Millerton celebrates Arbor Day


 

MILLERTON — Mayor John Scutieri commemorated Arbor Day April 25 by planting a Golden Raindrop crabapple tree at the entrance of Eddie Collins Field. He said the village would like to see more people do the same in their backyards, at any time of year.

"We live in the country for a reason," he said. "We like trees."

Village Clerk Karen McLaughlin donated the tree to the village in honor of Arbor Day. Arbor Day is a nationally celebrated observance that encourages tree planting and care, according to the Arbor Day Foundation.

"I think the Village Board now is so aware of the importance of trees, and we get a great feeling now when we take trees down that we’re able to replace them," Scutieri said. "And I’m glad we’re all on the same page with keeping the area clean and green."

In fact, the village of Millerton is looking into becoming a "Tree City USA." To qualify for that honor, it must meet certain criteria. The village must have a tree board or department. It meets that requirement with its Shade Tree Committee. There must be a community tree ordinance, which it’s working on. Village workers do assess which trees need to be replaced. The village needs to have a community forestry program with an annual budget of at least $2,000. Millerton has a shade tree budget of $3,000 this year. The village must hold an Arbor Day observance and proclamation, which it did last week.

"We’re working toward a more formalized tree program and this is kind of our first step, today’s tree planting and recognition of Arbor Day," McLaughlin said. "Being a Tree City USA basically makes you more aware of the importance of not just shade trees, but trees in general. It encourages more community trees."

It also could help the municipality in grant applications, according to the village clerk.

"Overall, it just helps the community recognize the importance of trees being a renewable resource," she said.

And the village is doing even more to go green. It’s using e-mail more frequently to cut down on paper waste. At Village Hall workers also try to use the copy machine less and make use of electronic storage and management of files. They also encourage the motto "reduce, reuse, recycle."

Participating in Arbor Day was just one more way in which the village has been trying to promote the benefits of creating a greener, more eco-friendly environment.

"I think it will add beauty," the mayor said. "I really like these smaller, flowery apple trees. They will make the entrance to the park that much nicer."

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