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City Forestry Information - Tree City USA <br />Mounds View is proud to be recognized as a Tree City USA community since XXXX. To qualify as a Tree City USA <br />community, you must meet four standards established by the Arbor Day Foundation and the National Association of <br />State Foresters. <br />These standards were established to ensure that every qualifying community would have a viable tree management <br />program and that no community would be excluded because of size. <br />Standard 1 - A Tree Board or Department <br />Someone must be legally responsible for the care of all trees on city- or town -owned property. By delegating tree <br />care decisions to a professional forester, arborist city department, citizen -led tree board or some combination, <br />city leaders determine who will perform necessary tree work. <br />The public <br />will also know who is <br />accountable for <br />decisions that impact community trees. Often, both professional <br />staff and an advisory tree board <br />are established, <br />which is a good goal for most communities. <br />The City of Mounds View relies on trained Parks Department resources, contracted professional foresters and/or <br />arborists for tree care decisions. The Mounds View Parks, Recreation and Forestry Commission ... <br />Standard 2 - A Tree Care Ordinance <br />A basic public tree care ordinance forms the foundation of a city's tree care program. It provides an opportunity <br />to set good policy and back it with the force of law when necessary. <br />A key section of a qualifying ordinance is one that establishes the tree board or forestry department —or both — <br />and gives one of them the responsibility for public tree care (as reflected in Standard 1). It should also assign the <br />task of crafting and implementing a plan of work or for documenting annual tree care activities. <br />The City of Mounds View defines tree management requirements and guidelines through multiple chapters <br />within the City Code. <br />Standard 3 - A Community Forestry Program with an Annual Budget of at Least $2 Per Capita <br />City trees provide many benefits —clean air, clean water, shade and beauty to name a few —but they also require <br />an investment to remain healthy and sustainable. By providing support at or above the $2 per capita minimum, a <br />community demonstrates its commitment to grow and tend these valuable public assets. Budgets and <br />expenditures require planning and accountability, which are fundamental to the long-term health of the tree <br />canopy and the Tree City USA program. <br />To meet this standard each year, the community must document at least $2 per capita toward the planting, care <br />and removal of city trees —and the planning efforts to make those things happen. At first this may seem like an <br />impossible barrier to some communities. <br />The City of Mounds View budgets ... <br />Standard 4 - An Arbor Day Observance and Proclamation <br />An effective program for community trees would not be complete without an annual Arbor Day ceremony. <br />Citizens join together to celebrate the benefits of community trees and the work accomplished to plant and <br />maintain them. By passing and reciting an official Arbor Day proclamation, public officials demonstrate their <br />support for the community tree program and complete the requirements for becoming a Tree City USA! <br />The City of Mounds View observes Arbor Day planting trees on City owned property <br />Source: https://www.arborday.org/programs/treecityusa/standards.cfm <br />