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Tree-planting efforts questioned 1 year after highly destructive derecho storm | CBC News

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Some critics say the city isn’t doing enough to get replacement trees in the ground a year after a derecho windstorm destroyed thousands of trees across Ottawa, and after Mayor Mark Sutcliffe campaigned on a promise to plant a million in his term.

In a typical year the city plants about 100,000 trees. They cool urban heat deserts, shade houses and sequester carbon, and they increase property values and improve quality of life, among other benefits.

A panel of four people sitting at a table.
Mark Sutcliffe speaks during a mayoral debate on the environment last fall. (Patrick Louiseize/CBC)

Sutcliffe said during last year’s election campaign that he would get 250,000 trees planted annually.

In 2023, his first full year in office, the city will continue to plant somewhere around 100,000.

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The routine figure — a year after what the city repeatedly describes as “the most significant weather-related forest disturbance in decades” — disappoints Paul Johanis, chair of the Greenspace Alliance of Canada’s Capital.

He’s not surprised, though.

“There were no extra dollars in the budget this year for forestry. So it’s hard to, you know, solve that conundrum,” Johanis said.

An overhead view of an urban forest.
A comparison of satellite imagery from 2018 and CBC drone footage of Hazeldean Woods from May 17, 2023. The city planted about 3,500 saplings in Hazeldean Woods last fall. In total, it planted about 90,000 across the city in 2022. (Google Earth/CBC News)

The forestry budget increased by 3.5 per cent from last year, to a little over $27 million. In comparison, the city’s entire operating budget increased by about nine per cent from 2022, and Canada’s rate of inflation from over the past year was 4.4 per cent.

Angela Keller-Herzog, executive director of Community Associations for Environmental Sustainability Ottawa, said it’s going to take “a serious effort” to restore canopy after increasingly powerful and frequent storms.

“I think that we need a big push from the mayor,” she said.

“As far as I’m concerned, it’s time to sit down at the table and roll up our sleeves and start making much more concrete plans and allocating resources.”

A snapped tree trunk in a clearing of trees.
Hazeldean Woods as seen earlier this week. The city will start developing a tree-planting strategy later this year. (Felix Desroches/CBC)

The city lost more than 2,500 trees in parks and right of ways in front of houses, which doesn’t take into account the many tens of thousands destroyed or cut down in forested areas, hedgerows, ravines and other treed places, which the city doesn’t count individually.

Exactly how much tree cover was lost isn’t yet known. Detailed scans of the entire National Capital Region began shortly after the derecho, but the analysis isn’t expected until late 2023, according to Jason Pollard, a section manager with the city’s forestry department.

It’ll show the change to the canopy expressed as a percentage. In 2017, the last time the survey was done, about 31 per cent of city-owned land was covered in trees.

The goal is 40 per cent.

Tree-planting strategy to come

To get more canopy, the city is developing a tree-planting strategy later this year. The strategy will be added “to slowly make a difference in terms of increasing the numbers of trees planted and increase our tree canopy,” Pollard said, adding trees incrementally over time.

A woman stands on a residential street.
Angela Keller-Herzog, executive director of Community Associations for Environmental Sustainability Ottawa, says more transparency, monitoring and data about trees is needed from the city. (Reno Patry/CBC)

It’ll include a review of existing tree-planting programs such as Trees in Trust, in which residents apply to the city to have trees planted on right of ways in exchange for watering them.

Since the derecho, 251 trees have been planted through Trees in Trust.

Keller-Herzog doesn’t think it’s enough, and hopes the city will find ways to more proactively help residents.

“There is a lot of unharnessed positive energy in communities in terms of identifying plantable spaces,” she said.

“It’s a matter of priorities and a matter of planning.”

A man in a baseball cap stands in front of downed trees.
‘We’re hopeful that we’re not into a regular pattern of these severe weather events, but currently we’re able to respond and we can slowly start to rebuild and replant trees to help our canopy recover,’ says Jason Pollard from the city. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

Pollard said there’s more work to come and responding to an event like the derecho takes time.

Staff “will be meticulous in terms of evaluating each and every site where disturbance occurred and looking to re-establish and replant trees,” he said.

When compared to the city’s other pressures, such as affordable housing, Johanis said tree canopy is a number one issue for community associations.

“We hear it everywhere, all the time, without even soliciting it,” he said.

“Whether it gets translated through council to action, we’ll see.”

A clearcut.
Pinhey Forest lost thousands of trees in the 2022 derecho. (Felix Desroches/CBC)

In an emailed statement, Sutcliffe didn’t answer questions about his campaign promise to plant one million trees.

Instead, the mayor wrote he’s working on the tree-planting strategy with city staff, and engaging community groups, businesses, partners and schools to organize tree-planting events and volunteer will be an “important” piece.

“This not only instills a sense of pride and accomplishment within our community but also [ensures] that the knowledge and passion for environmental stewardship are passed down to future generations,” Sutcliffe wrote.

An overhead view of an urban forest.
A comparison of Google Earth satellite imaging from 2018 and CBC drone footage of Pinhey Forest taken on May 17, 2023. (Google Earth/CBC News)

National Capital Commission

As for its lands, the National Capital Commission (NCC) said it’s still in initial stages of recovery, and it’s “too early to provide specific details about the derecho cleanup and subsequent steps.”

Johanis said he thinks that’s an indication of how “overwhelmed” and “swamped” the commission is.

“I think this is a very, very big hit on their holdings, and even though the Greenbelt and managing and conserving it is part of their activity, they have other … higher priorities,” he said.

“Our big concern is that this will lead, at some point, to disposal of some NCC lands because they can’t manage them.”

For more images of the derecho’s aftermath, browse this photo gallery:

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