Bamboo grows in the Town of Huntington on June 20,...

Bamboo grows in the Town of Huntington on June 20, 2012. Credit: Kevin P. Coughlin

Long Beach has become the latest Long Island municipality to pass a law restricting use of bamboo plants on private property.

The legislation makes Long Beach at least the ninth city, town or village on Long Island to restrict the use of bamboo. Homeowners sometimes plant bamboo for aesthetic purposes or as a property barrier, but the often-invasive plant can spread into adjacent areas and damage foundations, roots and sidewalks.

The city's law states that invasive or "running bamboo" cannot be planted anywhere in the city. Residents who already have bamboo on their properties can maintain it as long as "it does not encroach or grow onto any adjoining or neighboring property," the law states.

The law will allow the city to bring scofflaw bamboo growers into court, said Scott Kemins, the city's building commissioner.

"It's a win for homeowners who are being invaded by this bamboo. It's just another tool to help them," Kemins said.

The law allows the city to give violators 10 days to remove bamboo and fine them $250 per day after that.

The City Council enacted the law by a 3-1 vote Tuesday night. John McLaughlin was absent and Michael Fagen dissented, saying the law could pit residents against each other.

"At the end of the day, we want neighbors working with neighbors," Fagen said. "You're going to have two neighbors that are sworn adversaries."

The city set about banning bamboo in response to complaints from roughly a dozen residents about bamboo encroaching on their properties, City Council president Len Torres has said.

City Manager Jack Schnirman said the city's law was crafted after consulting restrictions that have recently been enacted in other Long Island municipalities, such as Hempstead and Smithtown towns.The law was revised based on an Aug. 7 public hearing during which several residents said the law should not penalize bamboo growers who maintain the plant responsibly. The City Council had a chance to approve the law after the Aug. 7 hearing, but balked.

"The revised resolution takes people's concerns into account," Schnirman said.

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Giving back to place that gave them so much ... Migrants' plight ... Kwanzaa in the classroom ... What's up on LI ... Get the latest news and more great videos at NewsdayTV

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