Hundreds of communities around the country will share more than $1 billion in federal money to help them plant and maintain trees under a federal program that is intended to reduce extreme heat, benefit health and improve access to nature.
U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack will announce the $1.13 billion in funding for 385 projects at an event Thursday morning in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The tree plantings efforts will be focused on marginalized areas in all 50 states as well as Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and some tribal nations.
“We believe we can create more resilient communities in terms of the impacts of climate,” Vilsack told reporters in previewing his announcement. “We think we can mitigate extreme heat incidents and events in many of the cities.”
Better keep an eye on any planted too close to a movie studio.
This is pretty awesome. I’d love to see more projects like this!
Nice but it’s a band-aid.
Prevent the storage of heat in cities.
- metal roofs
- light colors (aka No Black)
White, specifically.
I want to start seeing this stuff on buildings: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDRnEm-B3AI
tldw: ultra white meta material paint that reflects infrared into space at a frequency that doesn’t get absorbed by the atmosphere.
I think they needed to do that years ago.
Or not cut existing ones down.
I spent 30 years in Brisbane which has the most green space of any city in the world. My asthma cleared up 3 years after moving there.
I mean, good I guess, but planting a few trees where millions used to grow seems counterintuitive.
Oh, so we do nothing? Yeah, let’s just wait it out until someone magically invents some perfect solution that we can implement all at once.
Or… we chip away at the issue until it gets solved. Lots and lots of small fixes that add up… just like how lots and lots of small problems caused the issue in the first place.
It’s passed time to chip away at it. That was 30 years ago. The solution is to stop buying, but even you hopeful fools won’t give up your things and conveniences.
Plant your trees.
“The best time to plant a tree was twenty years ago. The second best is now.”
What’s the alternative? There isn’t space for everyone to live in a cottage in the woods. Cities are great for density of people leaving more land to be forests. And I’d love it if cities encouraged and protected natural biome parks, especially cities that were once forested. But also this is the first step that can lead to urban forests