Can you believe it?
It has been a tremendous week in #Chicago at the Partners in Community Forestry 2024 conference.
Thank you to Dan Lambe with Arbor Day Foundation for the challenge to Believe. To find hope, nurture optimism, and foster passion in these unprecedented and uncertain times.
But how? How do we push through uncertainty? By not just beleiving, but rooting those beliefs in facts so that we can confidently take action.
Here are some of the many unbelievable facts from this week:
0. The number of seats left in the opening session, and in many of the plenary sessions. It is unbelievable, and quite possibly one of the greatest signs of success for our field, that we still need a bigger room. So many new faces this year! If you are one of those people - welcome! You are going to do amazing work to carry our field to even greater heights.
842. The number of proposals that the USDA Forest Service received last year for planting, managing, and caring for trees in disadvantaged communities in every state across the country. Although not all were awarded, these cities, plus hundreds of others working through their state Urban & Community Forestry programs, demonstrate an unbelievable desire to build more equitable and just urban forestry programs. We must continue to protect and inspire long-term, sustainable #Funding through collective impact and #advocacy (including new tools from Arbor Day Foundation, PlanIT Geo™, and others to share progress).
26. Low-income communities on average have 26% less canopy cover and are 6F degrees hotter, and regardless of income, communities of color have 38% less tree canopy and are up to 13F degrees warmer. These inequities are unbelievable, but there is hope. It is humbling to hear all of the ways that cities across the country are committing to and advancing #TreeEquity. From mapping Tree Equity and taking action in Tucson, AZ with support from Mayor Regina Romero to the Urban Forestry Equity Collective’s research in Los Angeles led by City Plants to our host city of Chicago’s staff and mayoral leadership intergrating Tree Equity into city-wide sustainability and public health initiatives, cities and #Mayors area leading the movement.
It is for these unbelievable facts that I beleive.
I believe not just in the future of urban forestry, but in the urban forestry of the future.
Where collectively, as a field, we address Tree Equity head-on by working with disadvantaged communities to close the canopy gap, while changing the systems and structures that led to the canopy gap in the first place.
We are here to help. I’d be honored to introduce you to any of my colleagues here at American Forests to assist you on your journey.
The future is now.
Together, let’s achieve the unbelievable.
Jad Daley Benita Hussain Ian Leahy Vikram Krishnamurthy Lida Aljabar, AICP Alana Tucker, AICP Chris David Joel O. Pannell