Environmental Restoration by CSX Employees

CSX employees, joined by representatives from TreeBaltimore, Parks & People Foundation and the Westport Community, will spend Saturday, October 10, from 8:30 am to 12 noon, planting large Redbud, Maple and Sycamore trees throughout the Westport Neighborhood of Baltimore.

The railroad-sponsored program will focus on Annapolis, Maisel and Cedley streets in the 45-acre Westport neighborhood that is being redeveloped from an industrial area to a mixed-used community. An estimated 37 percent of the area’s families live below the poverty line, but area leaders hope the environmental restoration and community revitalization goals will make the neighborhood a national model for urban restoration.

The CSX event is part of the railroad’s “Trees for Tracks” program that promises to plant 21,000 trees, or one tree for each mile of CSX track, in partnership with local organizations over the next five years. Other partners include City Year, the national youth service initiative, and Alliance for Community Trees, a national organization dedicated to helping cities restore their forest canopy, a third of which has been destroyed in recent decades.

According to Tori Kaplan, Director of Corporate Citizenship for CSX, “Planting trees improves air quality, offsets carbon emissions, creates noise buffers, improves wildlife habitats and adds beauty to our communities. We appreciate the opportunity to bring Trees for Tracks to a Baltimore city neighborhood that has received national attention for reinventing itself in ways that improve the quality of life and benefit the environment.”

During its twenty-five years of working in Baltimore City, Parks & People has found environmental restoration can be a critical early step in the revitalization of communities in need. Says Guy Hager, Senior Director for the Parks & People Foundation, “In communities with trees, people socialize more with their neighbors, have a stronger sense of community and pride in their neighborhood, and feel safer than people in communities without trees. We are excited to be part of this larger effort that CSX is undertaking, to bring trees back to our city.”

“Alliance for Community Trees is thrilled to partner with CSX on this and other Trees for Tracks initiatives, to make communities cleaner, greener, and healthier. CSX is an outstanding hands-on partner -- we could not be happier with the results of the program,” adds Alice Ewen Walker, Alliance for Community Trees Executive Director.

Source: https://www.keeponliving.org/

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