Category Archives: tree benefit

Back to the Forest Conference CUFC 10

Registration is now Open!

Please Check the Site and Register at  http://www.cufc10.ca/

Tree Canada and the City of London, in partnership with the Ontario Urban Forest Council and the Society of Municipal Arborists, is hosting the 10th Canadian Urban Forest Conference in London, Ontario October 2nd – 4th.
London, The Forest City, has a long history of progressive and innovative forest management.  With over 80% of Canadians living in urban areas, London will provide a focus for Canadian urban forest practices and allow a dialogue with professional and community groups on urban forest strategies, policies,technologies and management practices.

With an international airport and direct train links to Toronto, London The Forest City, has a long history of progressive and innovative forest management.  With over 80% of Canadians living in urban areas, London is excited to provide a focus for Canadian urban forest practices, while allowing for a dialogue with professional and community groups on urban forest strategies, policies, technologies and management practices.

 Program and Conference details will be updated at. www.cufc10.ca.

 The conference will include:

  •  A strategic urban forest workshop and quality local, national and international presenters

  • Field tours of London’s urban forest and Canada’s unique Carolinian Forest

  • A banquet and gala event marking Tree Canada’s 20th anniversary

  • Networking and dialoguing opportunities with Canadian urban forest leaders

    EARLY REGISTRATION
    if received by JUNE 30, 2012 – 15% Discount
    on entire purchase

Waterloo Board Shade Policy Will Keep Schoolyards Cool

Board shade policy will keep schoolyards cool   January 26, 2012 21:01:00
 During these gloomy January days, it’s difficult to imagine the sun beating down on an uncomfortably hot schoolyard. But the time will come. And when it does, children in public schools will be a little better protected than they were before.

That’s because, in between the passionate debates about what time school should start and who should provide child care in schools, board trustees have quietly done something that’s just plain good sense. They passed a policy encouraging shade in schoolyards.

If you’ve been around one of those yards recently, you will notice that some have shaded areas (often thanks to parent volunteers who raised funds and watered saplings) and some don’t. And those yards that are just bare turf and asphalt are hostile environments for children.

Children have thinner, more sensitive skin than adults. A sunburn is more serious for them than it is for adults. An unshaded schoolyard can become so hot — some surfaces get to 92 degrees C — that students become miserable, stressed, and can hardly move. If that ground is shaded, the temperature is dramatically lowered and damage is also limited from harmful ultraviolet rays.

School board chair Catherine Fife is justifiably proud of the board’s policy, one of the first of its kind in the province. “A schoolyard is an extension of the classroom,” she said. You can’t stand in the classroom and teach children about the benefits of biodiversity, for example, while sending them out into a barren yard.

This policy “recognizes the importance of the provision of shade” in schools and encourages school councils to “develop school based greening solutions to address ongoing sun safety behaviours and shading initiatives.”

By having that as a policy, Fife said, it places the issue on the agenda. It’s an acknowledgement that resources are needed, and a message to the community that “this is a priority for us,” she said.

“I’m thrilled,” said Carol Moogk-Soulis, a Waterloo researcher who has spent many years measuring the temperature of Ontario schoolyards using satellite imagery. She found that some school grounds, with their asphalt parking lots, mowed grass, metal fences, and tar-and-chip roofs, can get so hot, they heat up the surrounding neighbourhood for up to 150 metres.

Moogk-Soulis said she will be watching the policy with interest as it unfolds.

What will be most interesting is the line in the report to trustees that says there are “no financial implications” in passing the policy.

In other words, there’s no extra money, right now, to help move the policy along and create more shade.

Trustee Harold Paisley, who chaired the committee that came up with the policy, said the board already has a limited budget for planting trees and shrubs. Almost all the school board’s income comes from the Ontario government, which is talking restraint. Much will depend on the generosity of corporate donations and the ingenuity of shade advocates and school councils.

That said, this move recognizes that the well-being of children goes hand in hand with their learning. It is a healthy beginning and deserves our support.

http://www.guelphmercury.com/opinion/columns/article/669109–on-growing-our-tree-canopy-don-t-miss-the-forest-for-the-trees

2011 Spreading Roots Conference Recap.

If you haven’t already done so please don’t miss our Summary of the 2011 Conference Spreading Roots in partnership with Toronto Botanical Gardens.  This will take you to the presentation links for speakers whose presentations have been made available.

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A History of Urban Forests in Ontario


Alternatives Journal article “Keepers”

We are pleased to share with you an article written by our very own Vice President Brenlee Robinson. “Keepers- New legislation allows you to designate heritage trees” was written for Alternatives Journal  http://www.alternativesjournal.ca/ December 2011 Issue 38.1  Alternatives Journal, Canada’s national environmental magazine, delivers thoughtful analysis and intelligent debate on Canadian and world environmental issues, the latest news and ideas, as well as profiles of environmental leaders who are making a difference. Never predictable, always on the edge, the publication focuses on how we can move forward.  http://www.alternativesjournal.ca/

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