Public Safety

LA Students Plant 5,000 Trees for Wildfire Recovery

LA Students Plant 5,000 Trees for Wildfire Recovery

STUDENTS LEAD NEW MODEL FOR WILDFIRE RECOVERY

A collective of young environmental leaders across the Los Angeles metropolitan area rolled up their sleeves on Wednesday, launching a sophisticated grass-roots reforestation initiative designed to heal Southern California landscapes scarred by recent natural disasters. Operating out of a specialized school nursery infrastructure in the Pacific Palisades, high school and elementary school students began the physical planting phase of a long-term project aimed at cultivating and distributing 5,000 native trees to areas severely impacted by the destructive 2025 Los Angeles wildfire season.

The multi-city coalition operates under the organizational banner of TREEAMS, an acronym representing Trees and Dreams. The foundational blueprints for the program were directly inspired by world-renowned primatologist and conservationist Dr. Jane Goodall shortly before her passing. In alignment with her global ecological vision, the initiative unites student leaders from diverse geographic backgrounds, drawing active participants from campuses across Altadena, Pasadena, Pacific Palisades, and Malibu.

Shawna Marino, Vice President of EF Academy, characterized the program as a revolutionary, student-led framework for regional disaster recovery. Rather than relying solely on traditional state agency intervention, high school and elementary students are collaborating directly with regional arborists and soil botanists. Through this hands-on mentorship, the youth learn the exact biological science behind selecting wildfire-resilient species, proper root-bed installation techniques, and optimal hydration schedules necessary to ensure the saplings thrive in arid microclimates.

NURSERY PLACEMENT AND COMMUNITY DONATIONS

The tactical strategy relies heavily on designated, student-managed incubation nurseries, such as the flagship facility currently operating in the Palisades. The young trees will be carefully monitored and nurtured through their vulnerable initial growth stages until they reach structural maturity. Once the root systems are sufficiently hardened against environmental stressors, the trees will be systematically donated and transported directly to residential and public properties that suffered catastrophic landscape losses during the fires.

The emotional resonance of the project is deeply felt by local participants, many of whom witnessed the encroaching flames firsthand. Student volunteer Tecker Kaplan, who participated in the Tuesday soil preparations, noted the profound personal significance of watching green life return to the hillsides where he grew up. Project organizers emphasize that beyond the immediate benefits of carbon sequestration and erosion control, the program instills a lasting sense of civic responsibility and environmental agency within the next generation of California policymakers. Comprehensive volunteer registration details and corporate sponsorship pathways are currently available through the project's official digital portal at TREEAMS.org.

Explore NBCPalmSprings.com, where we are connecting the valley.

By: CNN Newsource

May 20, 2026

TREEAMS projectLos Angeles wildfire recoverystudent environmental leadersPacific Palisades nurseryEF Academy reforestationSouthern California climate action2026
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LA Students Plant 5,000 Trees for Wildfire Recovery