The Parks Board voted to approve the City of Sugar Land’s 2025 Tree City USA application following a staff presentation on program requirements and recent tree-planting activity.
"I am here tonight to ask for your approval for Tree City USA for us to submit that application to continue our designation as a Tree City USA for the City of Sugar Land," said the right-of-way services manager, who presented program details and the required documentation. Staff said Sugar Land has held the designation since 2011 and that the city's community forestry spending this year equated to $3.20 per capita, above the Tree City USA requirement of at least $2 per capita.
Presenter examples included the city’s Arbor Day proclamation and a November 1 volunteer tree-planting event (staff reported roughly 125 trees or container plantings at Brazos River Park). Board members asked whether plantings typically occur in parks or along roadways; staff said volunteer plantings are usually staged in city parks for safety and that right-of-way crews handle trimming along road corridors.
After discussion, the board approved the application. Kelsey Johnson moved to approve the Tree City USA application and Chris Melei seconded; the chair announced the motion carried.
Staff said the final application will be routed for the city manager’s signature and submitted to the Tree City USA program before the application deadline.
The board’s approval keeps Sugar Land eligible for the national Tree City USA designation, a recognition based on having a tree board, a tree ordinance and a minimum community forestry budget.