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Conservation board advances work on revised tree law and Tree City USA application
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Summary
Board members discussed a revised town tree law, steps for a Tree City USA application and immediate tasks for Arbor Day; they agreed to gather municipal tree-management data and invite parks/highway staff to a follow-up meeting to meet application requirements.
The Grand Island Conservation Advisory Board spent a large portion of its April 23 meeting advancing a revised tree law and preparing a Tree City USA application, highlighting that the application requires documented budget and tree-management statistics before submission.
A committee member explained that the town's revised tree law has been through multiple versions and that the town board has provided feedback on a version the advisory board did not expect. "If there's not an interest in passing it, then I wouldn't wanna contribute too much more time to a Tree City application," the member said, urging clarity on the ordinance before committing volunteer time to the application.
Members reviewed Tree City USA requirements including a legally-recognized tree board, documented annual budget and metrics for trees planted, pruned and removed. One member recited figures from the guidance: a per-capita budget benchmark (discussed as about $22 per person) and deadlines for DEC review ahead of Arbor Day/Foundation timelines. The board agreed to request records from parks and highway departments on past tree planting and maintenance and to invite staff (including Jim Sedita and Tom Cicero, names referenced in discussion) to a short follow-up (meeting or Zoom) to gather the required data.
Why it matters: Achieving Tree City USA recognition and passing a clear tree law would require the town to document its tree-management practices and budget commitments; board members said this can bring visibility and grant-eligibility but will require staff cooperation.
What happens next: Board members will: (1) gather line-item expenditure and tree-management data from parks and highway departments; (2) invite parks/highway staff to a future meeting or Zoom to review application questions and how the community forestry management plan is being used; and (3) refine the proposed ordinance for town-board consideration.
Quotes: "They want the number — how many trees did you plant? How many did you remove? How many did you prune?" a committee member said of application questions. "You gotta be serious about these things," the speaker added of the application process.
Provenance: Discussion and application details appear between SEG 1228 and SEG 1912.

