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LTC 407-2013 Tree City USA - 8 Year Anniversary MIAMIB OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER NO. LTC # Y _7 -a0 /3 LET ER TO COMMISSION TO: Mayor Matti Herrera Bower and embers of e City Commission FROM: Jimmy Morales, City Manager � o Fn DATE: November 13, 2013 SUBJECT: Tree City USA — 8 Year Anniver embers We are proud to inform you that the City of Miami Beach has once again received 8;e .� Tree City USA certification. This marks the eighth year that the City of Miami Beach has been awarded this designation. The Tree City USA program is sponsored by the National Arbor Day Foundation in cooperation with the National Association of State Foresters and the USDA Forest Service. The Tree City USA designation recognizes communities that have proven their commitment to a healthy urban forest and an effective urban forestry program. It honors the efforts of the elected officials, city staff and citizens who work to maintain and enhance the urban forest. To qualify for Tree City USA status a city must meet four standards: 1. A Tree Board or Department responsible for the care and management of the city's trees In Miami Beach, this responsibility resides in the Department of Parks & Recreation, Greenspace Management Division, Urban Forestry Program. The program is headed by Mark Williams, an International Society of Arboriculture Certified Arborist Municipal Specialist, member of the American Society of Consulting Arborists and Landscape Inspectors Association of Florida Certified Landscape Inspector. Four additional certified arborists in the Greenspace Management Division assist with monitoring and managing the City's trees, among other duties. 2. A Tree Care Ordinance In Miami Beach, Ordinance Number 2000 -3279 addresses tree care, maintenance and protection. 3. A Community Forestry Program with an Annual Budget of at Least $2 per Capita Miami Beach easily exceeded this standard with tree plantings under the Reforestation Program, which the City Commission authorized in 2007, tree plantings as part of CIP projects, and funds expended for tree maintenance, including salaries and equipment for a tree maintenance crew. 4. An Arbor Day Observance and Proclamation Each year the mayor proclaims a date in April as Arbor Day in Miami Beach. The Arbor Day celebrations, which always include tree planting, have usually been linked to larger events in order to bring our tree - friendly message to bigger crowds. In recent years the Arbor Day celebration has been associated with the Spring Eggstravaganza at North Shore Park, the Captain Planet Carnival at Flamingo Park, an ECOMB event at Marjory Stoneman Douglas Park, where volunteers planted 23 trees provided by the City, and most recently as part of the 2013 Earth Day event at Lummus Park featuring the Native Flags Eco -Art Project, designed by Xavier Cortada. Trees are a vital part of the city infrastructure, providing numerous environmental, economic and social benefits. Among the identified benefits are cleaner air, reduced energy usage, less storm water runoff, amelioration of high urban temperatures, higher property values, improved aesthetics, a greater sense of health and well- being, reduced anxiety levels, and lower crime rates. Being designated as a Tree City USA projects a positive image of Miami Beach, and tells visitors, convention organizers and prospective businesses that ours is a community that cares about a healthy environment and their quality of life. The designation supports those of our residents, who have worked so hard to ensure a vital urban forest, and encourages residents to plant trees and properly care for those they have. The Tree City USA designation also assists the city in obtaining grant money that is allocated for trees or urban forestry programs. Despite declining funds for urban forestry grants, the Urban Forestry Program has been awarded three Urban & Community Forestry grants since 2006. The grants assisted with tree planting, the removal and replacement of six hazardous Australian pines, the purchase of a water tanker truck to promote better water use efficiency and survival of newly planted trees, and the trimming of mature Mahogany trees on Alton Road. We are pleased to report to you that the City's Urban Forestry Program has planted over 147 trees and palms this past fiscal year and a total of 4,321 trees and palms since the inception of the program in F.Y. 2006 -07, utilizing designated funds earmarked towards the Urban Reforestation Program. This past year has had many challenges for o l r tree canopy, with an increased focus on proper maintenance practices and risk assessment. A tree inventory GIS project was started with the ultimate goal of uniquely identifying and categorizing every tree and palm on City owned or controlled property and ROW's. With this information we will gain a more complete understanding of the current state of our Urban Forest. Additional remedial structural pruning is scheduled for 161`' Calophyllum trees along Meridian Avenue as a continuation of the work originally performed in 2011 in relation to cold damage. Plea advise if there are additional questions. JM /MT R /JO /MW