We’ve decided to concentrate on council’s annual reports for this post – in particular focusing on an area that is repeatedly touted as vitally important to residents – increasing our overall tree canopy. We now have plenty of policies that are supposed to concentrate on environmental sustainability, urban forest creation, and protecting mature trees as well as reaching the target of 22% tree canopy coverage by 2040. So how well are we actually doing and can we trust the figures that council trots out?

Since the 2021/22 annual report residents have no idea as to how well the goal of increasing tree canopy is going. Why? Because every single annual report since then has consistently refused to provide the most essential data – ie how many trees have been lost and had to be replaced? If the only figure that is provided is the number of new tree plantings, then how on earth can we know whether the cited new plantings are in fact achieving the stated goal?

The list below features verbatim quotes from 2018/19 onwards. Readers will note that up until 2021/22, we were told not only how many new plantings there were, but how many trees had been lost throughout the year.

2018/19 – We planted 2,077 street trees (940 replacement and 1,137 additional). (page 13)

2019/20 –  We planted 950 street trees (684 replacement and 266 additional) which was 1,050 under target due to COVID-19 restrictions (PAGE 15)

2020/21 Annual report – We planted 1,854 trees (854 replacement and 1,000 additional). (page 15)

2021/22 – 1008 – NO MENTION OF REPLACEMENTS

2022/23 – 872 trees planted NO MENTION OF REPLACEMENTS –

2023/24 – 2,241 trees planted – NO MENTION OF REPLACEMENTS

2024/25 – 1189 planted – NO MENTION OF REPLACEMENTS

What’s even more frustrating is the nonsense that the following paragraph from 2022/23 report reveals –

The planting of the 800 trees will result in an estimated tree canopy increase to 12.8 per cent canopy cover for the municipality, which is helping Council achieve the Urban Forest Strategy 2040 target of 22 per cent canopy cover ( 2022/23 ANNUAL REPORT – PAGE 80)

How is the 12.8 percent figure arrived at, when we don’t know how many trees have gone? Does this mean that the 0.8 per cent increase is the result of only effectively 400 new plantings? 300? 600? Nor does the paragraph reveal that council’s coverage is only 12% at the previous assessment. Is a purported 0.8% increase really that great? And that’s without even knowing what the true number of plantings is.

Whilst we accept that annual reports are really nothing more than public relation exercises designed to provide as much positive news as possible, the onus must still be on full disclosure and accountability. Council continues to fail in these two essential requirements.