Free Trees Help You Fight Climate Change (and Make Your Yard Even Nicer)
The City of Los Angeles has just appointed its first urban forester to spearhead a campaign to add 90,000 trees to the city’s landscape by 2021, in an effort to combat the effects of climate change and improve air and water quality. Fortunately, you don’t have to live in L.A. to take advantage of an offer for free trees—many municipalities and nonprofits across the West are offering them up to mitigate air pollution and the urban heat island effect.
Adding greenery to urban areas isn’t just a matter of environmental importance—it’s a critical social justice concern. Even before wildfires became a perennial threat in California, the effects of air pollution have been particularly high in low-income neighborhoods and communities of color, where highways, busy streets, and polluting industries tend to be sited; as a result, black and brown children suffer significantly higher rates of asthma than their white peers. Planting trees is an easy and low-cost solution with lasting benefits, one that is being implemented more and more throughout the West.
Whether you live in a highly polluted area, want to increase your home’s value (while decreasing your cooling costs), or just want to make your yard look nice, planting trees is just a good thing to do, period. Here’s where to find trees for your street and yard, without having to spend a dime of your own money:
Washington
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- The City of Seattle’s Trees for Neighborhoods program
- The City of Spokane’s Neighborhood Tree Program
- The City of Tacoma doesn’t have free trees, but its department of urban forestry offers a $30 coupon toward the purchase of trees
- The City of Vancouver’s Yard Tree Giveaway program
Oregon
- City of Portland‘s Department of Urban Forestry offers up to two free trees per household for Portland residents
- Planting throughout the Willamette Valley and Greater Portland area (including Southwest Washington), Friends of Trees works on a sliding scale to plant street trees free of charge to to people who can’t afford them (people can pay up to $35 for a tree)
- City of Tigard‘s Free Trees to Beautify Your Block
- Lane County Department of Public Works offers a tree voucher program
California
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- City of Glendale‘s Tree Power Program
- The City of Los Angeles Department of Environment and Sanitation will plant a tree on your property for free. City Plants also offers free yard and street trees.
- Trees for Oakland offers help finding free shade trees for residents of disadvantaged communities
- City of Oxnard is offering free fruit trees to residents with the specific goal of combatting air pollution. Priority neighborhoods are Tierra Vista, Mar Vista, Five Points Northeast, Rose Park, La Colonia, and Cabrillo.
- The City of Sacramento‘s Sacramento Shade Program offers up to TEN free trees per household
- The City of Salinas will purchase and plant a tree on your property, free of charge through their Adopt-a-Tree program
- San Francisco‘s Friends of the Urban Forest offers free trees, and we already put together a list of specimens particularly suited to the area.
- The Woodland Tree Foundation