Students, Volunteers, Plant 50 Trees on Campus
Irvine, Calif.
(Nov. 19, 2010) - The University of California, Irvine today helped the
Arbor Day Foundation and Toyota celebrate the positive impact Tree
Campus USA is having on college campuses across the United States. As a
way to commemorate the program's success, the Arbor Day Foundation and
Toyota teamed up with students and volunteers to plant trees on the
school's campus.
In the second year of the program, Tree Campus
USA has more than doubled as 74 colleges and universities across the
United States earned recognition, including UC Irvine. The Arbor Day
Foundation began Tree Campus USA with support from Toyota to recognize
colleges and universities that practice sound campus forestry.
The
aim of the program is to honor college campuses for promoting healthy
urban forest management and engaging the campus community in
environmental stewardship. Since its inception, Tree Campus USA has been
supported by $1.3 million in grants from Toyota.
To celebrate
the program's success and reach in just two short years, the Arbor Day
Foundation and Toyota are holding tree-planting events on six college
campuses this fall. In addition to UC Irvine, Tree Campus USA
tree-planting events will also be held at Bowling Green State
University; Creighton University; The Georgia Institute of Technology;
Florida International University; and Furman University.
During
the event, students and volunteers at UC Irvine planted 75 trees in
Aldrich Park, which is located in the center of campus. Aldrich Park is a
19-acre botanical garden and arboretum that is heavily used by the
campus community. The park provides a respite for students and faculty,
attracts wildlife and helps with the heat island effect in the city
campus. The trees planted in the park will add to the species diversity
in this urban forest.
"In our view, there's no better way to
celebrate the achievements of Tree Campus USA than to plant trees with
students on beautiful college campuses like the University of
California, Irvine," said John Rosenow, chief executive and founder of
the Arbor Day Foundation. "By encouraging students to get involved with
conservation efforts on campus, UC Irvine is helping the next generation
of tree planters see firsthand that a landscape can be transformed and a
community improved by the simple act of giving back to the earth."
In
order to become a Tree Campus USA community, schools are required to
meet five core standards of tree care and community engagement. Those
standards are: establishing a campus tree advisory committee; evidence
of a campus tree-care plan; verification of dedicated annual
expenditures on the campus tree plan; involvement in an Arbor Day
observance; and the institution of a service-learning project aimed at
engaging the student body.
UC Irvine was recently named a Tree Campus USA university for 2010.
More information about the Tree Campus USA program is available at www.arborday.org/TreeCampusUSA.
[Source] http://pressroom.toyota.com/pr/tms/arbor-day-foundation-and-toyota-179419.aspx