Trees Planted at Santa Barbara Unified Junior High Schools

By Santa Barbara Unified School District

Students, families, and staff teamed up with UCSB students and a local non-profit to plant trees at two Santa Barbara Unified schools.

The local volunteer urban forestry nonprofit Your Children’s Trees helped organize the plantings at Goleta Valley (GVJHS) and La Colina Junior High Schools with the assistance of District Maintenance staff, principals, staff, and families. 

Science Teacher Ian Moore has been leading students in the planting and ongoing care of trees at GVJHS, while staff member Maureen Granger is leading similar efforts at La Colina Junior High.

The GVJHS planting on February 4th was the latest in a series of plantings that have happened at the school since 1998, according to Your Children’s Trees President Ken Knight. 

The latest plantings started with an inventory of all the trees at GVJHS last year, which resulted in selecting prime sites for 15 new shade trees last April and planting five trees In February. 

Native varieties, including Coast Live Oak, Sycamore, Cottonwood, and Alder, were planted. In addition, climate-appropriate trees such as Ginkgo, Island Oak, and Redbud were added to the campuses.

A week later, on February 11th, volunteers were back at work on the La Colina campus, planting 11 more trees after similar inventories and tree site selection coordinated with District and school staff. 

Varieties such as elderberry, purple orchid, African fern pine, and white alder will provide shade and color, as well as improve soil health on the La Colina campus for generations to come. 

These projects were supported through a grant from California Releaf and their fiscal sponsor Southern California Edison.

In addition to the tree planting and ongoing care efforts, this year, Your Children’s Trees has produced self-guiding tree walks for the GVJHS and La Colina campuses showcasing their diversity of tree species on the campuses. 

“We responded to school requests for assistance in adding to their tree canopy,” said Knight.  “We help the schools analyze their educational and environmental tree opportunities and then find resources to make that happen.”  

The tree walks are tied to a tree walk guide for educators available in the educational outreach section of Your Children’s Trees website.

SBUnified

Written by SBUnified

Press releases written by the Santa Barbara Unified School District (SBUSD). Learn more at sbunified.org

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2 Comments

  1. Seeing a lot of self-congratulatory press releases from SBUSD recently. I wonder if they are trying to distract from the fact that they are facing an exodus of teachers, SBUSD refuses to negotiate a COLA or salary increase, and the teachers who are still left are protesting and getting closer to a strike. Planting trees is cool and everything, but how about paying teachers enough to live here before they all leave?

  2. Citizen – Every teacher in California is underpaid and almost every teacher in California is challenged to afford housing – this is not a SB unified issue. I also think that almost every board member in every district wants to pay teachers more, but they have a fixed budget to work with and a responsibility to stay solvent in the long term. This is real problem in California as teachers (and even administrators) are forced to leave the profession or move elsewhere. This is a state funding issue and to a smaller degree federal funding. No school board is ever going to be able pay teachers what they deserve, because they simply don’t have the money. This is sad.
    It is my understanding that SB unified and the teacher’s association signed a three year contract for 21-24 that did include guaranteed wage increases. I’d bet these were not sufficient to cover the recent dramatic COLA increases. I know they are negotiating again (began in March) and at this time, neither side has discussed wages – just class size and working conditions. Hopefully, they will discuss wages, but it is up to the negotiating teams. An important point – if they decrease class sizes, that will cost money – which means they would then have less money for wages.
    As for this tree planting – it cost the district nothing – a few (amazing) teachers, administrators and parents volunteered their weekend time. I see this news release as another example of the amazing things that teachers do and I am happy they are posted. Way to go Ian and Maureen!

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