Keeping Corridors Open and Compliant

Right-of-way clearing services for vegetation management, access maintenance, and safety compliance in Tyler, Texas.

Your utility corridor, pipeline easement, or road right-of-way in Tyler needs regular clearing to prevent vegetation from interfering with infrastructure, blocking access for maintenance crews, or creating fire hazards during dry months. Trees that grow into power lines cause outages, brush that encroaches on pipeline markers hides corrosion or leaks, and overgrown access roads delay emergency response when equipment needs to reach remote sections. Right-of-way clearing maintains visibility, access, and regulatory compliance across corridors that may stretch for miles through wooded or rural areas.


TNT LandWorx provides vegetation management to remove trees, brush, and invasive species, access maintenance to keep roads and gates passable, erosion control to stabilize cleared slopes, and safety and compliance work that meets utility, pipeline, or municipal standards. In Tyler, pine saplings, invasive vines, and fast-growing hardwoods recolonize cleared corridors within a season if left unmanaged. The work includes mowing, selective clearing, stump grinding, and herbicide application to slow regrowth and reduce the frequency of future clearing cycles.


Contact us to review your corridor layout and clearing schedule in Tyler.


Clearing begins with a survey of the right-of-way to identify encroaching vegetation, dead or hazard trees, and areas where access has been blocked by fallen timber or overgrowth. Equipment removes trees and brush within the cleared corridor, cuts vegetation back to the easement boundary, and grinds stumps to prevent rapid resprouting. On your Tyler right-of-way, mowers handle low grass and shrubs, while tracked equipment clears heavier brush and fells trees that threaten lines or pipelines. Debris is chipped, hauled off, or piled for removal depending on site access and local regulations.


After clearing, your corridor has unobstructed sight lines to infrastructure, access roads wide enough for maintenance vehicles, and slopes stabilized to prevent erosion into ditches or waterways. You see cleared boundaries that match easement maps, no vegetation touching lines or markers, and improved drainage where brush was trapping water.


Herbicide treatment targets stumps and roots of invasive species that regrow quickly, reducing the need for annual mechanical clearing. Erosion control includes seeding cleared slopes with low-growing ground cover or installing silt fencing to keep soil in place during storms. Right-of-way clearing does not include tree trimming outside the easement, structure repairs, or road paving, but it does maintain the conditions utility and pipeline operators need to inspect and service infrastructure safely and on schedule.

How Vegetation Control Prevents Infrastructure Problems

A bulldozer is carrying a large tree stump on a dirt road.

Clarifying scope before clearing begins

Utility companies, landowners, and contractors across Tyler ask about regrowth control, property boundaries, and how clearing affects existing infrastructure.


  • What vegetation gets removed during right-of-way clearing? You remove all trees and brush within the cleared corridor that could interfere with lines, pipelines, or access, along with dead or hazard trees outside the easement that could fall into the right-of-way. Low ground cover and grasses are mowed or left in place depending on the maintenance plan.
  • How often does a right-of-way need clearing? Most corridors in Tyler need clearing every two to four years depending on vegetation type and growth rates. Corridors treated with herbicide or planted with low-growing species go longer between cycles.
  • Why is erosion control necessary after clearing? Removing vegetation exposes soil to rain and runoff, which can erode slopes and wash sediment into ditches or streams. Erosion control stabilizes the ground until new ground cover establishes and roots hold the soil in place.
  • What happens to the cleared brush and trees? Debris is chipped for mulch, hauled off-site for disposal, or piled in designated areas for pickup. You choose the method based on access, budget, and local regulations for burning or disposal.
  • How do you mark the easement boundaries before clearing? Boundaries are flagged using survey data from easement maps or utility records, and the crew clears only within the marked corridor. You review the layout with the operator before work starts if there are concerns about adjacent property or features.


TNT LandWorx provides right-of-way clearing for utility companies, pipeline operators, municipalities, and private landowners who need corridors maintained for safe access and regulatory compliance across Tyler. Get in touch to schedule your clearing work.