December 2022 1 65 Report
bonsoir, j'ai besoin de votre aide
The members of American Forests are reporting their thoughts on the Global Climate Action Summit. Their organization was etablished in 1875 and is devoted to the protection and restoration of forest ecosystems.
Last week, we attended the Global Climate Action Summit in San Francisco. Amid all the excitement, here are the perspectives of our staff members, each of whom played a huge role in acknowledging forests as a key player in climate change mitigation tactics.
Jad Daley, President & CEO: The Global Climate Action Summit represented a permanent and historic turning point for forest-climate solutions. In the past, forests were treated as a side issue, if at all. At this Summit, forests took center stage.
Rebecca Turner, Vice President and Chief of Staff, General Counsel: As a delegate to the proceedings of the Global Climate Action Summit, it was amazing to see the land sector, and forests specifically, take center stage. Forests are a key part of the solution to meeting the carbon reduction commitments set by the inter- national, state, local, private and NGO sectors. American Forests is ready, with our partners, to make this happen, from cities to wildland forests.
Eliza Kretzmann, Urban Forestry Manager: Planting trees in the Tenderloin was a high point – the neighborhood is teeming with life, including the challenge of many people experiencing homelessness. To help plant trees in and for the areas that need them most felt like the right thing to do on our 143rd birthday week – giving the gift of shade, cleaner air, and healthier communities.

We could not have done it without local groups – from the City of San Francisco to local tree groups and community groups like Friends of the Urban Forest and Safe Passage Tenderloin – and I am thankful for the rich partnerships and friendships we have in San Francisco.
Ian Leahy, Director of Urban Forestry: This week in San Francisco amplified the feeling I've had that people are waking up to urban forestry as a way to bring seemingly unwieldly problems, like inequality and climate change, to a scale where people can see impacts and progress where they live. Mayor London Breed, Senator Scott Wiener, and Assembly member Eduardo Garcia had many options this week where they could show their commitment to global climate action goals. The fact they chose a tree planting in a community of high need speaks volumes.

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