Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Location: 4th Floor Registration Bays
Location: Exhibit Hall
Location: Grand Ballroom
8:35 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. | Land Acknowledgement
8:45 a.m. – 9:00 a.m. | Welcome to Chicago! - Dan Lambe, Arbor Day Foundation CEO
9:00 a.m. – 9:10 a.m. | Our Nation’s Urban Forests
9:10 a.m. – 9:20 a.m. | Welcome to the City of Chicago!
Honore Ballroom: Engaged Cities
Planning an Equitable Urban Forest
Rachel Malarich, Esther Marguiles, Edith de Guzman; City of Los Angeles
Summary: How do you create equitable urban forests in a fully built out city? Where and how do you expand canopy? How should you involve community voices in the design and decision making? The City of Los Angeles has been working with the University of Southern California’s Urban Trees Initiative and the Urban Forest Equity Collective since 2020 to answer these and other questions. Addressing tree canopy equity requires more than just planting trees. Join us to hear about the tools these teams have been creating and how you might use them in your city.
Growing Shade Equity in the Desert
Nicole Gillett; City of Tucson
Summary: In the desert, trees offer vital benefits: safe passage for children, wildlife shelter, and life-saving shade. Tucson, among the fastest warming U.S. cities with only a 6% canopy cover, recognized the urgent need for action. Now four years into the Urban Forestry Program, we are dedicated to enhancing climate resilience and expanding tree coverage equitably. "Shade Equity in the Desert" delves into the practicalities of launching this initiative amid climate urgency and political imperatives, emphasizing its transformative potential on tree equity.
Communities Thrive Where Trees Thrive
Laurie Reid; City of Charlotte
Summary: To help mitigate the inequities in tree canopy in underserved, disadvantaged communities, the City of Charlotte has implemented a Canopy Care Program. This program provides care for trees on private property to assist underserved neighbors to stay in their homes. This presentation will discuss the evolution of Charlotte’s Canopy Care Program from a $25,000 single neighborhood pilot project to a $600,000 IRA grant-funded project assisting Charlotte residents in multiple CJEST census blocks.
Red Lacquer: Partnerships
Improving Schoolyard Air Quality with Vegetative Buffers
Michelle Catania; Morton Arboretum
Summary: Poor air quality along major transportation corridors negatively impacts people’s health. Blocking the source from vulnerable populations with a wall of trees is an impactful community-focused solution. The Morton Arboretum, EPA, & Environmental Law & Policy Center have been working to establish pilot sites in the Chicago area to install a wall of trees along school properties close to highways. Our focus is on improving the health & well-being of communities that have experienced historic environmental injustices while promoting the benefits of trees.
Growing from Concrete: Green Spaces in Little Villages
Luis Gutierrez; Latinos Progresando
Joel Zavala; The Nature Conservancy
Summary: This discussion will share how a local Chicago-based nonprofit located in Little Village, a historically Mexican, low-income immigrant neighborhood, partnered with a national group, The Nature Conservancy, to identify and grow green spaces within their neighborhood. We will discuss how to obtain community buy-in and support, how to leverage projects and resources, and why it is important that work in the community is led by those with similar lived experiences. This will cover an air monitoring program, a playground greenspace, and planting over 100 trees.
Urban Trees and Public Health in Cleveland, Ohio
Mike Piskur; Great Lake St. Lawrence Governors & Premiers
Summary: The Conference of Great Lakes St. Lawrence Governors & Premiers (GSGP), Cleveland Clinic, and the Cleveland Tree Coalition are partnering to promote the public health benefits of urban tree planting in the Great Lakes region. The team is planting trees in low-canopy neighborhoods in Cleveland and developing informational materials about the public health benefits of urban trees for community members, healthcare professionals, and policymakers.
Empire Room: Workforce Development
Growing Access to Green Careers Through Workforce Programs
Kayla Stuart; The Works
Hannah Gregory; American Forests
Mike Larrivee; The Works
Summary: In 2023, The Works, Inc. launched an innovative pre-employment program, TreeCPR, to train Memphis residents for career pathways into native tree nursery, tree care, and urban wood utilization. This panel and panelists will broadly discuss how to form a program from scratch, overcome challenges associated with case management and job placement, train the trainers, and more. We will also cover how the program was successful through unique approaches to funding from American Forests and technical assistance through the Tree Equity Workforce Network.
Washington, D.C. Youth Tree Ambassadors: Why, Where, and How
Melinda Peters; Casey Trees
Ray Barrera; Student Conservation Association
Summary: Casey Trees and the Student Conservation Association joined forces through funding from the Arbor Day Foundation to recruit and train a small group of high school youth to become our Youth Tree Ambassadors. Through this youth workforce development program, we aimed to introduce urban forestry, environmental justice initiatives around trees in cities, community outreach, and hands-on green job opportunities that build soft and technical skills while learning behind the scenes how non-profit organizations work together to accomplish shared goals.
Building a Workforce Development Rooted in Intersectionality
Juanita Ibarra & Joel "Jojo" Flores; Canopy
Summary: In this presentation, we will provide insight into Canopy’s approach to intersectional youth leadership programming, including the structure and goals of the Teen Urban Forester internship, as well as successes and challenges. In addition, participants will hear directly from Teen Urban Foresters about the program’s impact. Participants will come away from this program with an understanding of the critical role of youth leadership in effective community forestry and practical tips and tools to empower and engage youth in driving positive change.
Location: Exhibit Hall
Honore Ballroom: Urban Forest Management
Implementing a Master Plan – 3 Years In
Rachel Comte; Urban Canopy Works
Rosalie Hendon; City of Columbus
Summary: We hear so much about developing urban forest master plans. What happens after they are approved? Implementation can be overwhelming. Hear how Columbus, Ohio has implemented its first Urban Forestry Master Plan (UFMP) over three years: the wins, the challenges, and the lessons learned.
A Framework for Urban Forests as Social-Ecological Systems
Jess Vogt; DePaul University
Summary: This session will describe a comprehensive framework for examining urban forests as social-ecological systems. First, why it is important to look at the totality of the social-ecological system in order to understand urban forest dynamics and management will be discussed. Then, a comprehensive framework will be outlined along with a database for organizing case studies in research and practice, using Chicago as an example. The framework would allow for generating applied management insights that go beyond panacea-like ‘best management practice.
Red Lacquer: Volunteer Programs
Active Engagement – A Web of Opportunities for Volunteers
Michael Dugan & Tom Ebeling; Openlands
Summary: Learn about Openlands' strategy for engaging our community forestry volunteers, the 33-year-old TreeKeepers program. Our framework offers four pillars within our 'Web of Opportunity': Do, Learn, Lead, and Engage. Volunteers choose activities tailored to skills and interests, from stewardship events to leading their own initiatives, while emphasizing continuous learning. We will discuss keeping a trained volunteer force impactful, active, and relevant to modern urban forestry issues in Chicago.
Tree Care Volunteer Programs with the University of Minnesota
Sonja Tosteson; University of Minnesota
Summary: Sonja will present the University of Minnesota's two state-wide urban and community forestry tree care volunteer programs, offering advice and insights into how other states or organizations may create their own. Both programs are made possible through funding from the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and the United States Forest Service.
Empire Room: Research/Science
New Approach to Monitor the Life Cycle of Urban Street Trees
Ayda Kianmehr; University of Southern California
Summary: Urban tree canopy is essential for mitigating the effects of climate change, yet tree mortality impacts its associated benefits. This study in six neighborhoods near downtown Los Angeles predicts tree mortality throughout the century. Utilizing individual tree growth and lifespan, it forecasts nearly 50% canopy loss by 2050, with an annual 1% tree loss due to aging. This approach informs planting campaigns, aiding urban resilience in a warmer climate.
The Canopy Report: How Americas Sees Trees
Jeff Salem & Mike Kuhl; Arbor Day Foundation
Summary: This presentation will showcase the interesting points from the Canopy Report and discuss ways the urban forestry audience can leverage the consumer sentiment found in the report, reinforcing and validating their important work to their stakeholders.
Moderator: Jacob Koch; Bloomberg Associates
Angela Tovar; City of Chicago
Raed Mansour; Chicago Department of Public Health
Summary: The City of Chicago is in the midst of transformational change in its approach to urban forestry. Within the past few years the city has gone from a net annual loss of trees in the thousands and response-driven planting and maintenance program that primarily served whiter wealthier neighborhoods to annual net increases of over 10K trees and equity-oriented data-driven approaches to both planting and maintenance. This is all driven by expansive community-based partnerships and collaborations including a Tree Equity Working Group and a Tree Ambassador program.
Location: Exhibit Hall
Location: SPIN Chicago
Thursday, November 21, 2024
Location: 4th Floor Registration Bays
Location: Exhibit Hall
Location: Grand Ballroom
Dan Lambe, Arbor Day Foundation
Pat Covey, The Davey Tree Expert Company
Jennifer Birchfield; Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission
Drew Hart; USFS
Leo Sawyers; Student Conservation Association
Summary: CommuniTree is a regional community forestry program that brings partners together to create a more diverse, healthy, and equitable urban forest. Serving one of the most industrialized areas of the country, CommuniTree engages with underserved communities to increase tree equity. Core CommuniTree partners, NIRPC, SCA, and USFS, will discuss the development of this growing and synergistic network based on the collective impact model. Partners will share tangible collaborative successes as well as lessons learned over the eight years of developing CommuniTree.
Jaylnn Webb; Imani Village
Rebecca Hankins; Forest ReLeaf of Missouri
Summary: Dying trees on private land pose risks to people and property, hindering new tree planting and appreciation for trees. Affordability is often a hurdle for tree removals and pruning. Treesilience, a growing national initiative, adopts a “remove 1, replace with 2” model to tackle these challenges. It supports tree removals, replacements, and mature tree pruning. Focus areas prioritize communities facing canopy threats to bolster urban forest resiliency. Learn about the impacts from Chicago participants, how to implement, and potential funding approaches.
Walter Passmore; CAL FIRE
Shannon Gamson Danks; Green Schoolyard America
Summary: The California Schoolyard Forest System® is a statewide initiative to increase tree canopy on public school grounds to shade and protect PreK-12 students from extreme heat due to climate change. We will share insights and impacts from the first three years of this successful collaboration between two California government agencies and two nonprofit organizations. This will include a summary of actions, the effect of $150 million of grants, and goals for the future. We will also discuss efforts underway to expand this initiative to other states.
Ian Hanou (PlanIT Geo)
David Sivyer (USDA Forest Service)
Paul Cooper (Arbor Day Foundation)
Summary: Join us to explore the impact of the Inflation Reduction Act's $1.4 billion investment in urban forestry, funding nearly 400 projects to enhance tree canopies and create green jobs in underserved communities. Learn how the National Canopy App identifies disadvantaged areas and prioritizes planting efforts. Discover the groundbreaking National Urban Tree Canopy Assessment and web-based reporting systems that empower communities to maximize project impacts and celebrate their successes through interactive geospatial dashboards and story maps.
Jessica Sanders & Paul Morrison; Urban Wood Network
Summary: We all know the problem: Millions of tons of viable wood from urban trees are dumped into landfills yearly instead of being transformed into high-value, carbon-trapping products. We also know the solution: Stronger partnerships across the board. However, this goal has proven elusive. In this presentation, participants will learn about a new path forward led by Urban Wood Network. They’ll walk away with an action plan for fulfilling the promise of this industry and its proven benefits of good jobs, carbon solutions, and positive social impacts.
Location: Exhibit Hall
Honore Ballroom: Environmental Justice
Environmental Justice Lessons and Strategies from Cities and Nonprofit Organizations
Dr. Christine Carmichael; Fair Forests Consulting
Summary: As cities and nonprofit organizations seek to enact equitable strategies to urban forest restoration, it is crucial to share examples and lessons with others hoping to do the same. This presentation will share examples of how Tree City USA communities and Alliance for Community Trees (ACT) member organizations are striving to enact equitable approaches to urban and community forestry. This will range from ways to equitably reach out to and collaborate with diverse groups to developing equitable community tree ordinances and budgets.
"What's in Your Way" A Workforce Development Solution
Kayla Stuart; TreeCPR
Summary: This presentation will discuss my thesis research which is to characterize the constraints and barriers on individuals living in underserved and overburdened communities face when considering careers in natural resources. In order for industry to understand this phenomena we must recognize the disparities in career preparedness, exposure to natural resource careers, and equitable attainment of job opportunities. This presentation will focus on the case study I have conducted through interviewing individuals from a 9-week WFD program in natural resources.
Culturally Relevant Tree and Community Engagement
Joe Toolan; GreenLatinos
Summary: What are culturally relevant trees? Why are they important? To achieve our tree canopy, urban heating, and tree maintenance problems— we need to start by properly engaging communities to “meet them where they are” and excite them about urban forestry and conservation. Come learn about how to engage diverse communities.
Red Lacquer: Trees + Tech
Track sponsored by PlanIT Geo
Tree Care and Technology in Baltimore City
Marcus Tuah & Kajall Hylton; Baltimore Tree Trust
Summary: As Baltimore’s principal tree planting organization, Baltimore Tree Trust (BTT) is dedicated to advancing tree care practices tailored to the specific needs of and challenges faced by trees in an urban landscape. Guided by the principle that tree care should never be an afterthought in urban forestry projects, we aim to provide an in-depth analysis of the skills, systems, and technologies that BTT uses year-round, and hope to emphasize that the impact of an urban forest is determined by the care we provide.
Ready, Set, Goal: Setting Actionable Canopy Goals
Alex Hancock & Alec Sabatini; PlanIT Geo
Summary: Cities around the world use tree canopy goals to inspire and inform their urban forestry efforts. But how do you pick a canopy target that is both inspiring and practical? What comes after the goal has been set? This presentation will explore the canopy goal setting process, including utilizing urban tree canopy change analysis, accounting for growth and mortality factors, and weighing benefits against physical and financial limitations. We’ll then discuss how goals become action with planting plans, timelines, budgets, and resources.
Mapping Urban Forest Equity in Austin: A Comparison of Tools
Alison Baylis; Texas A&M Forest Service
Paul Ries; Oregon State University
Summary: Mapping tools have been developed to guide equity-based decision-making to bring the benefits of trees to the neighborhoods that need them the most. However, after comparing five tools in Austin, many differences were found in the functionalities, methodologies, data, and results of the tools. Where are the benefits of trees needed most? The answer depended on which mapping tool was used. In this presentation, we will share our findings and recommendations for urban forest practitioners utilizing mapping tools in their work toward urban forest equity.
Empire Room: Land Management
A National Approach to Managing Forests in Cities [Panel]
Clara Pregitzer; Natural Areas Conservancy
Elizabeth Winlock; Olmstead Parks Conservancy
Jody Thompson; Kentucky State University
Summary: This panel will present local and national perspectives on strategies being used to organize around improving the health and value of urban forested parks, showcasing research that quantifies nature-based climate solutions such as cooling and carbon storage and sequestration in urban forested natural areas.
Honore Ballroom: Urban Wood
Fallen Trees: The Rest of the Equity & Climate Equation
Jeff Carrol; Urban Wood Economy
James Williams: Center for Heirs Property in South Carolina
Summary: Investment and momentum for equitable tree planting and care is at an all-time high in the U.S. However, there is untapped potential for our urban and community forestry sector to leverage and maximize this investment for even more significant economic and environmental impact. Now is the time to integrate urban and community wood markets that provide jobs, capture carbon, and reduce waste. Wood utilization (wood-sourced products) completes the tree planting/care life cycle and reinvests in community health and wealth.
Camp Small: Closing the Loop of Community Forestry
Shaun Preston; Baltimore City Forestry
Summary: Baltimore City's urban wood utilization program, Camp Small, distributes valuable products created from the wood of city trees. Its sawmill and kiln operation supports a growing economy for makers sourcing local wood. The work done at Camp Small closes the loop on TreeBaltimore's community forestry programming. So now in Baltimore, the love of city trees can lead to the appreciation of a piece of furniture, but the appreciation of a piece of furniture can also lead to the love for city trees.
Red Lacquer: Youth Engagement
It’s Giving…Green Vibes: Inspiring Eco Action in Gen Z
Amelia DeVivo, Ashleigh Cibelli-Pettus & Britney Huynh; City of Austin
Summary: The current climate crisis disproportionately affects youth, yet young people are rarely engaged as viable partners and key actors in building climate resilience by promoting green infrastructure. This presentation seeks to inform participants about how the City of Austin educates, trains, and uplifts young employees to become urban forest ambassadors who plan reforestation initiatives, promote urban forest health, and engage with local communities.
Transforming Schoolyards into Educational Green Spaces
Samantha Bradley, Lindsay Hoot & Graham Stephens; Texas Trees Foundation
Summary: The presentation will cover the origins of the Cool Schools Program, including a brief summary of the Texas Trees Foundation and the program's establishment in Dallas. The focus will be on the key factors the program intends to address and the crucial role of schoolyards in achieving success. The conversation will highlight our ongoing efforts and the most effective strategies for engaging teachers, students, and communities in outdoor activities. We will also examine the future objectives of the Program and opportunities for participant involvement.
Empire Room: International Urban Forestry
The Power of Conservation Enterprises in Developing Cities
Liza Paqueo; USDA/US Forest Service International Programs
Summary: Conservation enterprises in developing cities represent innovative approaches to promoting green spaces while fostering sustainable economic development. These initiatives aim to harness the potential of natural resources in a way that benefits both economic growth and biodiversity conservation efforts. By empowering marginalized communities to responsibly manage and benefit from their natural resources, these initiatives contribute to a more resilient and prosperous future for both people and nature.
Successfully Revitalizing Urban Trees in Croatia
Jim Grob; Herbafarm Magnolija
Summary: Croatia is home to many large historic urban trees. Over 30 years, a novel and cost-effective method was developed to permit root system revitalization by creating zones with air porosity and water holding coupled with organic nutrition and microbiome inoculation, which promotes rapid root growth.
Location: Grand Ballroom
Honore Ballroom: Community Engagement
Putting Equitable Engagement into Action
Alexis Gomez; American Forests
Tawsha Trahan; Unlimited Potential
Carly Weidman; Keep Indianapolis Beautiful
Summary: Community-driven action is critical to position residents as the drivers of change in their neighborhood, especially in frontline and historically marginalized communities. In this session, local practitioners from Indianapolis, IN and Phoenix, AZ will present their experiences implementing equitable engagement best practices. Audience participants from municipalities and organizations will learn strategies to equitably engage residents, including becoming more familiar with the Community Action Guide, a resource to support equitable engagement efforts.
Community-Led Strategies for Expanding Urban Tree Canopy
Meg Morgan & Tanner Yess; Groundwork USA
Summary: To mitigate the impacts of climate change, the Groundwork network is expanding the tree canopy in environmental justice neighborhoods by centering community engagement and tree equity. In this session, we will discuss some of the tactics Groundwork Trusts are using to engage residents in local urban forestry efforts, including case studies from within the Groundwork network, focusing on how to develop equity-focused tree-planting projects, build trust with community members, and steward the urban tree canopy.
Building a Sustainable Canopy: ABQ NeighborWoods
Ray Hendrix; Tree New Mexico
Summary: Albuquerque’s last major tree planting effort occurred in the 1930s, leaving many trees now at maturity age; also, roughly 60% of ABQ’s trees are below 6" in diameter, meaning younger trees are failing to reach maturity. To address this, the ABQ NeighborWoods Program aims to increase the tree canopy by planting 100 trees and giving away 100 more, one neighborhood at a time. The program focuses on three key means to ensure that trees will reach maturity: community buy-in, proper tree placement and planting, and post-planting education and monitoring.
Red Lacquer: Trees + Tech
Track sponsored by PlanIT Geo
Branching Out: Integrating AI into Community Forestry
Josh Behounek; Davey Resource Group
Summary: Discover how AI transforms arboriculture and urban forestry, enhancing tree health monitoring, species identification, and maintenance practices. Learn about drone technology, machine learning models for climate resilience, and AI's role in creating sustainable urban green spaces. This presentation offers a glimpse into the future of more intelligent, greener cities through innovative AI applications.
Evaluating Your Program: Methods, Insights, and New Protocols
Chris Peiffer; PlanIT Geo
Summary: An audit or evaluation of your community forestry program gives perspective on whether current policies, plans, and operations are building toward the desired future urban forest. This presentation will draw on the experience of 20+ audits completed across the US to demonstrate the utility of these processes, share common strengths and program gaps, and discuss how audit results lead to impactful changes. Lessons learned from past evaluations will also be applied to the SFI U&CF Standard for communities to measure and strengthen their programs.
Modeling Solutions for Extreme Heat and Air Quality
Mei Visco; Hyphae Design Lab
Summary: Hyphae Design Lab uses an innovative, research-backed design approach to address challenges caused by urban heat and air quality on human health and ecosystems. The presenters will delve into the evidence-based methods that utilize modeling in the design process, share insights gained from this technical approach, and highlight key lessons from their work.
Empire Room: Food Forests
Connections, Cuisines, and Canopies
Natalie Burgos; Chicago Region Trees Initiative
Summary: Initially aiming to host 8 local workshops to introduce food forests as a way to mitigate the local food desert. WaukGrow has grown beyond Waukegan, leading to the planting of 6 food forest sites totaling 132 trees with more being planned. Beyond providing fresh food, the sites also bring a new appreciation of food and connection to over 290 community members and 23 partners. Alongside The Plant Clinic, a series of free virtual plant care trainings has also been created for anyone to access to knowledge on how to best care for food forests.
Cultivating Community: The Growth of D.C.’s Food Forests
Alexander Grieve; DDOT
Summary: Alex’s talk on D.C.'s food forests will highlight an important connection between urban forestry and the community. He’ll highlight school and park partnerships that foster stewardship and education, showing how community input shapes these green spaces into productive, educational, and recreational areas, enhancing urban life.
Accessing Fruit: Using Food Forests to Create Community
Stathis Pauls; Michigan State University Extension Detroit
Partnership for Food, Learning, and Innovation
Summary: Edible forests produce food where most crops are perennial woody plants. These plants are generally shrubs and trees that yield fruits and nuts. Perennial crops go dormant in the winter and do not need to be replanted in the spring. Perennial plants have many benefits - edible forests are more resilient to climate change, sequester carbon in soil, capture stormwater, and reduce flooding. When plants reach maturity, the yields are abundant, nutrient-dense sources of protein, carbohydrates, and healthy fats.
Honore Ballroom: Research/Science
Evidence-Based Design for Urban Forestry
Brent Buckman; Hyphae Design Labs
Lannie McClelen; Texas Trees Foundation
Summary: One of the hidden challenges associated with urban heat island and air quality is that they are an everything problem: mortality and morbidity, mental health and stress, housing, food systems, equity, economic development, etc. Addressing urban heat island and air quality in design requires a process that is holistic in scope, interdisciplinary in focus, and innovative in approach. Brent will delve into Hyphae's iterative process, share insights gained, and highlight key lessons from their work that can be applied to urban forestry across the country.
Red Lacquer: Tree Maintenance
Beyond Planting: Working with Partners to Care for New Trees [Panel]
Marisa Wilson; Philadelphia Parks & Recreation
Summary: Centering tree maintenance, community care, and economic opportunity, Philadelphia Parks & Recreation, Philadelphia Commerce Department, and community partners worked together to plant street trees on commercial corridors that had low tree canopy and showed the commitment to ongoing care by training and paying community members to provide two years of establishment care. This panel discussion will dive into how we brought this program to life, centering the community partnerships that made it a reality.
Empire Room: Workforce Development
From Apprentice to Arborist [Panel]
Katie Fleming; Openlands
Summary: Department of Labor-approved Registered Apprenticeship Programs are an innovative workforce development tool for the arboriculture industry. RAPs provide employers with higher retention rates and a better trained workforce, and offer participants hands-on, paid on-the-job training opportunities. This presentation will include a panel of apprentices who can share their experience in RAPs in Chicago, Wisconsin, and Colorado, discuss the importance of training and education in their careers, and offer insights from a unique perspective on workforce development in urban forestry.
Honore Ballroom: Environmental Justice - Lightning Round
Tree Ambassador Community Organizing Programs
Cristina Basurto & Carlos Campero; City Plants
Summary: The Tree Ambassador – Promotor Forestal Program is a grassroots community organizing program designed to amplify community expertise and foster place-based stewardship of our shared urban forest in historically and systemically disinvested neighborhoods in Los Angeles. This program provides on-the-ground, community-centered support to residents in low-canopy and urban heat-vulnerable regions of the city by paying residents directly to organize for a greener and more equitable future.
Tree Equity Handbook
Ian Leahy; American Forests
Summary: This presentation will introduce a free new Tree Equity handbook with interactive features and downloadable forms to guide practitioners through each step in building equity-oriented urban forestry programs from the ground up. The handbook includes program and needs assessment, building an inclusive coalition, and data-driven strategic planning.
Prioritizing and Funding Community Tree Plantings
Lauren Davis & Rebecca Pobst; Friends of Grand Rapids Parks
Summary: Using data from TreeEquityScore.org and the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool (CJEST), we have identified neighborhoods to prioritize community-based planting events. We use census data that includes age, health risk index, income, and canopy cover. Using this data and preliminary site selections, we can present planting projects to community leaders, residents, and local businesses for support and participation. Using this data and the projected benefits of the tree canopy, the future impact of the planting can be shared today.
Community Forestry Can Further Equality
Beck Swab; Holden Arboretum
Summary: While progress has been made in integrating environmental justice into community forestry, improvements can still be made. To better address the needs of underserved and vulnerable populations when making community forestry decisions, we can integrate the sociological concept of the human hierarchy of needs and the First Nations concept of cultural perpetuity. This framework will help arborists accomplish successful and enduring tree-related activities, achieve environmental justice goals, and further a sustainable society.
Tree Spacing Guidelines as a Barrier to Tree Equity
Laura Messier; University of California
Summary: Focusing on a high- and low-income neighborhood in Los Angeles, this study looks at how seemingly value-neutral tree spacing guidelines hinder equity goals. Adoption of less restrictive standards, as found elsewhere in California, can close the gap in the maximum quantity of trees achievable in each neighborhood. Yet, additional modifications, such as widened parkways, are needed to support large-stature shade trees equitably. Development patterns that differ by neighborhood socioeconomic status leave less space for future green infrastructure.
Red Lacquer: i-Tree
Leveraging i-Tree’s Legacy
Alexis Ellis; USFS Northern Research Station
Robert Seemann; USFS
Summary: Join Alexis Ellis and Robert Seemann to discuss how concepts seeded by i-Tree almost 20 years ago influenced the recent $1.5B Federal investment in Urban & Community Forestry (UCF) and brought new participants to the UCF National Program. The speakers will highlight how this historic investment and intra-agency collaboration are being leveraged to develop national, public implementation tools that will feed into the next generation of i-Tree updates, tools, and research.
Bringing the Receipts: Using i-Tree to Capture Your Impact
Jason Henning; Davey Tree Expert Company
Summary: Reporting on your work can be challenging and time-consuming, but it is necessary to demonstrate your effectiveness to funders and your community. i-Tree offers new tools and new data that can capture the impact of your projects in as little as ten minutes. With i-Tree, you can estimate return on investment for funders, understand the monetary value of your tree resources, and establish benchmarks to ensure delivery of tree benefits to your community. Join us to see how i-Tree can provide the evidence you need to support your community forestry efforts.
Empire Room: Workforce Development
Tolerant Greenspaces: Designing Urban Nature-Based Solutions
Sara Barron; University of British Columbia
Summary: Young adults are a missing middle in urban forestry and health research. Our research used a novel appraisal framework focusing on fostering social ties and supporting mental health among young adults via urban green space provision. The work was informed by a literature review and Australian case studies, resulting in a framework that can inform planning and policy improvements to include the voices of our young people.
MythBusters: Telling the Truth About Trees to Stakeholders
Audrey Sellepack; The Davey Institute
Dana Karcher; Davey Resource Group
Summary: It isn’t easy being a tree in the city. With poor soil, competition, and pest and human-inflicted damage, it’s no wonder that trees are guaranteed shorter lives in our communities. Communicating the science and facts about trees can help lengthen their lives. This presentation brings together a scientist to help understand the myths and a seasoned storyteller to share how to communicate the science to benefit the trees and the community.
Grand Ballroom: Policy
Sustainable Urban Forests Coalition: Policy Listening Session
Sustainable Urban Forests Coalition
Summary: Join the Sustainable Urban Forests Coalition (SUFC) for a Post-Presidential Election discussion on what a new Administration means for Urban & Community Forestry. Led by Joel Pannell, the Vice President of Urban Forest Policy for American Forests, we'll discuss the priorities for the new Administration and the climate on Capitol Hill.
About SUFC:
SUFC is the country's only network of nonprofits, businesses, associations, foundations, and other entities committed to advancing sound, effective urban forest policy and practices.
Location: Exhibit Hall
Linda Powers Tomasso; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
Public adoption of urban tree planting and climate-health-nature implementation goals can be accelerated through the use of dynamic visualization models and design prototyping to present to and solicit feedback from locally impacted communities. At Harvard, we have developed tangible state-of-the-art visualization tools that allow community residents to review tree-planting proposals and create partnerships for climate adaptation strategies. In this session, we present digital tools and feedback we learned from actual design charrettes in Springfield, MA.
Nadina Galle; The Nature of Our Cities
Summary: Dr. Nadina Galle envisions a future where nature and technology forge thriving, sustainable cities. Drawing from her book, 'The Nature of Our Cities,' she introduces the innovators driving this shift, showcasing technology's supporting role in urban forestry with a 'nature first, technology second' approach. Highlighting examples like AI-powered laser mapping, augmented reality, and advanced sensors, she offers strategies to address climate change, mental health, and urban resilience, emphasizing the vital connection between people and nature.
Dan Lambe; Arbor Day Foundation
2024 Sponsors
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