Goshen, Middlebury, Nappanee, Syracuse and Elkhart are among 61 Hoosier cities and towns recognized by the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Division of Forestry, as Tree Cities USA for outstanding management of urban forests.
Of those municipalities recognized, 14 also have received the Growth Award, which exemplifies a higher standard of excellence for urban forestry management activities.
“In 2007, Indiana's 61 Tree Cities planted more than 10,938 trees, removed 6,269 and pruned 19,296,” said John Seifert, state forester. “These municipalities are to be commended for utilizing the urban forest as a tool to enhance economic development, environmental health and quality of life in their community.”
The Tree City USA program has been in existence in Indiana since 1984, when Bloomington met the criteria and became the first Tree City in Indiana. In 2007, six new cities earned recognition for the first time: Avon, Dyer, Geneva, Russiaville, Westfield and Vincennes.
To achieve Tree City USA status, communities must draft and pass a public tree-care ordinance, designate a municipal department and tree advisory committee, spend at least $2 per capita on their tree-care program and have an Arbor Day observance and proclamation.
“Becoming and remaining a Tree City is not an easy task,” said Pam Louks, state community and urban forestry coordinator. “Since 2004, we have lost two Tree Cities each year. Out of the 568 cities and towns in the state, these 61 are truly unique in that they are making a concentrated effort to care for their urban forest, which cleans the air we breathe and the water we drink.”
Tree Cities for 2007, with an asterisk denoting a Growth Award, include: Anderson, Angola, Auburn, Avon, Beech Grove, Bedford, Berne, Bloomington*, Carmel*, Chesterton, Columbia City, Crown Point, Culver*, Decatur, Delphi*, Dyer, East Chicago, Edgewood, Elkhart, Evansville*, Fort Wayne*, Fortville, Fremont, Geneva, Goshen, Greencastle, Greendale, Greenfield, Grissom Air Reserve Base, Huntington*, Indianapolis*, LaPorte, Lafayette, Madison*, Michigan City*, Middlebury*, Mishawaka, Montpelier, Mount Ayr, Muncie, Munster, Nappanee, Nashville, New Harmony, Noblesville*, North Manchester, Richmond, Rochester, Russiaville, Salem, South Bend, Syracuse*, Terre Haute*, Tipton, Valparaiso, Vincennes, West Lafayette, Westfield, Whiting, Winamac and Zionsville.
These communities will be formally recognized by Department of Forestry staff during this month and next at Arbor Day ceremonies throughout the state. The National Arbor Day Foundation and the National Association of StateForesters sponsor the program, which now includes 3,216 Tree Cities nationally with 503 receiving the Growth Award.
For more information on urban forestry and how to become a Tree City USA, contact (317) 915-9390 or urbanforestry@dnr.IN.gov.
Local News
Cities, towns named ‘Tree Cities’
- Local News
-
-
New library rental fees set
The Middlebury Town Council amended the Middlebury Public Library's community room use policy Monday, with the primary change being an increase in rental fees for the library's three community rooms.
-
Local artists win at regionals
Five NorthWood High School students won at the 2012 Northwest Indiana & Lower Southwest Michigan Region of The Alliance for Young Writers & Artists.
-
Indiana lawmakers return to action after Super Bowl break
After a time-out to accommodate out-of-town Super Bowl visitors, the Indiana General Assembly is back in session to tackle legislation that had been bottlenecked by a contentious labor bill.
-
CITY COUNCIL: Housing Authority’s crisis packs the house
Mayor Allan Kauffman’s request to provide the beleaguered Goshen Housing Authority with an emergency infusion of $571,050 was passed by the City Council in an initial step toward approval, but there is much more discussion expected before a final vote.
-
CITY COUNCIL: First hurdle cleared for $571,050 in Goshen Housing Authority relief
Mayor Allan Kauffman’s request to provide the beleaguered Goshen Housing Authority with an emergency infusion of $571,050 was passed by City Council in an initial vote Tuesday, but there is much more discussion expected before a final vote.
-
UPDATE: Police release name of Fort Wayne man killed in crash
GOSHEN — One driver was killed and another hurt when a Ford SUV collided with a Chevrolet HHR at C.R.s 15 and 32 at 4:50 p.m. Tuesday.
-
Preschool mothers to host film about faith
Harvest Community Church will present “A Courageous Night: Dinner and A Movie” Feb. 11.
-
More work on new bike trail approved
An amendment to a contract with S & L Builders, Millersburg, was approved Monday by the Goshen Board of Public Works and Safety, to have S & L perform additional work on a bicycle/pedestrian path on West Washington Street near the Millrace Powerhouse project for $7,332.
-
SLIDESHOW: Pets of the Week
Featured pets ready for adoption at the Elkhart County Humane Society.
-
Indianapolis organizers considering asking for another Super Bowl
If praise and adulation could put points on the scoreboard, then Indianapolis had a blowout victory hosting its first Super Bowl.
- More Local News Headlines
-







