Politics

Planting Trees on Arbor Day to Promote Unity and Environmental Conservation at the Capitol

Arbor Day Tradition: Lawmakers Planting Seeds of Bipartisanship

Title: Bipartisan Tradition of Arbor Day Trees Continues at Minnesota Capitol

The signs of early spring are all around as a chorus of birds sing on Rep. Rick Hansen’s hobby farm outside Harmony in southeast Minnesota. The DFL chair of the House Environmental Committee from South St. Paul trudges up a hill on this land in his family since the late 1800s and where his mother grew up. He points out a tree he planted his first year in the Legislature.

“I’ve been using Arbor Day trees I get to fill in the holes,” Hansen said with a chuckle about not all the trees he plants surviving the elements. “It’s part of the circle of life.”

The Arbor Day trees he references are part of a Minnesota House tradition that began decades ago. Two Democrats and two Republicans started passing out tree saplings to recognize the importance of forestry in the state and to have a brief respite from partisan clashes.

“The first Arbor Day recognition in the United States was in 1872 in Nebraska. Minnesota adopted the tradition four years later. By the 1920s, each state had passed a law for an Arbor Day observance.”

The Minnesota House Arbor Day tradition was started as a symbol of working together.

“We were always able to do this bipartisanly,” said former Republican Rep. Denny McNamara, one of the early organizers of handing out trees.

Speeches on the House floor over the years have ranged from touting the importance and legacy of forestry in Minnesota to how to care for the seedlings once in the ground.

“Try your best to understand where they come from because that’s how they get to understand you as well,” Solberg said. “It’s extremely important.”

“I don’t think there’s a single member that walks into our session on Arbor Day and says, ‘Oh, gee, they’re handing out trees … that’s terrible,’” Republican Rep. Josh Heintzeman of Nisswa said with a laugh. “I think everybody’s, for the most part, clamoring for trees.”

Heintzeman is the lead Republican on the House Environment and Natural Resources Committee and owns a custom woodworking business in the Brainerd lakes region. He’s one of the lawmakers behind this year’s effort and reflects on being in the minority party at the Capitol.

“Is there an opportunity on Arbor Day to potentially have some détente for a moment? Possibly.”

DFL Rep. Heather Edelson, who is also part of this year’s distribution, said clashes in public doesn’t necessarily mean hostility among lawmakers.

Meanwhile, back at Hansen’s farm, he notes it’s harder to work across party lines than when he was first elected 20 years ago.

He said distributing these trees isn’t going to solve the problem, but the little acts of kindness are important as things wind down at the Capitol. He looks forward to the escapes to the hobby farm in Harmony when the week’s work in St. Paul winds down.

“When I’m when driving, I can feel the tension get away,” Hansen said. “You can hear the birds around us — that’s a lot different than hearing from lobbyists.”

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