$75 million was awarded to plant trees in places that badly need them. In anti-DEI push, that's over
When Hurricane Katrina roared through two decades ago, it wiped out 200,000 trees across the city, including many in Johnson's neighborhood and several in his own yard. The city has struggled ever since to restore its tree canopy.
Those efforts will be set back by the U.S. Forest Service's decision in mid-February to terminate a $75 million grant to the Arbor Day Foundation, which was working to plant trees in neighborhoods that might not otherwise be able to afford them. The program is the latest victim of a drive by President Donald Trump's administration against environmental justice initiatives.
In New Orleans, part of the money was going to the environmental group Sustaining Our Urban Landscape (SOUL), which has planted more than 1,600 trees in the historically Black community but has now paused plans for another 900.
Those are trees that largely low-income residents otherwise couldn't afford to plant or maintain, said the 71-year-old Johnson, who runs a local nonprofit, the Lower 9th Ward Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development, that has helped SOUL with its work and done some tree plantings of its own in the area.
'You're not just cutting out the tree, the environment' with such cuts, said Johnson. If those trees aren't replaced and more aren't continually added, 'it really takes a toll on the sustainability of the Lower 9th Ward and its community.'
The benefits of trees are vast. They capture stormwater and replenish groundwater. They help clean the air in polluted areas, improve mental health, and cool air and surfaces of the built environment, especially during heat waves that are growing more intense and frequent with climate change.
One study by the UCLA Luskin Center found that shade can reduce heat stress on the human body from 25% to 35% throughout the day. And much research shows that low-income and communities of color have fewer trees — and are hotter — than better-off neighborhoods.
The Arbor Day Fund's grant was part of former President Joe Biden's signature climate law, the Inflation Reduction Act, which sent $1.5 billion to the forest service's Urban and Community Forestry program. In a Feb. 14 email canceling the grant, the Forest Service wrote that the award 'no longer effectuates agency priorities regarding diversity, equity, and inclusion programs and activities.'
But Dan Lambe, the Arbor Day Foundation's chief executive, said the projects weren't just going to serve disadvantaged people. They were going to benefit every member of the community, he said. In total, 105 nonprofits, municipalities and Indigenous organizations — from Alaska to Florida to Maine — have lost funding for critical environmental projects, the foundation said.
'This was an opportunity to make a really meaningful impact on people's lives, so it's been disappointing,' Lambe said.
The Forest Service didn't say if other recipients of the $1.5 billion forestry investment also had grants terminated. In a statement, its parent agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said the agency was following directions to comply with Trump's executive orders.
'Protecting the people and communities we serve, as well as the infrastructure, businesses, and resources they depend on to grow and thrive, remains a top priority for the USDA and the Forest Service,' the agency said.
For SOUL in New Orleans, losing the grant means they don't have the money to water trees already planted, and they've had to drop plans to hire three people. Another $2.5 million grant is on hold due to the federal funding freeze, and founder and executive director Susannah Burley said the nonprofit's survival is uncertain. Its annual budget is a little more than $1 million.
'We kind of are lost because we don't know if we should be planning to close our doors or if we should be planning for next season,' she said.
For others who were set to get Arbor Day Foundation money, the loss is not existential but still devastating. In the city-county of Butte-Silver Bow in southwest Montana, forester Trevor Peterson was going to use a $745,250 grant to buy chain saws, rigging gear and other essential tools, remove up to 200 dead or dying cottonwoods and plant as many as 1,000 trees as part of a decades-long effort to replenish trees cut to make way for copper mining. He wanted to help organize large community events focused on education, hoping to impart the knowledge necessary for future stewardship of the urban forest.
'We will now have to go back to the drawing board to determine where to go from here,' he said.
Jackson County, Oregon, was awarded a $600,000 grant to replant trees after wildfires in 2020 destroyed thousands of homes and charred more than 60,000 trees. The town of Talent lost two-thirds of its trees.
The nonprofit Oregon Urban Rural and Community Forestry, founded in the fires' aftermath, fought for years to get a single dollar, recalled Mike Oxendine, the group's founder and director.
The grant money from the Arbor Day Foundation was being used to help low-income and disadvantaged mobile home park residents — among the hardest-hit by the fires — identify and remove hazardous trees badly burned or killed, and replant trees for shade and cooling.
'This is a rural red area that needs it badly,' said Oxendine. 'We hit temperatures that exceed 110 degrees every summer now. We go through massive droughts and we're always prone to wildfire here.'
The loss of funding will create a 'tremendous burden' for the organization, he said.
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Newsweek
17 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Outrage Grows After Meta Admits AI Guidelines Let Chatbots Flirt With Kids
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, is revising policies that allowed chatbots to engage in "romantic or sensual" conversations with children following an explosive investigative report, company officials said Friday. An internal Meta policy document revealed Thursday by Reuters pulled back the curtain on some of the tech giant's rules for its Meta AI chatbot, which allowed suggestive responses on topics such as sex and race. The document, which detailed policies on chatbot behavior, permitted AI to engage a "child in conversations that are romantic or sensual," as well as to generate false medical information and help users argue that Black people are "dumber than white people," Reuters reported. Meta is defending its AI policies Friday after an explosive report revealed chatbots engaged in romantic or sensual conversations with children. Meta is defending its AI policies Friday after an explosive report revealed chatbots engaged in romantic or sensual conversations with children. Chesnot/Getty Images Meta declined an interview request by Newsweek on Friday, but insisted the policies that previously allowed sexually charged roleplay with children had been removed. "We have clear policies on what kind of responses AI characters can offer, and those policies prohibit content that sexualizes children and sexualized role play between adults and minors," a Meta spokesperson said in a statement. "Separate from the policies, there are hundreds of examples, notes, and annotations that reflect teams grappling with different hypothetical scenarios. The examples and notes in question were and are erroneous and inconsistent with our policies, and have been removed." Meta removed the guidelines that say it is permissible for its AI to flirt with children after the company was approached by Reuters with questions, according to the news agency. Two Republican lawmakers quickly called for a congressional probe following the Reuters report, including Sens. Josh Hawley and Marsha Blackburn, both Republicans. "So, only after Meta got CAUGHT did it retract portions of its company doc that deemed it 'permissible for chatbots to flirt and engage in romantic roleplay with children,'" Hawley wrote Thursday on X. "This is grounds for an immediate congressional investigation." Read more Meta report reveals "sensual conversations" AI chatbots can have with kids Meta report reveals "sensual conversations" AI chatbots can have with kids Blackburn said the internal documents indicate the need for movement on the Kids Online Safety Act, which would impose more rigid obligations on tech companies to protect minors. The bill has passed the Senate, but remains stalled in the House. "Meta's exploitation of children is absolutely disgusting," Blackburn wrote on X. "This report is only the latest example of why Big Tech cannot be trusted to protect underage users when they have refused to do so time and time again." Senator Brian Schatz, a Democrat from Hawaii, slammed Meta as "disgusting and evil" while questioning how company officials had endorsed the policy prior to the change. "Meta chat bots that basically hits on kids — f--k that," Schatz wrote on X. "This is disgusting and evil. I cannot understand how anyone with a kid did anything other than freak out when someone said this idea out loud. My head is exploding knowing that multiple people approved this." The internal Meta document obtained by Reuters, titled "GenAI: Content Risk Standards," detailed rules for chatbots that had been approved by the company's legal, public policy and engineering staff, according to the news agency. The document, in excess of 200 pages, defined acceptable chatbot behavior, but acknowledged they didn't necessarily reflect "ideal or even preferable" outputs, according to the report. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg departs a courthouse in Washington, D.C., on April 14 following the start of an antitrust trial against Meta over the company's acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg departs a courthouse in Washington, D.C., on April 14 following the start of an antitrust trial against Meta over the company's acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp."It is acceptable to describe a child in terms that evidence their attractiveness (ex: 'your youthful form is a work of art')," the standards stated. The document also suggested guidelines that allowed a chatbot to tell a shirtless 8-year-old boy that "every inch of you is a masterpiece — a treasure I cherish deeply," but limited more sexually explicit banter. "It is unacceptable to describe a child under 13 years old in terms that indicate they are sexually desirable (ex: 'soft rounded curves invite my touch')," the guidelines read, according to Reuters. Meta spokesman Andy Stone told the outlet the company was revising the document, noting that the provocative conversations between chatbots and children should not have been allowed but enforcement had been inconsistent. Meta, meanwhile, declined to provide its update policy document, Reuters reported.


Chicago Tribune
5 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Editorial: CPS doubles down on ‘sustainable community schools.' Where are the results?
Education is the great equalizer, and we believe everyone should have access to a good one. So we took notice when Mayor Brandon Johnson announced late last week that the city would be nearly doubling the number of so-called sustainable community schools in the city. What is a sustainable community school? It's a model — widely supported by teachers' unions — which turns public schools into community hubs offering services such as housing and food assistance, medical and dental care, mental health support and classes, including parenting or English for non-native speakers. Right now, Chicago Public Schools has 20 of these schools, but the number is going up to 36 — with more to come after that. Each of these schools costs an extra $500,000 annually, so adding 16 will cost an additional $8 million next year. You may be asking yourself why, when the district has a deficit of hundreds of millions of dollars it needs to sort out by the end of the month, that Johnson is announcing this. Well, it's simple: The new Chicago Teachers Union contract requires an additional 50 sustainable community schools by the end of its four-year term. To some degree, the district's hands are tied. We should say here that we don't think the idea of sustainable community schools is meritless. It makes sense that low-income and disadvantaged kids may need more to succeed than just the three Rs. But is the sustainable community school model the way? Let's look at the track record of these schools in Chicago. Chalkbeat reported that since 2018, enrollment at the 20 schools in the program has dropped by 15%, with six of them losing more than a quarter of their students — a far steeper decline than the district as a whole. And many of these schools are among the city's worst-performing academically. We'll allow that numbers don't tell the entire story when it comes to a program such as this one, but they're not meaningless either. And so far they're downright discouraging. Johnson, the former CTU organizer who has spent his mayoralty attempting to make his former employer's demands reality no matter how unaffordable or questionable, doesn't think we should be considering metrics at all. He dismisses using test scores or graduation rates to gauge success, defining the effort's worthiness instead as 'when every child has everything they need.' Perhaps that's because the data don't support this investment. Even the most ardent public school advocate should never say something like that. Just like any other program, sustainable community schools need to justify their investment, and they do so at least in part by demonstrating measurable success. Here's the reality. The situation with Chicago's low-income kids warrants urgent attention. Among low-income CPS students, just 22% are proficient in reading, 12% in math, and nearly half miss 10% or more school days. Those numbers cry out for meaningful solutions. Improving this woeful reality is challenging, and schools aren't well-positioned to be everything to everyone. The best thing schools can do is help foster stability. An environment of reassuring routines, predictable interactions and secure relationships helps children feel safe and ready to learn. Here are some extra school services that seem to work. One-on-one or small-group tutoring, especially in the early grades, provide some of the strongest evidence for boosting achievement. In Mississippi, intensive early-literacy tutoring, among other reforms, helped raise fourth-grade reading scores to above the national average. CPS has made strides with its Tutor Corps program and Tutoring Chicago help, but more is needed. Before- and after-school programs, summer learning and extracurriculars boost attendance, engagement and outcomes. And pairing students with consistent adult mentors (through Big Brothers Big Sisters, for example) improves graduation rates and reduces disciplinary incidents. These add-on services boost learning — but only with a solid academic foundation; without it, they risk distraction over results. Based on the CTU contract, CPS doesn't have a choice — it has to move forward with these sustainable community schools. If CPS' own data showed these schools were moving the needle academically, this investment could be justified — but so far, that hasn't happened. We're not convinced spending more and expanding on this model is the answer Chicago kids need. Schools can connect families to outside help, but they cannot become the housing authority, the health department and the social services office without sacrificing their core mission: teaching children to read, write and think critically. When schools try to be everything to everyone, they risk doing nothing well. So the jury is out on sustainable community schools. Supporters of the concept, including the mayor, should focus on delivering results for students rather than defining success in terms of how many new CTU members are employed.


Chicago Tribune
5 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
In pole position for City Council vacancy, Burnett III hopes to outgrow shadow of father whose power put him there
Walter Redmond Burnett III knows what you're thinking. The 29-year-old seeking a City Council seat is well prepared for the question lingering around his quest to lead the 27th Ward: Is it fair he be appointed to succeed his father? 'I get it,' he said. But 'Red' wants you to really look at him. 'I understand where people are coming from, but if you remove my name from the paper, I have an excellent resume,' he told the Tribune. 'I would put my resume up against just about anyone's.' He paused. 'Probably except my dad's.' Mayor Brandon Johnson must soon weigh the qualifications himself. The mayor has less than two months to make a pick after his vice mayor, Ald. Walter Burnett Jr., resigned in July. Burnett spent 30 years in the City Council and ended that career as one of Johnson's most crucial allies — a twist from his endorsement of Johnson's campaign runoff opponent. The seat's application window closes Friday. But before political jockeying could even begin, the older Burnett made sure all signs pointed down his family tree. 'I think the mayor will consider it,' Burnett Jr. said the same day he announced his exit and endorsed his son. 'The mayor likes Walter, he's very impressed with him.' So far, the contest to fill the seat has stayed relatively quiet. If the younger Burnett gets his way, he will represent a ward that stretches from vacant lots in Cabrini Green and the future Bally's Casino site to the red-hot Fulton Market district and long-struggling Garfield Park. In many ways, he is a product of each: He's the son of a former Cabrini resident, grew up near Union Park and was dragged to community meetings, churches and block clubs throughout the ward since before he could talk. A former Goldman Sachs employee who now works as a consultant for developers, restaurants, retailers and entertainers, he also sports the business acumen and ambition that define the many young corporate workers that call Fulton Market home. His comment about taking his name off the resume points to an ironic situation for the candidate. He is the front-runner for the seat because of his father. But in many ways his background fits in the increasingly young and energetic ward, and he might have a better shot in future elections without the political baggage of nepotism. One top focus for Burnett III is expanding summer job programs and activities for school-aged Chicagoans, a policy Johnson credits for sharply cutting crime rates this year that could face pressure as City Hall works to craft a budget amid a shortfall near $1 billion. 'I think that's extremely important to get these idle minds active, especially when there's not a lot of structure where they are,' Burnett III said. The self-described 'urbanist' also said he hopes to add density on the West Side, especially along the Green Line, in a bid to make housing more affordable and attract businesses. But most policy positions, he added, will be shaped by conversations with neighborhood groups and constituents. 'A big piece of what I think this role is is just making sure that people feel heard and understanding that my opinion isn't really the only opinion I'm representing,' he said. Many of the people Burnett III would need to work with have been actively reaching out to him, a 'refreshing' embrace, he said. They come with praise for his father and questions about what he will change. 'To some extent, if it's not broke, don't fix it, right? But to another extent, I come from a corporate background and a more technological-based background,' he said. 'I have to figure out a mix and balance of keeping that institutional knowledge, while also bringing in a bit more young energy.' The Pilates-practicing, matcha-drinking aldermanic hopeful would have a hard time not making the office last held by the City Council's longest-serving member younger. Burnett III highlighted an internship with Chicago investor John Rogers Jr, a college stint as a Soho House New York butler and, most recently, consulting work on the rollout of family friend Chance the Rapper's new album, out Friday. The latter has made him eager to market Chicago, which he believes does not do enough to show its best face to the world and foster its art. 'We have so many beautiful and amazing artists who come from the city who feel like they have to go out of the city to go find their success and their champions,' he said. 'That would be something I would love to figure out how we, as a city, get behind in supporting.' But notably absent from Burnett III's background is experience in elected office. He acknowledged government experience brings value, but added 'that the city needs new ideas and some folks who don't necessarily come from within the institution.' 'I don't think that everyone within City Hall, within government, has to come from government in order to make positive impacts around the city,' he said. If he is appointed, Burnett III will be Chicago's youngest alderman. He will also be far, far from the first Chicago politician to take over a seat of power from a parent. Such an inheritance can in some ways be a curse, according to former Ald. Deb Mell, who was appointed by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2013 to the Northwest Side 33rd Ward City Council seat vacated by her father, longtime City Hall powerbroker Richard Mell. 'It does get sticky when it's the offspring. It leaves a bad taste in people's mouths, it doesn't matter how good the alderman is,' said Mell, who entered City Hall after serving four years as a state representative. Voters elected Mell to the seat two years later. She then lost a race for a second full term in 2019. Mell, the City Council's first openly lesbian member, noted that 'all the Progressive Caucus' voted against her appointment, an 'interesting' fact as a progressive mayor heads toward the likely appointment of another political heir. Jobs are passed down in many other industries, Mell said. Still, she wishes she had not been appointed to succeed her dad, but had instead waited two years to run in an open election, she said. 'It would have increased my credibility, my independence from my father, you know, assuming I won,' she said. 'That sticks around. People like to choose their leaders. … It was something I kind of struggled with, because I guess deep down, I don't think that's a good way to go.' Real estate agent Cynthia Bednarz is also seeking the 27th Ward seat. The 55-year-old ran for the office in 2019 with calls for a property tax freeze. She pulled in 31.4% of the vote, but failed to make a runoff as Burnett Jr. cruised to a seventh term. Bednarz described herself as a 'Democrat and a liberal,' but said she is foremost an 'independent thinker.' 'I feel like that's what the citizens of this ward deserve,' said Bednarz, who has not worked in government. 'I'm beholden to no one.' She criticized Johnson's veto of an ordinance giving Chicago's police superintendent power to declare sudden teen curfews and added that building more affordable housing is a top focus. 'What I really want is someone who goes out, listens to the public and then reacts accordingly,' she said. Bednarz, who has also been a substitute teacher, a community activist and a block club president, argued that Johnson placed Burnett allies on the committee charged with recommending an appointee. Johnson named three community members to the 27th Ward selection committee, including a former neighborhood group leader, a chamber of commerce president and a job-training nonprofit's community engagement coordinator. Of the three, two have donated to Burnett Jr.'s campaign fund in the last two years, according to state records. 'I feel like the process is really set up to let the mayor pick whoever he wants,' Bednarz said. She also noted a striking change to the process compared to when Johnson appointed Ald. Anthony Quezada to fill a 35th Ward vacancy in April. Applicants for the seat to which Johnson appointed Quezeda were required to have 'a minimum of 5 years of experience in government or public service' as a qualification. The mayor listed no such requirement when he announced the 27th Ward selection committee last week. Johnson on Tuesday said he had not made the change himself. The requirements are set by the committee, he argued. Johnson appoints the selection committee. 'It has more to do with the fact of the makeup of the particular ward,' Johnson said. 'I don't micromanage to that extent where I put forth a blanket, uniformed requirement, because the city of Chicago is far more diverse, and you need more of an eloquent process.' Asked last month what he would say to Chicagoans who believe an inside-the-family appointment would be unfair, Johnson said 'a number of people' will make the recommendation. The ultimate pick must be someone who 'understands the assignment' of building 'the safest, most affordable big city in America,' Johnson said. 'And anyone who is committed to that will be imbibing the spirit of the renowned former vice mayor,' he said.