Students, Volunteers, Plant 50 Trees in Sweetwater
Miami, Fla.
(Nov. 19, 2010) - The Honors College at Florida International University
today helped the Arbor Day Foundation and Toyota celebrate the positive
impact Tree Campus USA is having on college campuses across the United
States. As a way to commemorate the program's success, the Arbor Day
Foundation and Toyota teamed up with students and volunteers to plant
trees in the school's hometown of Sweetwater.
In the second year
of the program, Tree Campus USA has more than doubled as 74 colleges
and universities across the United States earned recognition, including
Florida International. The Arbor Day Foundation began Tree Campus USA
with support from Toyota to recognize colleges and universities that
practice sound campus forestry.
The aim of the program is to
honor college campuses for promoting healthy urban forest management and
engaging the campus community in environmental stewardship. Since its
inception, Tree Campus USA has been supported by $1.3 million in grants
from Toyota.
To celebrate the program's success and reach in
just two short years, the Arbor Day Foundation and Toyota are holding
tree-planting events on six college campuses this fall. In addition to
FIU, Tree Campus USA tree-planting events will also be held at Bowling
Green State University; Creighton University; The Georgia Institute of
Technology; the University of California, Irvine; and Furman University.
During
the event, students and volunteers at Florida International planted 50
trees adjacent to the school's main campus. The trees were planted in
Linear Park along the 8th Street Canal at a major access point for the
campus. The trees will provide shade for students who use the access
route as they commute to campus or study along the canal, and will help
beautify the main campus entrance.
"In our view, there's no
better way to celebrate the achievements of Tree Campus USA than to
plant trees with students on beautiful college campuses like Florida
International University," said John Rosenow, chief executive and
founder of the Arbor Day Foundation. "By encouraging students to get
involved with conservation efforts on campus, FIU is helping the next
generation of tree planters see firsthand that a landscape can be
transformed and a community improved by the simple act of giving back to
the earth."
In order to become a Tree Campus USA community,
schools are required to meet five core standards of tree care and
community engagement. Those standards are: establishing a campus tree
advisory committee; evidence of a campus tree-care plan; verification of
dedicated annual expenditures on the campus tree plan; involvement in
an Arbor Day observance; and the institution of a service-learning
project aimed at engaging the student body.
Florida International University has been named a Tree Campus USA university for two years.
More information about the Tree Campus USA program is available at www.arborday.org/TreeCampusUSA.
[Source] http://pressroom.toyota.com/pr/tms/arbor-day-foundation-and-toyota-179417.aspx