Cities@Work – Success Stories

Tempe’s Goodwin Park receives NFL Super Bowl XLIX Forestry Grant

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Tempe, ARIZ –Community members and neighbors will gather at 9 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 15 at Goodwin Park in Tempe to plant trees that were awarded through an NFL Super Bowl XLIX Forestry Grant. A total of 27 trees will be planted including: 7 Chinese Elm (Ulmus Parvifolia), 9 Red Push Pistache (Pistache X “Red Push”) and 11 Eldarica Pine (Pinus Eladarica).

 

 

“The City of Tempe is pleased to receive the NFL Super Bowl XLIX Forestry Grant,” stated Tempe Mayor Mark Mitchell. “Adding 27 new trees of varied species to the Tempe community will enhance our urban forest and provide a host of benefits – from environmental to aesthetic – and will be enjoyed by present and future generations. The planting of these trees would not be possible without the dedication and generosity of the Super Bowl Urban Forestry Program.”

 

 

Hundreds of trees will be planted throughout the Phoenix area this fall and winter as part of the greening of Super Bowl XLIX. Trees will be planted in public spaces in Tempe, Mesa, Phoenix and Glendale beginning November 15, 2014 in Tempe and finishing in Glendale in January 2015 – just one week before Super Bowl XLIX.

 

 

“Urban forestry has been part of Super Bowl for ten years – ever since our first tree planting project in Jacksonville back in 2005,” said Jack Groh, NFL Environmental Director. “It is one of the many ways that the NFL works to leave behind a positive legacy in each Super Bowl host community.”

 

 

The four cities applied for and were awarded matching grants by the NFL and the Arizona Super Bowl Host Committee in partnership with Super Bowl sponsor Verizon and local nonprofit Valley Permaculture Alliance. Grants can be used to match the cost of trees for local urban forestry projects – in some cases allowing the city to double the size of an existing tree planting project.

 

 

The Alta Mira Neighborhood Association, which surrounds Goodwin Park, teamed up with the City of Tempe earlier this year to plant 50 trees in Goodwin Park. Funds for those trees were both donated by residents and awarded through the City’s neighborhood enhancement and beautification grant. The neighborhood aims to plant a total of 100 trees in Goodwin Park by spring of 2015.