Environment: What Residents Should Know When Applying for a Street Tree Permit

Young trees on Spruce Street add to the urban canopy that the City of Philadelphia is trying to build. (Caroline Sweeney/PN)

The City of Philadelphia is launching the Philly Tree Plan, a 10-year plan to help grow, maintain, and protect the city canopy. However, despite the city’s efforts to build a greener Philadelphia, residents still face obstacles when facing getting local trees planted. 

Local environmental and tree tending groups are helping residents along in the process of getting trees planted. Although the Philly Tree Plan has been active for a year, there are still nine years left for residents to see the real impact.  

Organizations like UC GreenCenter City Residents’ Association Green Tree Tenders, and Queen Village Tree Tenders work alongside residents to help them get a tree planted and navigate other barriers that arise during the process. 

Tempest Carter applied to have a street tree planted through one of Pennsylvania Horticultural Society’s 202 tree tending organizations, UC Green, where she is also a board member. For her, it was an easy process. 

“It was pretty seamless,” Carter said, describing the application which asks for a general date and time to deliver the tree, and what type of tree you want. 

Carter’s first tree was planted in April 2021, and that tree ended up dying.

“I wanted a flowering tree,” she said.

Carter worked with UC Green volunteers to determine the reason the tree died. They removed the dead tree and provided Carter with a new flowering tree as a part of a larger tree planting even with other tree planting programs.  

Ethan Leatherbarrow is a special project coordinator for Philadelphia Parks and Recreation responsible for various projects developing the City’s street tree inventory, such as data management and field inspections. Along with working for Philadelphia Parks and Recreation, Leatherbarrow is a UC Green volunteer. 

“Depending on location, homeowners have a few ways to get trees planted in their property,” Leatherbarrow said. “Essentially, a permit is required for any new street tree planting, but not for yard trees. Planting organizations such as Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, PHS, private contractors, and certified arborists are all viable methods for new plantings.”

Although the application for a street tree is simple, external obstacles can hinder getting that tree planted. 

“Each potential planting site will have highly variable conditions that may decrease the likelihood of permit approval such as low hanging overhead wires, cracked sidewalk slabs, or the presence of water, gas, and sewer infrastructure,” Leatherbarrow said. “PPR will not approve applications for permits to plant species that do not conform to our species selection criteria.”

UC Green Executive Director Kiasha Huling is also aware that built-in barriers can be an issue for residents looking to get a permit to plant a street tree. UC Green’s Arbor and Art’s Instagram auction helped raise money for UC Green. UC Green plans to create a fund for residents experiencing built-in environmental issues and help them cover the cost to remedy those issues. 

UC Green is a tree tending organization that is responsible for greening the West and Southwest Philadelphia communities. Greening these communities included planting and maintaining street trees, maintaining community gardens and organizing block cleanups in the 19104, 19143, and 19139 ZIP codes. 

“If you want a tree, you have to repair your own sidewalk that the former tree messed up,” Huling said. “A lot of residents say, ‘That makes no sense to me,’ and I could agree, but also it is the way it’s set up.”

Cracked sidewalks and other structural issues can hinder a resident’s ability to plant a tree on their property. (Caroline Sweeney/PN)

Huling also explained how a block structure can be another hindrance to tree planting. 

“The City of Philadelphia has a large inventory of carriage blocks because we are an old city,” Huling said. “The rule is you have to have from your property out to the curb there has to be 3 feet of a walking path, and the minimum size of a tree pit has to be 3 feet. So you need at least 6 feet of clearance, and that excludes a lot of blocks.” 

Other tree planting issues can be unique to different areas of the city. Common among Pennsylvania Horticultural Society’s 202 Tree Tenders are the unique challenges faced in each community. 

According to the PHS website, Tree Tenders are “groups in their neighborhoods that transform the health and well-being of their communities by rallying neighbors to plant and care for trees.” 

Please email any questions or concerns about this story to: [email protected].

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