​Cowtown is partnering with the Texas Trees Foundation, which helped Dallas create its plan, unveiled last year. Photo by Julie Thibodeaux.

May 18, 2022

Cowtown wants to take stock of its trees.

The Fort Worth City Council announced plans this week to partner with the Texas Trees Foundation in creating the city’s first Urban Forestry Master Plan.

The benefits of urban trees are well known — they not only provide the oxygen we breathe, they can cool temperatures by 10 degrees, clean the air of pollutants, reduce crime and just make us happier, according to studies.

While Dallas beat out Fort Worth by unveiling its urban forest master plan last year, Cowtown has reached some pioneering green milestones over the years.

Fort Worth is the oldest and longest-running Tree City USA in Texas, a designation the city first received in 1978. It hired its first city forester, Raymond Morrison, in 1926. It created a wildlife sanctuary in 1964 that later became the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge, which at 3,600 acres is one of the largest city-owned nature centers in the U.S.

And while Dallas established its Open Space program in 1977, just this month, Fort Worth voters approved a $15 million bond proposition for its Open Space conservation program, created in 2019. 

“Taking the initiative to create a Fort Worth Urban Forestry Master Plan is a perfect next step in our efforts to protect cherished natural amenities that residents will enjoy for generations to come,”said Mayor Mattie Parker.

The city’s Development Services Department and Texas Trees Foundation will lead planning efforts to engage community stakeholders, developers and forestry experts. The comprehensive report will evaluate current urban forest resources and city policies and ordinances relative to the urban forest, recommend appropriate strategies to sustain and enhance the urban forest, and provide methods to measure progress while addressing the numerous urban forestry elements throughout Fort Worth now and in the future.

Several elements of the plan will include identifying strategic partners interested in investing in the growth of the urban forest, identifying priority planting and preservation areas, reassessing the current citywide tree canopy goal, and recommending amendments to the Urban Forestry Ordinance.

Several elements of the plan will include identifying strategic partners interested in investing in the growth of the urban forest, identifying priority planting and preservation areas, reassessing the current citywide tree canopy goal, and recommending amendments to the Urban Forestry Ordinance.

“Our Foundation has a vision of creating a cleaner, greener, cooler and healthier Texas. For 40 years we have focused our mission on impacting the city of Dallas, and we are delighted to now be branching out into the city of Fort Worth to spotlight the importance of urban forestry and tree benefits,” said Janette Monear, CEO of Texas Trees Foundation. “Trees are a vital pillar of a healthy community and we are looking forward to working alongside the city of Fort Worth and our funding partners to build an Urban Forest Master Plan that will leave a green legacy for generations to come.”

Increased planning initiatives surrounding urban forestry in the city has been championed by Mayor Pro Tem Gyna Bivens due to the recent, illegal clear-cutting of trees in the Cross Timbers Region, located east of I-35W. The region consists of a large area with ancient, drought-stressed and slow-growing trees, many of which predate not only statehood, but also the birth of the United States.

“The east side of Fort Worth has experienced instances of devastating tree loss, and it is absolutely incumbent upon us as City Council to ensure responsible development and look for every opportunity to enhance urban forest preservation,” Bivens said. “I am glad to put my wholehearted support behind the creation of a Fort Worth Urban Forestry Master Plan to ensure we are achieving those goals now and into the future.”

Along with the city’s $50,000 contribution utilizing Tree Fund Collections, the Texas Trees Foundation will bring a minimum of $250,000 to the project, which will come from a combination of partnerships and donations by organizations like Wells Fargo, Atmos Energy, Texas Trees Foundation and the Fort Worth-based Nicholas Martin Jr. Family Foundation.

Along with the city’s $50,000 contribution utilizing Tree Fund Collections, the Texas Trees Foundation will bring a minimum of $250,000 to the project, which will come from a combination of partnerships and donations by organizations like Wells Fargo, Atmos Energy, Texas Trees Foundation and the Fort Worth-based Nicholas Martin Jr. Family Foundation.

“Wells Fargo is committed to demonstrating leadership among financial institutions in sustainability, and believes that climate change is one of the most urgent environmental and social issues of our time,” said Wells Fargo’s North Texas Regional Banking Director Scott Wallace. “We are honored to support the Texas Trees Foundation and their important work that aligns with our commitment to help transition to a low-carbon economy and minimize society’s environmental footprint.”

“Our partnership with the Texas Trees Foundation and the City of Fort Worth aligns with Atmos Energy’s commitment to fueling safe and thriving communities by investing in a safe and healthy environment for all,” said Chris Felan, Atmos Energy vice president of rates and regulatory affairs. “We are committed to helping the City of Fort Worth thrive and create a strategic roadmap for sustainable and safe forestry management and we are honored to help sponsor the development of this historic urban forest plan.”

Nick K. Martin, representative of the Nicholas Martin Jr. Family Foundation, also applauded the program.

“Much like a Land Use plan guides city planning and future development, we hope that a research-driven Urban Forest Master Plan will help facilitate a more efficient, effective and consistent decision-making process for the entire community, including city officials, nonprofits, developers and homeowners alike,” said Martin.

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