It began in 1987 when a city
contracted tree-cutting crew wanted to remove two 75-year-old
ash trees from in front of Pepper Provenzano's home. Six trees
had been removed from the adjacent block a day earlier, cut
from the ground level, chopped up and hauled away.
Pepper called the City Forester and won a temporary reprieve
which later turned permanent but not before he learned that
most of Salt Lake City's trees were in declining condition
and the City Forester had only a five-man crew to handle 46,500
street trees. He also learned that about 800 trees must be
removed from public areas each year while only 400 can be
planted due to limited funds.
Pepper recognized a need for creating an organization dedicated
to urban forestry and the stewardship of trees. TreeUtah was
established on Arbor Day in April of 1989 through a proclamation
by then Salt Lake City mayor Palmer DePaulis. Pepper Provenzano
remains the Founding President of TreeUtah.
Help support TreeUtah's efforts by donating through our secure online Treebank.
Urban & Community Forestry: TreeUtah's Statewide Urban and Community Forestry program's purpose is to build public awareness and understanding of the needs and values of healthy community forests. We offer our services to individuals and communities throughout the State of Utah to help facilitate tree plantings in their cities and towns. In the Salt Lake Metropolitan Area, our MetroGreening initiative helps build partnerships among local communities, government programs and private enterprises to educate, collect data and plant trees.
Permaculture & Ecological Demonstration Garden: The Food Forest Ecological Demonstration Garden was created in 2006 in partnership with the Salt Lake City Parks Department and the Day-Riverside Library. The Eco-Garden was developed to facilitate education and skillbuilding within the community around the topic of urban sustainability. Community Members come together in creativity and productivity while learning ecological design concepts, water harvesting and organic gardening techniques as well as natural building skills.
Ecological Restoration: In cooperation with several partners, TreeUtah is responsible for the restoration and management of 119 acres of Jordan River floodplain. The purpose of the project is to restore and preserve migratory bird habitat along the Jordan River corridor. The restoration plan is designed to improve habitat for a broad variety of bird species through manipulation of site hydrology, control of exotic vegetation, and re-establishment of native trees and shrubs. Since November 1998, we have planted over 60,000 native seedlings on approximately 90 acres of the site. This has been made possible with the help of over 5000 volunteers that have dedicated over 50,000 hours of their time to this future woodland.