Keep Port St. Lucie Beautiful

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About KPSLB

Our Mission: Engaging individuals to take greater responsibility for improving their community environments

KPSLB Logo & Keep America Beautiful Affiliate

Keep Port St. Lucie Beautiful has been dedicated to enhancing our city since 2001 through community pride and environmental stewardship. From neighborhood beautification to the Adopt-a-Street initiative, we lead in urban transformation and civic engagement.

Taking its lead from Keep Florida Beautiful and Keep America Beautiful, we promote quality of life through education, beautification, and litter control. Join us in preserving Port St. Lucie's natural beauty and sustainability through volunteerism and active participation. Together, we create a cleaner, greener, and vibrant community for all residents, businesses, and visitors.

PSL on the Mic podcast

In Episode 44, Meighan Beckett, program manager for Keep Port St. Lucie Beautiful, shares how the program has been transforming the community and fostering civic engagement for nearly 25 years, with the support of over 500 dedicated volunteers annually.

Applying Our Principles

 

Keep America Beautiful, a recognized leader in community improvement, upholds the following core principles:

  • Education: Inspiring positive behaviors that enhance community well-being begins with effective education.
  • Individual Responsibility: Lasting change starts with personal commitment—individuals taking active roles as engaged citizens and environmental stewards.
  • Public-Private Partnerships: Strong, diverse community alliances are vital for achieving sustainable improvements.
  • Volunteer Action: Engaging volunteers amplifies the impact of our educational efforts and actions.

How KPSLB brings these principles to life

  • Litter Prevention: Initiatives such as the Adopt-a-Street Program, Cleanup Day, and the Litter Hotline encourage cleaner communities.
  •  Beautification and Community Improvement: Efforts include tree planting projects, a tree-canopy assessment, a master tree-planting plan, tree giveaways, and engaging local television programming.
  •  Waste Reduction and Water Quality: Programs like Household Hazardous Waste Collection Day, Recycling initiatives, and anti-litter campaigns aim to reduce waste and protect water quality in lakes, wetlands, and rivers.

KPSLB News & Resources

PSL receives national, international recognition as a Tree City

tree city usa

The City of Port St. Lucie has again received national and international recognition for its efforts to develop and maintain a robust urban forest landscape.

This marks the 20th consecutive year Port St. Lucie has earned the Tree City USA Award and the 19th year in a row receiving the Tree City USA Growth Award, which recognizes cities nationwide for effective urban forest management and high achievement in municipal tree programs. It is also the third consecutive year Port St. Lucie received international designation as one of only 170 Tree Cities of the World.      

Tree City USA is a partnership between the Arbor Day Foundation, USDA Forest Service and National Association of State Foresters, which recognizes cities committed to ensuring that urban forests and trees are properly maintained, sustainably managed and celebrated. Tree Cities of the World is a collaboration between the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and the Arbor Day Foundation.

To receive the international Tree Cities of the World designation, the City met five core standards including:

  • Establishing responsibility for the care of trees
  • Setting rules for managing trees
  • Having an updated inventory of local trees resources
  • Allocating resources for tree management
  • Holding an annual celebration about trees to educate local residents

The City has planted more than 75,000 trees as part of the Port St. Lucie Tree Challenge and approximately 14,000 trees have been distributed since 2004 through the Keep Port St. Lucie Beautiful Tree Giveaway program.

Keep Port St. Lucie Beautiful celebrates 20 years

Keep Port St. Lucie Beautiful celebrates 20 years of engaging individuals to beautify the City of Port St. Lucie!

KPSLB partners to beautify Sandhill Crossing neighborhood

KPSLB partnered with NuCO2/Linde and the Arbor Day Foundation to plant 100 trees along Tiffany Avenue and beautify the Sandhill Crossing Neighborhood.

Adopt-a-Street volunteer recognized for leadership, dedication to community

danielle hightower

Danielle Hightower started changing the landscape – literally – when she was 14.

That’s when her mother, Khalilah Chatman, first introduced her to Keep Port St. Lucie Beautiful.

Through Chatman’s nonprofit, Rise Above Youth Center for Excellence, Hightower and her two best friends started picking up litter along Southwest Rosser Boulevard and Southwest Aledo Lane as part of KPSLB’s Adopt-a-Street program.

“My mom’s nonprofit is about the youth,” Hightower said. “It’s about uplifting, empowering and educating, so what better way to do that with litter prevention and recycling in a community that the youth live in.”

Four years later, Hightower would grow her own Adopt-a-Street group, recruiting

like-minded students keen on participating in a project with a common goal: to beautify and keep their community clean.

The 18-year-old’s leadership didn’t go unnoticed.

Hightower, now a freshman at Florida Agricultural & Mechanical University, was nominated

by KPSLB as its Outstanding Youth Champion for promoting behavioral change on litter prevention, recycling and beautification through its Adopt-a-Street program.

Keep Florida Beautiful, KPSLB’s parent organization, recognized her passion, too.

In August, the group named Hightower Florida’s Outstanding Youth Champion during its virtual awards ceremony.

“I knew this was an impactful thing, but I didn’t see it as something I was doing that would change lives,” she said. “I just thought it should be done. We all should be doing this. It should be the norm. For it to be so much of an influence or have so much recognition, that’s awesome.”

‘It starts in your community’

For six months – up until the COVID-19 pandemic closed much of the Treasure Coast in March – Hightower and 15 other young people picked up trash, cigarette butts, cans, newspaper, whatever they could fit in their trash bags.

About 80% of the group was juniors and seniors from Hightower’s alma mater, Treasure Coast High School, but students from Lincoln Park Academy and other St. Lucie County high schools also joined the litter fight.

And even though Hightower considers herself a humble person, she admits she’s proud of the impact she’s had on her peers.

“For me, that’s important,” she said. “I see myself as a leader in my community, and I want to be a great leader in the world one day. It starts in your community … that little community you lived in for most of your life.”

Hightower, who’s majoring in supply chain management at FAMU, said she understands the importance of recycling and litter prevention. At the same time, she recognizes today’s young people are the next generation of environmental champions.

“We see a lot of great leaders today and their time is passing,” she said. “It’s our time to step up and be those leaders for the following generation.”

Hightower wants to launch nonprofits geared toward women, health, equality and racial justice, economic equality and environmental health – just like her mother.

She wants to attend law school, with a focus on human rights, and become an entrepreneur, too. She’s even thinking about running for political office.

“I want to do a lot, just as long as I can make a difference.”

For more information about Rise Above Youth Center for Excellence, search @RiseAboveYouthCenter on Facebook.