tree canopy improvements for vancouver could be in jeopardy under mayor ken sim’s proposed $100 million budget cut.
sim and his abc party are calling for a zero per cent property tax increase for 2026, and last week directed city staff to find ways to slash budgets and find efficiencies, creating new worries at the vancouver park board as to where those cuts will come from.
park board commissioner tom digby said the board is concerned that trees could be a target for budget cuts.
while the city cares for trees in plazas and parking lots, the park board is responsible for the care and maintenance of over a million trees on public lands, including medians, boulevards, parks and golf courses.
there has been slow but steady progress to improve the city’s tree canopy in efforts to meet the goal of the city’s
urban forest strategy, adopted in 2020, of bringing the urban forest canopy cover to a target of 30 per cent by 2050, said digby, a green party commissioner.
“if we pause the work we’ve been doing, this could be a real tragedy for city trees,” said digby. “now it is all at risk.”
in 2022, as part of its election platform, abc promised to expand the city’s tree canopy by adding 100,000 new trees to cool down neighbourhoods, improve equity for lower-income communities that lack adequate green spaces and mitigate climate change.