TREEKEEPERS OF WASHINGTON COUNTY

PORTLAND, Oregon, 97225-5368 United States

Mission Statement

Our mission is to expand the knowledge of local residents about how to best enjoy and protect trees. We want to engage with local communities and advocate together to protect our existing trees. Join us in this effort to influence our county leadership and to convince elected officials to enact vital legal protections for trees. In many parts of urban unincorporated Washington County, large trees and groves are being removed during development. A healthy urban forest canopy provides significant benefits such as cooling our temperatures, absorbing pollution, soaking up rain that causes flooding, and other benefits. Our goal is to show that trees and housing developments CAN and should coexist, and there are already examples around us. Join our movement to protect trees!

About This Cause

What We Do: - Communicate with developers and the Washington County Commissioners about the value of keeping large trees. - Inventory street trees, so we know what we currently have. - Follow housing developments to see what’s planned for tree protection or destruction. - Build communities of tree allies in Washington County. - Provide educational materials about the cost benefits and climate mitigation benefits of existing trees. - Provide a clearing house of information about urban trees. Why Protect Existing Trees? Planting trees is a great thing to do, but little trees don’t store as much carbon as mature trees. They won’t make much of a difference for two or three decades. Letting existing trees and forests grow is essential to any climate goal we have. As trees get older, they absorb more carbon every year. Washington County's current tree protection policy is unclear and nearly non-existent. Our goal is to stand with our community to influence decisions that will protect existing trees. To meet our climate goals, we have to make changes now. We know the many benefits of trees. Many researchers believe that preserving our existing mature forests will be one of the best ways to slow global warming in the coming decades. In many parts of urban unincorporated Washington County, large trees and groves are being removed to enable development. They are replaced with smaller species that fit on small lots and narrow parking lots. This is the opposite of what needs to happen to meet our tree canopy goals. An adequate urban forest canopy would mean significant benefits such as cooling our temperatures, absorbing pollution, soaking up rain that causes flooding, and other benefits. Washington County is one of the last places in the Portland Metro area that does not have regulations to protect trees in its urban unincorporated areas, despite a clear need and years of community requests for protections. Strong tree protections are critical for our county’s environmental and community health, and to increase our ability to adapt to climate change. Our goal is to show that trees and housing developments CAN coexist, and there are already examples around us! Help us protect existing trees in Washington County Washington County's current tree protection policy is subtle, subjective, and nearly non-existent. Many efforts have been made by the recognized community groups (CPOs) of Washington County as well as City Planners to request the protection of our trees and natural resources. Washington County is the only jurisdiction in the Willamette Valley with no specific protection for existing trees. Knowing this, our goal is to provide guidance for the community to assert influence on decisions within political, economic, and social institutions to protect existing trees.

TREEKEEPERS OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
10940 Sw Barnes Road Box #285
PORTLAND, Oregon 97225-5368
United States
Phone (503) 310-1560
Unique Identifier 883552265