Green Enhances Growth
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Read first few paragraphs of article:
What's big, green, and disappearing? In many communities the
answer is trees. New development, old age, careless cutting,
gypsy moths, utility companies, highway departments, and other
culprits are all combining to slowly strip our communities of
trees.
For the most part people care about trees. As a result, tree
preservation and planting have become hot issues in communities
across the U.S. and Canada. Hundreds of places, both big and
small, have established urban greening and street tree planting
programs. For example, Lakeland, Florida, has been planting over
one thousand trees per year since 1990. A Houston, Texas, based
nonprofit, "Trees for Houston," has used private donations and
corporate funding to plant tens of thousands of street trees
throughout the sprawling city. Dozens of other big cities have
done the same. Likewise the National Arbor Day Foundation and
American Forest's "Global ReLeaf" program have helped hundreds
of small towns start tree planting programs.
While the simple act of planting trees can have a profound
long-range impact on a community and its inhabitants, until
relatively recently the idea of protecting existing trees
through local tree preservation ordinances was rare. As recently
as 1984, the University of Pennsylvania could identify only one
hundred communities nationwide with tree protection laws. But
today, tree protection ordinances are sprouting up all over the
country. In California and Florida alone almost two hundred
communities now have city tree ordinances. Nor are they confined
to big urban states. New laws can now be found in virtually
every state from Mississippi to Missouri.
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