Celebrating Arbor Week with plans for more urban forestation
NORTH BATTLEFORD, Sask. — As Arbor Week is celebrated across Saskatchewan this week, with Arbor Day on May 28, Battleford Mayor Ames Leslie said people may not realize just how much trees benefit the community on many levels.
“Municipalities have not done a good job to keep up with tree replacement,” he said. “They are essential for keeping our air clean and reducing our carbon footprint. We are all upset about the carbon tax. Trees are a significant consumer of carbon. They add beauty, [and] a lot of protection from wind, dust and sound for that matter within our communities. The more we can get out there and plant these trees, the better off our community will be in five [to] 20 years.”
The town is starting a number of projects this year that include adding more trees to the landscape.
Crews will be working on a project to plant a significant number of trees for a shelterbelt between Highway 4 South and the Battle Springs subdivision, located at the south end of Battleford, in response to area residents’ concerns about excessive wind and dust.