Citizen Portal
Sign In

Get AI Briefings, Transcripts & Alerts on Local & National Government Meetings — Forever.

Akron committee advances package to plant 1,800 trees and expand proactive maintenance

Akron City Council committee meetings (Parks & Recreation; Public Service, Public Utilities & Green; Public Safety) · April 28, 2026
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Public Service Committee put on consent a package of ordinances to plant roughly 1,800 trees (900 spring, 900 fall), remove dead/diseased trees, and fund trimming to improve lighting and safety; funding sources cited include the Sewer Capital Fund (for CSO-related replanting) and the Street Lighting Assessment for trimming.

The Public Service, Public Utilities & Green Committee advanced a set of ordinances on consent that together expand the city's tree program: authorizing planting of about 1,800 trees this year (900 in spring and 900 in fall), authorizing removal of dead or diseased trees on city land and right-of-way, and approving a trimming program intended to improve structure, visibility and street-light function.

Service Director Chris Lotto told the committee the tree-planting ordinance funds approximately 1,800 trees and that the city has a long-standing commitment to replace two trees for every tree removed during capital projects. Lotto described a mix of species selected for the program (including dogwood, redbud, crab apple, hawthorn, yellowwood, serviceberry and ornamental cherry) and said the plantings will contribute roughly 12 canopy acres; he added the city’s canopy is about 37% and the goal is to exceed 40%.

On funding, Councilperson Fran Wilson noted the capital budget line items and asked whether the Sewer Capital Fund contributes because of the combined-sewer-overflow (CSO) program; Lotto confirmed CSO-related tree removals are funded through the sewer fund and those funds are used to replant in other locations. Wilson also noted $600,000 in the capital budget for trimming funded via the Street Lighting Assessment (SLA), which Lotto said is used when trimming improves street-light function.

Lotto described the removal ordinance as a proactive hazard-reduction effort for dead or diseased trees, and said trimming targets code obstructions, low hanging branches and sight-line issues. Committee members moved each item to the consent calendar; all were advanced with 'Aye' votes and will go to full council on the consent calendar.