Proposed construction of a
police training facility in the
South River Forest—an in southeast Atlanta and Dekalb county—has led to ongoing protests. Conservationists and activists oppose the project and built encampments in and around the
old Atlanta prison farm during 2021 and 2022. This has led to multiple confrontations with police. The low-density
residential subdivision development that dominates the Atlanta area has historically not been required to replace lost tree inventory. Because of larger
lot sizes and natural-looking architecture, such as
California contemporary, older neighborhoods typically have many mature forest trees, except in cases where they have been destroyed by homeowners. Increasing density allowed by
zoning since the 1980s has meant fewer and fewer trees left, and by the 2000s it became common for developers to completely
clearcut dozens of acres of forest and bulldoze all hills flat to build generic
tract housing, often with tightly packed homes nearly touching each other and up against the street. However, over the past decade some area cities and counties have revised their tree ordinances to require tree recompense to be equal to or greater than the pre-development tree density, trying to ensure a future
tree canopy. Rather than leaving trees on each home lot as before, this typically involves a set-aside of
green space in each development, with most other areas still clear-cut. Even when some trees are replaced, it is with a
single type of trees planted the same distance from each other, rather than different trees at random placement and age as in the native forest. At a rate of 50 acres (20 hectares) per day, the
deforestation brought by
land development has had a significant impact on area watersheds, as they now
flood far more rapidly and to a much greater extent than prior to development. ==Commentary==