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Reedley going green with trees

Reedley going green with trees

Tree Fresno has proposed adding more than 2,000 trees to Reedley in a first-ever citywide tree planting project.

Planting could begin as early as next spring, said Lee Ayers, chief executive officer of Tree Fresno.

The Reedley City Council voted 3-1 on Sept. 23 to give $10,000 to Tree Fresno to develop a community landscape plan for Reedley.

The total cost of the landscape plan is $30,000.  Reedley will give Tree Fresno the $10,000 once Tree Fresno raises the other $20,000.

 

Council Member Anita Betancourt voted “no” and Council Member Rick Rodriguez was absent.

Tree Fresno – a nonprofit Fresno-based organization – planted a memorial tree last year on the Rails to Trails Parkway for Sheryl Nickel of Reedley, who wanted to honor her late husband, Ray.

That led Ayers to collaborate with e good of all Fresno County and surrounding counties,” Zieba said.

Over the past 29 years, Tree Fresno has planted 40,000 trees in four counties — Fresno, Kings, Madera and Tulare counties.

Tree Fresno recently planted 300 trees in a Clovis neighborhood but has never done a project across an entire community.

Betancourt said she voted against the plan because the city can’t take care of its existing trees.

She said the trees on the Rails to Trails Parkway are “dying” and “look dirty.”

“I feel like we can barely take care of what we have right now,” Betancourt said. “Trees look good and are important, but if we’re going to plant them and can’t take care of them, I can’t see [supporting] that.”

Additionally, Betancourt said, trees require water, something that is scarce in the current drought.

Ayers said trees have multiple benefits.  They improve property values, contribute to energy conservation, provide shade and enhance air quality.

He said the landscape plan will identify areas where trees can be planted and list specific types of trees that would work best in Reedley – trees that are native to the area, drought-tolerant and don’t lift up sidewalks.  He also said Tree Fresno is committed to serving as a resource to help maintain the trees, once they are planted.

Ayers said the plan will position the city – in conjunction with Tree Fresno – to go after grant money to implement the plan.

Ayers said Reedley could take advantage of an “extraordinary” amount of money in the governor’s budget this year for urban forestry – over $10 million for disadvantaged communities.

Ayers said it’s possible that over 90 percent of the trees in Reedley would be planted on private property, including backyards and front yards.

“Our aim is to have a plan that is so compelling that everyone will want to plant trees,” Ayers said.

Tree Fresno has pitched the plan to the Kings Canyon Unified School District, Adventist Medical Center – Reedley, and the Greater Reedley Chamber of Commerce.  All have expressed interest in the project.  Palm Village Retirement Community already has committed funds to the project.

When Tree Fresno first approached the city about the landscape plan, Zieba said, she was a little “standoffish” because she thought Tree Fresno was going to ask the city to foot the bill.  However, she said, Tree Fresno’s offer to pay two-thirds of the amount was “very admirable.”

Ayers said Tree Fresno reached out to several neighboring communities, but Reedley seemed the most receptive to the plan.

Council Member Ray Soleno Soleno said trees could also help the city meet the state’s guidelines for cutting greenhouse gases and reduce the city’s carbon footprint by enhancing air quality.

Mayor Bob Beck also favors the landscape plan.

“This is a project that, if it gets a foothold, might help us in the long run.  It would be an advantage,” Beck said.

Council Member Mary Fast likes the aesthetics of trees.  She said there’s nothing prettier than a tree-lined street.   “It’s fun to walk in, it’s fun to bike in, and I believe very much that trees in a neighborhood make a big difference,” Fast said.

Follow this link to read it on the Reedley Exponent Website

 

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Lowell Elementary girls help bring green to Fresno’s Dickey Playground

Lowell Elementary girls help bring green to Fresno’s Dickey Playground
By George Hostetter The Fresno Bee
November 22, 2013

A corner of Dickey Playground in downtown Fresno is getting a green makeover.

Members of the Girl Power Club at nearby Lowell Elementary School and Mayor Ashley Swearengin teamed up Friday to plant a young tree at Dickey Playground.

The Aristocrat Pear is one of about 10 trees slated to go onto the site of a barracks-like building that was never eye-catching and struggled over the decades to adequately serve the neighborhood.

The building became irrelevant when the city five years ago built the $1.5 million Dickey Youth Center on Divisadero Street, a block from the playground’s basketball courts. The old building was razed and a slice of green space is about to emerge.

Grass will soon accompany the trees.

“It’s another sign of life in the Lowell neighborhood,” Swearengin said.

The mayor, City Manager Bruce Rudd and members of Tree Fresno provided moral support and green-thumb expertise as the fifth- and sixth-graders wrestled the tree into a hole. The girls were quick learners, deftly extricating the Aristocrat Pear from its plastic bucket.

“We saw some girl-power action,” Swearengin said.

Dickey — one of Fresno’s historic playgrounds — has seen quite a transformation in recent years. First the youth center, then a splash park, now a tiny urban forest.

The mayor stayed for one tree-planting, then headed back to City Hall. The stalwarts of Lowell’s Girl Power Club grabbed shovels and continued the work.

The reporter can be reached at (559) 441-6272 or ghostetter@fresnobee.com.

Read it in the Bee at http://www.fresnobee.com/2013/11/22/3625913/lowell-elementary-girls-help-bring.html 

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Valley air officials aim to cool down decades-old smog problem

Hot cities are ‘heat islands’ that contribute to ozone

In sweltering September 2011, Fresno could have used more trees. Temperatures climbed, winds died and lung-searing ozone spiked the season’s highest readings on three days.

Worse yet, all three peaks broke the one-hour federal ozone standard between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. on weekdays when children were outside after school.

An extensive canopy of trees over streets, parking lots and driveways might have kept ozone-cooking heat down just enough to avert those dangerous peaks, say researchers. Plus, trees actually take pollutants out of the air.

It’s time to talk seriously about using trees and other city-cooling ideas, such as reflective or cool roofs, to end the San Joaquin Valley’s decades-long quest to achieve the federal one-hour ozone standard, say air-quality leaders.

These days, only a few parts per billion of ozone on a few days a year separate the Valley from the achievement…

…”Fresno needs to turn greener with trees,” says Lee Ayers, executive director of Tree Fresno. His organization is pushing to make trees a priority in the city.

“I don’t think there’s any doubt that we all would benefit from more trees,” he said. “It’s not just a matter of planting new trees. We need to replace trees that have died and retain mature trees in this city.”

Read Entire Article

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The Oak Tree

The Oak Tree

by Johnny Ray Ryder Jr

A mighty wind blew night and day
It stole the oak tree’s leaves away
Then snapped its boughs and pulled its bark
Until the oak was tired and stark

But still the oak tree held its ground
While other trees fell all around
The weary wind gave up and spoke.
How can you still be standing Oak?

The oak tree said, I know that you
Can break each branch of mine in two
Carry every leaf away
Shake my limbs, and make me sway

But I have roots stretched in the earth
Growing stronger since my birth
You’ll never touch them, for you see
They are the deepest part of me

Until today, I wasn’t sure
Of just how much I could endure
But now I’ve found, with thanks to you
I’m stronger than I ever knew

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Mighty Oak

Mighty Oak
By Kathy J Parenteau

Stand tall oh mighty oak, for all the world to see,
your strength and undying beauty forever amazes me.
Though storm clouds hover above you,
your branches span the sky,
in search of the radiant sunlight you
count on to survive.
When the winds are high and restless and
you lose a limb or two,
it only makes you stronger, we
could learn so much from you.
Though generations have come and gone
and brought about such change,
quietly you’ve watched them all yet still
remained the same.
I only pray God give to me the strength he’s
given you,
to face each day with hope, whether
skies are black or blue,
Life on earth is truly a gift
every moment we must treasure,
it’s the simple things we take for granted
that become our ultimate pleasures.