Council to Eliminate Tree Commission Tuesday
January 29, 2024
Davis’s 60 year old tradition come to an end
By Alan Hirsch, the Davis Lorax
Value seem to have changed: Tree Commission will likely be ended by City Council Tuesday
Tree advocacy & policy work will be subsumed into the Natural Resources Commission that will be renamed the “Climate and Environment Justice” commission. (Seems pollution and consumption of natural resources out of style).
The husk of the Tree Commission work will be retained in an ironically renamed “Tree Removal Commission.” per the staff memo summarizing one year of behind the scenes work by Josh Chapman and Bapu Vaitla.
This signals an historical shift in vaiues for Davis: The 60 year old Commission is one of oldest in city. It was founded 1963 as the “street tree committee”. Davis was a leader in municipal arboriculture at the time and was one of the first “Tree Cities” designated by the National Arbor Day Foundation. The city passed on of first Parking Lot Shade ordinance in the county (1979). This in not surprising as Davis , located next to the foremost arboricultural research universities in the world. LINK to tree history of Davis
However this move might also be seen as consistent with city management failure to enforce and update the Code section 37 Tree Protection Ordinance. It might also bode poorly for role of Trees in the proposed rewrite of the city general plan= the city planner failed to put enforceable promises about tree in the recently approve Downtown Plan despite much input form public, Tree Davis, and the Commission.
This move was a surprise to the Commission members, so seem not to have been surveyed. Deputy City manager Kelly Stachowicz share this likely decision with Tree Commission for the first time on Friday at 5pm council.
The council agenda item on this and elimination of two other commission will be heard 7:20 pm or later: Member of public can attend or call in their thought (2 minute) Tuesday between Noon and 4 Tuesday 530-757-5693. https://documents.cityofdavis.org/Media/Default/Documents/PDF/CityCouncil/CouncilMeetings/Agendas/2024/2024-01-30/05-Commissions-Subcommittee-Recommendations.pdf
Thoughts of the Lorax based on my attending 14 years of tree commissions meetings;
- It seems to me; elimination of the Tree Commission subverts Urban Forest Master Plan (UFMP) call for more community participation.
- Bodes poor for Trees in the General Plan: We all can remember Trees were not including in the DT Plan other than with platitudes and unenforceable promises.
- Reflects current Culture of city hall staff relative to citizen participation: Peter Drucker said: “Culture eat strategy for breakfast.”
UNPACKING
- I have long though there needs to be a rethinking of commissions structure and specifically the role of Tree Commission. See this article I wrote almost exactly a year ago: Rethinking Our Failing Davis City Processes How can we build more durable consensuses?
- UFMP: How is elimination of the Tree Commission (TC) consistent with the $250K Urban Forest Master Plan (UFMP) we just completed?
- Decrease Community Engagement with Tree. Most of us have thought city recommitment to urban forest involved more community involvement, not just adding one person to small staff of 5 managing over 30,000 trees. We can learn from history about the effect of the subsuming of tree Commission into the Natural Resource Commission. About 8 years back the Bike Commission was combined with the Traffic, Parking and Street Safety Commission Is now BTSSC. Bike commissioner members were all enthusiastic ats time, but for the first 12 month this combined commission had not a single bike item on its agenda-- staff control the agenda recall. The amount of attention to bike/active mode has dramatically declined from before the new combined commission.
- This reorganization likely signals diminished role of trees for the new General Plan rewrite. City Council did not put tree in the DT Plan building code despite many letters from many stakeholders. And council has failed to follow up on promise to remedy this in a separate DT tree plan. With elimination of Tree Commission this bodes poorly for anything more than unenforceable platitudes in a new General Plan.
- How will UFMP be assured of implementation with ending of consistent accountability & visibility . There are ~120 goals in UFMP to do over the next 40 years yet there is no 3- or 5-year plan milestones - so where is the mechanism for accountability the UFMP will ever be implement? We are now moving toward an “urban Forest czar” model like in most cities; their actions are largely invisible to public only the city manager see it. This relegates trees to feel god performative plantings. We need policies to grow and protect tree, not just plant them.
- Good Intents won’t counterbalance lack of check and balance: Urban Forester Charlie Murphy has good intentions, but his action will be invisible and beholding to city manager as tree stakeholders will no longer have a seat at the table --- i.e. the UFMP will likely go the way of similar plan in cities like Woodland. Developments also will proceed without proper consideration of tree. The Sutter Hospital tree debacle was caused by City management short cutting public process. just like city decision to allow removal 50 tree at Cannery (50 people show up at council one night to complain night). Expedient decisions on trees are made behind closed door by top city management who override the city arborist and wave fines when trees are cut illegally. The decision like to lack of trees in DT plan and failure to enforce tree ordinance will go unnoticed without a Tree Commission who are consistently involved and charged with “speaking for the trees”.
- Signals Participation and Expertise of Community Not Appreciated: Our city has a wealth of expertise on Tree as we are sight next to one of foremost arboricultural research institute in the world, yet this has never been used by the city. And when It is, it is ignored: A grad students have contract do to research paper on tree protection ordinance (2012) but this was ignored. There have been hundreds of volunteer hour put in by the TC members – in three different attempts (2015 2017,2021) -- to revise the tree ordinance- All were all ignored by top- city management and set to council even for feedback.
- Davis City Hall Culture override UFMP and Council City Tree Promises Maybe this proposal is just making it official: the onoy consistent role I have seen for Tree Commission only role consistently used by city staff over my 15 year was as the “Tree Removal Commission.” This, ironically, is the only husk of the now 60-year-old commission (founded 1963) that is being retained. LINK to history:
Save the Trees!!! (Commission)
Posted by: Alan C Miller | January 29, 2024 at 11:35 PM
I wonder if the "Tree Removal Commission" will recommend that we remove the trees on College Park above Russell so everyone can install rooftop solar and make the city "Greener" and for more "Climate and Environment Justice" (nobody knows what "Climate and Environment Justice" means but it sure sounds good)...
Posted by: South of Davis | January 30, 2024 at 08:21 AM
(nobody knows what "Climate and Environment Justice" means but it sure sounds good)...
It means that whenever a development or freeway expansion is proposed, both of those goals go out the window (e.g., DISC, I-80 expansion, and WDAAC's Davis-connected buyer's program).
I'm surprised that the council isn't proposing a new "Commission to Overturn Measure J".
Posted by: Ron O | January 30, 2024 at 10:28 AM
In response to South of Davis, please refer to the link below. Solar installations have plummeted more than 80% in recent months due to actions taken by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). Rooftop solar does in fact make the city greener, but it is unlikely that College Park or any other part of Davis is likely to see many installations in the foreseeable future.
https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2023-12-28/editorial-solar-installations-are-plummeting-and-california-regulators-are-to-blame
Posted by: George Galamba | January 30, 2024 at 01:43 PM
"Rooftop solar does in fact make the city greener,"
Greener than WHAT ?
Posted by: Alan C. Miller | January 30, 2024 at 02:36 PM
Alan needs to get with the program and "follow the science" if George and the companies that give money to politicians so they will get more taxpayer money for subsidized solar projects say that cutting down all the the trees in town will make us "greener" only "science deniers" (and the Lorax) will still say we will be "greener" with the trees than without them. Look how much "greener" Sutter Davis is without all those trees (some were not even "green" in the winter):
"Sutter Davis Hospital will be able to remove dozens of trees from its parking lot in order to install 11 solar canopies, thanks to a Davis City Council vote Tuesday night."
https://www.kcra.com/article/davis-city-council-votes-sutter-health-removing-trees-solar-panels/37684930
We all need to write the PUC and tell them that poor families in CA need to pay higher PG&E bills so rich families in Davis with solar panels on their million dollar homes can charge their Teslas for free.
Posted by: South of Davis | January 30, 2024 at 09:19 PM
>> We all need to write the PUC and tell them that poor families in CA need to pay higher PG&E bills <<
Using this familiar premise, last year the CPUC succeeded in gutting residential solar. And as I study PG&E rates in 2024, I can't find where the "poor families" have had their bills reduced. In fact I see nothing but cost increases that have happened since, plus unending increases to come.
I also see the destruction of an industry that gave us a less-polluting and more resilient energy system.... and now requires an almost 100% reliance on our utilities like back when energy was "great" in America.
Posted by: Darelldd | February 01, 2024 at 08:56 AM
The best part of Alan's "singing presentation" at the council (per the link he referenced) is the reaction of the guy in the background.
But I will say that it took some guts to get up there like that. Never let it be said that Alan M isn't willing to go "out on a limb" (tree pun intended).
Posted by: Ron O | February 01, 2024 at 09:42 AM
Darell: PG&E has had the CARE program to give reduced rates to the poor for years and has a new "percentage of income" program:
https://www.pge.com/en/account/billing-and-assistance/financial-assistance/percentage-of-income-payment-plan.htmll:
PG&E is also looking into making the "rich" pay more to help even more of the "poor":
https://patch.com/california/san-francisco/pg-e-pitches-new-bills-based-income-see-expected-fees-bay-area
P.S. My "PG&E Bill" last month was more than my Total Rent" in 1990...
Posted by: South of Davis | February 01, 2024 at 11:03 AM
The gutting of residential solar is this state's Golden Shame and Golden Sham. Gavin Newsom should pay, and the fact he may become President is a testament to how broken and corrupt our system is. Anyone who doesn't see Gavin's 'green in speech only but corrupt in action and sleezy in speech' from this one action, is not SEE-ing.
Posted by: Alan C. Miller | February 01, 2024 at 11:23 AM