tree branches crossing property lines doesn't always work out. CBS News Chicago covered a similar overbearing tree story in 2021. In that case, Roula Savakis of Chicago's Peterson Park community was so frustrated with a wall of trees blocking her windows that she hacked them back. In response, her neighbors took her to court, alleging at least $100,000 of damage.
Asher and Cynthia Kohn accused Savakis of violating the Illinois Wrongful Tree Cutting Act. They claimed she damaged 38 of their trees intentionally and illegally. Four years later, CBS News Chicago has learned that the Savakis family ended up selling their home to the tree-owning neighbors and relocating.
In Lincoln Square, as Jane's dog Brutus went hunting for mulberry-loving rats, CBS News Chicago went looking for the tree owners.
Jane and two plant experts suspect the tree is a white mulberry.
"Interestingly, white mulberry was introduced to the U.S. back in colonial times because it is the preferred food of the silkworm caterpillar, which is where we get natural silk from," said Jamie Viebach, horticulture educator at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Viebach said while white mulberry is not officially listed as an invasive species in Illinois, it is non-native and very weedy.
"It can basically be considered invasive (though, without the legal ramifications of the official designation)," Viebach wrote.
And the tree is treated as invasive by some land managers.
"It is not regulated or banned in any statewide way in Illinois, though it is often managed and removed by land managers when it is found growing in natural areas," said Chris Evans, an extension forestry and research specialist at the Department of Natural Resources & Environmental Sciences at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Viebach also noted that the Morton Arboretum lists white mulberry as a "problem plant." Jane agrees with the description.
"This is a health issue right now," she said. "This is a safety issue."
CBS News Chicago knocked on the neighbors' door, but never got an answer.
The city can issue citations to homeowners whose vegetation creates a "public nuisance." CBS News Chicago was told that while Savakis' situation with her neighbors' trees in 2021 met the Chicago Department of Streets and Sanitation criteria for a public nuisance, Jane's berry situation does not meet those criteria and does not warrant any fines.
The city said the following constitutes a nuisance per ordinance 10-32-140 (Trees, shrubs or other plant materials – Public nuisance):
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

On This Day, Aug. 3: Astronauts carry out first emergency repair spacewalk
On This Day, Aug. 3: Astronauts carry out first emergency repair spacewalk

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

On This Day, Aug. 3: Astronauts carry out first emergency repair spacewalk

Aug. 3 (UPI) -- On this date in history: In 1492, Christopher Columbus set sail from Spain, seeking a western route to India, with a convoy of three small ships -- the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria -- and fewer than 100 crew. They reached land at Guanahani, an island in the Caribbean, on Oct. 12. In 1914, Germany declared war on France and invaded Belgium. The following day, Britain declared war on Germany and World War I was underway. In 1923, by the dim light of a flickering oil lamp in a little farmhouse at Plymouth, Vt., his birthplace, Calvin Coolidge took the oath of office as president of the United States following the unexpected death President Warren G. Harding. In 1943, Gen. George Patton slapped Private Charles Kuhl, who was in a military hospital in Sicily. Kuhl was the first of two privates hospitalized for shock that Patton slapped and berated that month, accusing them of cowardice. The general was later forced to apologize. In 1958, the U.S. nuclear submarine Nautilus crossed under the North Pole. In 1975, a chartered Boeing 707 jetliner carrying Moroccan immigrant workers home from France to their families for the summer holidays crashed into a mountainside in Agadir, Morocco, killing all 188 persons aboard. In 1981, U.S. air traffic controllers went on strike. The strikers were fired within one week. In 2004, the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor was opened to the public for the first time since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States. In 2005, in the first emergency repair conducted in space, astronauts fixed a potentially dangerous problem by removing two strips of protruding cloth from the underside of the space shuttle Discovery. In 2007, the U.S. Congress passed a bill allowing the National Security Agency to monitor email and telephone communications between the United States and foreign countries without a court warrant if terrorism was believed to be involved. In 2008, People magazine published the first photos of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie's newborn twins, Vivienne and Knox, after paying up to $14 million, the most ever paid for baby pictures. In 2014, an earthquake in southern China's Yunnan province killed nearly 400 people, injured 1,800 and destroyed thousands of homes. In 2019, a gunman targeting immigrants opened fire at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, killing 23 people and injuring another 22. In 2024, American swimmers Nic Fink, Torri Huske, Ryan Murphy and Gretchen Walsh set a new world record time of 3:37:43 in the mixed 4x100-meter medley relay at the Paris Summer Olympics. Team USA won gold, China won silver and Australia took home bronze in the race. Solve the daily Crossword

A Cultural Sign of The Times
A Cultural Sign of The Times

New York Times

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Times

A Cultural Sign of The Times

In the In Times Past column, David W. Dunlap explores New York Times history through artifacts housed in the Museum at The Times. As New York's premier chronicler of fashion, the photographer Bill Cunningham (1929-2016) roamed the city. But home base was the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 57th Street, where some of his most interesting subjects were bound to appear. 'He became as much a part of the scenery as Tiffany & Company,' Jacob Bernstein wrote in Mr. Cunningham's obituary in The New York Times, where Mr. Cunningham's work most frequently appeared. (Tiffany's flagship store is on the southeast corner of that intersection.) 'His camera clicked constantly as he spotted fashions and moved with gazelle-like speed to record his subjects at just the right angle.' It was perfectly fitting that Mayor Bill de Blasio renamed the intersection Bill Cunningham Corner for one week in 2016, soon after Mr. Cunningham's death. When the temporary Bill Cunningham Corner street sign was taken down, Mr. de Blasio's wife, Chirlane McCray, gave it to John Kurdewan, a staff artist at The Times. For 16 years, Mr. Kurdewan collaborated closely with Mr. Cunningham, laying out the densely illustrated On the Street and Evening Hours columns. Mr. Kurdewan lent the street sign in 2018 to the New-York Historical Society (now New York Historical) for its exhibition 'Celebrating Bill Cunningham.' Later, he displayed it at his desk in The Times's headquarters in Midtown Manhattan. Four years ago, Mr. Kurdewan lent the sign indefinitely to the Museum at The Times. New York Historical announced last month that it had acquired Mr. Cunningham's archive: photographs, negatives, slides, contact sheets, prints, correspondence and ephemera. But you'll still find Bill Cunningham Corner at The Times.

‘I Asked Her Name So I Could Thank Her for the Lovely Conversation'
‘I Asked Her Name So I Could Thank Her for the Lovely Conversation'

New York Times

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Times

‘I Asked Her Name So I Could Thank Her for the Lovely Conversation'

12 Minutes Dear Diary: I was waiting for an uptown bus to meet my mother at the Met. It was one of the first hot June days, and I was sitting on the bench in the shade when an older woman walked up to the stop. 'Twelve minutes?' she said, looking at the countdown clock and then at me. 'I hope the new mayor fixes the buses.' 'I hope so too,' I said. 'Sometimes that sign isn't always right though. I always check on my phone.' I showed her how I check the M.T.A. website on my phone to see how far away the bus is. I like to know so I can decide whether it's worth waiting. We waited together for what probably was 12 minutes. I learned that her daughter was expecting a child and lived in Brooklyn. She said she had gone to the store that day to get some items for the baby. I congratulated her — her first grandchild! And a girl no less. We chatted about art in New York City until the bus arrived, and we sat next to each other on the bus so we could continue talking. Submit Your Metropolitan Diary Your story must be connected to New York City and no longer than 300 words. An editor will contact you if your submission is being considered for publication. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store