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🌳 Tree Protection/Urban Forest Equity

Urban Forest Equity: Mountain View vs San Jose

How do urban forest equity rules compare between Mountain View, CA and San Jose, CA?

Mountain View has fewer restrictions than San Jose.

Mountain View, CA

Santa Clara County

Few Restrictions

The OneSCC Sustainability Master Plan and county Climate Roadmap 2030 set urban forest equity goals tied to heat-vulnerable neighborhoods. Targets include doubling canopy cover in low-income areas through partnerships with cities, Valley Water, and Our City Forest.

View full Mountain View rules β†’

San Jose, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

San Jose's Community Forest Management Plan and Urban Forest Master Plan, adopted under the Envision San Jose 2040 General Plan, set citywide canopy goals and prioritize tree planting in low-canopy, heat-vulnerable neighborhoods often correlated with historic redlining patterns.

View full San Jose rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactMountain ViewSan Jose
PlanOneSCC Sustainability Master Plan-
Adoption2021 with 2030 horizon-
Tree target100,000 trees by 2030-
Equity threshold30 percent in low-canopy tracts-
Lead agencyOffice of Sustainability-
Plan name-Urban Forest Master Plan
Canopy target-25% citywide
Equity tool-CalEnviroScreen + heat maps
Grant source-CAL FIRE Urban Forestry
Local code-SJMC Chapter 13.32

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Mountain View FAQ

Can I get a free street tree through Santa Clara County's urban forest program?

Yes, often. Our City Forest provides free trees and planting assistance to qualifying residents in priority equity areas. Sign up through their website or the Office of Sustainability's annual neighborhood planting events.

Does urban forest equity affect my development project?

Indirectly. New subdivisions and major projects are encouraged to plant in line with canopy targets, and CEQA mitigation may require plantings in equity zones if the project removes existing trees in those areas.

San Jose FAQ

Can I get a free tree from the city in an equity-priority neighborhood?

Often yes. San Jose partners with nonprofits like Our City Forest to provide free street and yard trees in priority neighborhoods, funded by CAL FIRE Urban Forestry grants and city Community Forestry programs.

Why does the city care about which neighborhoods have trees?

Canopy reduces extreme heat, lowers utility bills, and improves air quality. Historic disinvestment left east-side and Alviso neighborhoods with much less canopy, contributing to public health gaps the master plan targets.

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