Solutions

Sacramento has a new plan to grow the city’s tree canopy and wants your feedback

Trees line 68th Avenue in the Meadowview neighborhood of Sacramento on Thursday, April 26, 2024. The area has around 12% tree coverage a little more than a third of the city’s goal of 35%. Kristin Lam/CapRadio

Sacramento is asking the public to give feedback on a draft plan to increase how much of the city is covered by trees from 19% to 35% by 2045. 

The city opened the public comment period Friday and will accept feedback on the Sacramento Urban Forest Plan through June 21. 

Rachel Patten, a sustainability program specialist, said the city can’t reach the goals on its own. The city, other agencies and the public will need to plant about 25,000 trees per year and protect the 1 million existing trees, according to the plan. The city doesn’t own enough land to plant all of the new trees and currently maintains about 100,000. 

“The city is a leader with urban forestry and has a responsibility to the trees that are in public spaces, but individual trees grow everywhere in the city,” Patten said. “Every individual homeowner or business and other agency is also part of this collaborative effort.”

Patten added the city is particularly interested in whether people have specific tree canopy ideas for their neighborhoods. 

“When we say we’re the City of Trees, we need to mean we’re the City of Trees for every neighborhood.”

—Mayor Darrell Steinberg

Ten neighborhoods, including Elmhurst and Land Park, already have tree canopy coverage of 35% or higher. But 69 neighborhoods have 20% or less coverage, according to the plan. Old Sacramento and Meadowview each have about 12% coverage. 

The plan proposes prioritizing planting new trees in areas with the lowest canopy levels and highest heat exposure. A 2019 study found temperatures between Sacramento neighborhoods can vary by up to 20 degrees and wealthier areas with more trees tend to be cooler. Trees not only lower temperatures, but also improve air quality and lower electricity bills, according to the plan, which is tied to the city’s goal to reach carbon neutrality by 2045

At a press conference on Thursday, Mayor Darrell Steinberg said the city will work with partners to decrease disparities in tree shade, including in North and South Sacramento. 

“When we say we’re the City of Trees, we need to mean we’re the City of Trees for every neighborhood,” Steinberg said.

The plan also proposes […]

Full article: www.capradio.org

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