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Republicans Senate candidate Herschel Walker, center, talks with Georgia state Sen. Butch Miller, left, and former state Rep. Terry Rogers on July 21, 2022, in Alto, Ga. (AP) Republicans Senate candidate Herschel Walker, center, talks with Georgia state Sen. Butch Miller, left, and former state Rep. Terry Rogers on July 21, 2022, in Alto, Ga. (AP)

Republicans Senate candidate Herschel Walker, center, talks with Georgia state Sen. Butch Miller, left, and former state Rep. Terry Rogers on July 21, 2022, in Alto, Ga. (AP)

Tori Gantz
By Tori Gantz September 1, 2022
Louis Jacobson
By Louis Jacobson September 1, 2022

What Herschel Walker gets wrong, and right, about federal funding for more trees

If Your Time is short

• The Inflation Reduction Act signed by President Joe Biden includes $1.5 billion to plant more trees and fund related activities, especially in low-income neighborhoods that tend to have fewer trees than wealthier areas. 

• It is an exaggeration to say the bill will raise taxes on middle- and lower-income Americans. Analyses that reached that conclusion looked only at the tax provisions in the bill and not the spending provisions, which could offset those increases, or surpass them. 

• Trees can help prevent deaths from heat waves. Trees also can ease carbon levels in the atmosphere.

In Georgia’s closely watched Senate race, Herschel Walker, the Republican challenger to Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock, keeps circling back to a subject rarely discussed in political campaigns: trees.

It began at Walker’s Aug. 21 campaign appearance, when he said of Democrats, "They continue to try to fool you that they are helping you out, but they’re not. Because a lot of money, it’s going to trees. Don’t we have enough trees around here?"

The following day, Walker doubled down, saying in a tweet, "Yes, you heard me right … Joe Biden and @ReverendWarnock are spending $1.5 billion on ‘urban forestry’ and raising taxes on those making under $200k to pay for it. Yes, I have a problem with that."

Walker was referring to the Inflation Reduction Act recently signed by President Joe Biden.

He accurately represented the amount of money allocated to support urban tree cover in the Inflation Reduction Act. But his assertion that the effort is being funded by "raising taxes on those making under" $200,000 is misleading, since the analysis that drew that conclusion didn’t take into account the savings to Americans from other parts of the bill.

When PolitiFact contacted him for this article, Walker said through his campaign, "Our inner cities need less crime, not more trees."

Shifting sentiment about trees

It wasn’t long ago when a large majority of Republicans indicated they supported tree-planting efforts. A 2020 survey by the Pew Research Center found that 88% of Republicans supported planting about a trillion trees to absorb carbon emissions, which scientists say would help arrest climate change. 

Also in 2020, President Donald Trump noted in his State of the Union address that he had worked to make sure the U.S. joined the World Economic Forum’s One Trillion Trees planting initiative. And House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., co-sponsored the One Trillion Trees Act along with 33 other House Republicans. (It did not advance.)

More recently, though, Republicans and GOP-aligned groups have used trees as a rhetorical punching bag.

In August, the group Citizens Against Government Waste ran a Facebook ad that ridiculed spending in the Inflation Reduction Act on such "wasteful" efforts as "‘tree equity,’ ‘clean’ garbage trucks and studying cow farts."

How much will be spent on trees under the new law?

The new law allocates $1.5 billion to the U.S. Forest Service’s Urban and Community Forestry program, which averages to $150 million a year over the bill's 10-year life.

That’s a substantial cash infusion for the program, which has been funded at around $30 million to $40 million per year for the past few years, said Matt Spitsen, program development manager for the Arbor Day Foundation, which promotes tree planting. 

Where does funding for the law come from?

Walker said the legislation would raise "taxes on those making under $200k." But the tax provisions in the measure are aimed at wealthy money managers and big companies.

One of the law’s two major tax elements would significantly scale back a tax-code provision known as "carried interest," which allows money managers to pay taxes on much of their income at capital-gains rates, which are lower than the regular rates for personal income.

The other provision would require companies reporting at least $1 billion in profits to pay at least 15% in corporate income taxes, which many currently do not do.

An analysis by the congressional bipartisan Joint Committee on Taxation found the law would raise taxes, on average, in every income bracket. Overall, the federal tax burden for all Americans would rise by an average of 1.4% in 2023, and by less in future years. For those earning between $30,000 and $100,000, the increase would be less than 1% in 2023. 

But there’s an important caveat: The joint committee analysis looked only at the tax side of the bill, not at spending provisions that could offset those tax increases for most families. The latter includes tax credits for people who buy electric vehicles and implement energy-efficiency improvements; multiyear subsidies for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act; and a drug-negotiation provision for Medicare.

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The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget concluded that the $64 billion in health insurance subsidies alone "would be more than enough" to erase the tax increases for people earning less than $400,000 under the Joint Commission on Taxation’s analysis. 

What will the allocation for trees be spent on?

The funding for trees is to be used "for tree planting and related activities, with a priority for projects that benefit underserved populations and areas," according to the bill

Before the bill’s passage, the U.S. Forest Service program’s budget was spent largely on placing staff in every state to support local urban foresters. The new, expanded budget will allow the program to award grants to local nonprofits seeking to improve tree cover in their geographic areas, Spitsen said.

The idea is to "help cities plant more trees in the places where they're needed most," said Jad Daley, president and CEO of the advocacy group American Forests.

The national program’s focus on racial and economic justice seeks to direct the bill’s funding to neighborhoods that are low-income and relatively treeless. 

"Across the nation, on average, the lowest-income neighborhoods in America have 41% less tree cover than the wealthiest neighborhoods," Daley said. And neighborhoods where a majority of residents are people of color have 33% less tree cover on average, he said.

"Essentially, shade and cooling is distributed according to race and income," he said.

A jet comes in for approach over downtown Phoenix as temperatures exceed 100 degrees in the morning hours. Phoenix officials are planting thousands of trees to lower temperatures. (AP)

Why is the money being allocated?

Supporters cite several benefits from expanding tree cover.

One major benefit is reducing mortality from heat. Between 1999 and 2010, 8,081 people died in the United States from heat-related deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About three-quarters of those deaths were primarily because of heat, and in the rest, heat was a contributing factor. 

That’s about five times the number of deaths from hurricanes over the same period, even counting the unusually high death toll from Hurricane Katrina in 2005. And it was about 12 times the number of deaths from tornadoes over the same period.

More recent data from a University of Pennsylvania study found even higher numbers for heat-related deaths: an estimated 13,000 to 20,000 between 2008 and 2017.

"The allocation of funds to tree planting in cities can have an immense impact on heat risk," said Brian Stone Jr., an urban environmental planning and design professor at Georgia Institute of Technology.

Stone said his research found that in combination with other strategies, planting trees in Atlanta "can reduce heat-wave mortality by more than 20%."

Trees also ease carbon levels in the atmosphere. Trees, like all plants, store and immobilize carbon dioxide, which is a key driver of climate change.

Daley said it’s estimated that 130 million metric tons per year of carbon dioxide are being stored in trees and forests. "So it's a really big slice of the natural climate solution," he said. Tree-planting is "a meaningful contribution to actually pull carbon dioxide out of the air."

Finally, trees help save money on cooling. Research published by the U.S. Forest Service suggests that, on average, urban trees and forests help decrease residential electricity use by 7.2% annually. That produces savings in utility costs and also reduces emissions from power generation. 

Our ruling

Walker said, Biden and Warnock "are spending $1.5 billion on ‘urban forestry’ and raising taxes on those making under $200k to pay for it."

Walker is correct about the amount being spent on efforts to bolster urban tree cover, but he exaggerated when he said the bill will "raise taxes" on middle- and lower-income Americans. 

Analyses that reached that conclusion looked only at the tax provisions in the bill. The spending provisions could offset those increases, or surpass them, by saving Americans money on green improvements, Affordable Care Act premiums and prescription drug costs.

We rate his statement Half True.

Our Sources

Washington Post, "Walker, criticizing climate law, asks: ‘Don’t we have enough trees around here?’" Aug. 22, 2022

Herschel Walker, tweet, Aug. 22, 2022

U.S. Forest Service, "Urban and Community Forestry Program," accessed Aug. 31, 2022

Text of the Inflation Reduction Act

Pew Research Center, "Two-Thirds of Americans Think Government Should Do More on Climate," June 23, 2020

Congress.gov, "H.R. 5859 - Trillion Trees Act," accessed Sept. 1, 2022

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "Heat-Related Illness," accessed Aug. 31, 2022

Insurance Information Institute, "Facts + Statistics: Hurricanes," accessed Aug. 31, 2022

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, "U.S. Annual Tornado Death Tolls, 1875-present," accessed Aug. 31, 2022

David J. Nowak, Nathaniel Appleton, Alexis Ellis, and Eric Greenfield, "Residential building energy conservation and avoided power plant emissions by urban and community trees in the United States," 2017

Environmental Protection Agency, "Heat Islands and Equity," accessed Aug. 31, 2022 

AZ Big Media, "Here’s how cool pavement pilot program is impacting Phoenix," Sept. 23, 2021

E&E News, "Climate bill would breathe new life into big-city trees," Aug. 9, 2022

E&E News, "Trump Touts Tree Planting but Ignores Climate in State of the Union Speech," Feb. 5, 2020

Time magazine, "The Increasing Death Toll in the U.S. From Extreme Heat," July  20, 2022

Planning magazine, "The Heat Is On," Aug-Sept. 2020

CBS News, "Here's how Phoenix is cooling down its streets as summers get hotter," July 22, 2022

New York Times, "What was said at Davos on climate change," Jan. 27, 2020

New York Times, "Trump and the Trillion Trees," Feb. 5, 2020

PolitiFact, "‘Tree equity’ part of $3.5T bill targets low-income areas that have fewer trees," Sept. 29, 2021

PolitiFact, "GOP claim on tax hikes in Democratic bill doesn’t factor in subsidies, savings," Aug. 3, 2020

Email interview with Matt Spitsen, program development manager for the Arbor Day Foundation, Aug. 24, 2022

Phone interview with Jad Daley, president and CEO of American Forests, Aug. 24, 2022

Email interview with Brian Stone Jr., an urban environmental planning and design professor at Georgia Institute of Technology, Aug. 29, 2022

Statement to PolitiFact from the Herschel Walker campaign, Aug. 25, 2022

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What Herschel Walker gets wrong, and right, about federal funding for more trees

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