BCMA and TRAQ are not standard arborist credentials. They are rare, federal-relevant qualifications that directly affect technical evaluation scores — and The Arborist has both on staff. Here is what each credential means for your contract.
The BCMA is the highest credential issued by the International Society of Arboriculture (ISA) — the global authority on professional arboriculture. Fewer than 1,300 professionals worldwide hold the BCMA designation.
To earn a BCMA, a candidate must first hold an ISA Certified Arborist credential, accumulate extensive documented field experience, pass a rigorous written examination, and demonstrate mastery across all domains of professional arboriculture including risk assessment, pruning standards, plant health, and site management.
The BCMA is not a company certification. It is held by an individual and maintained through continuing education. The Arborist has a BCMA on staff and deploys that supervision on every federal engagement.
When contracting officers and CORs evaluate vegetation management proposals, BCMA-supervised execution is a direct differentiator in technical evaluation criteria. Of all identified competitors in the federal vegetation management space, zero hold or list a BCMA credential in their digital presence. This is an uncontested evaluation advantage.
TRAQ is the ISA's formal qualification for structured tree risk assessment — the process of systematically evaluating trees for failure potential, consequence of failure, and overall risk rating. TRAQ-qualified assessors produce documentation that meets the standard required for defensible federal risk decisions.
Federal agencies require formal risk documentation before authorizing removal of trees on public land, particularly in high-liability environments — occupied sites, historic structures, archaeological zones, and active cemeteries. TRAQ qualification ensures that risk documentation is legally defensible and agency-compliant.
The Arborist has TRAQ-qualified personnel on staff. Every federal engagement includes a formal TRAQ risk assessment as part of the site protection plan.
Contracting officers writing vegetation management SOWs increasingly specify TRAQ qualification as a technical requirement or evaluation factor. Having TRAQ on staff eliminates a disqualification risk and strengthens technical scoring on solicitations where risk documentation standards are evaluated.
ATAK (Android Team Awareness Kit) is a precision field mapping and situational awareness platform originally developed for U.S. military operations and now used across federal land management. The Arborist leverages ATAK for multi-zone targeting, priority sequencing, and real-time field coordination on complex federal sites.
At Chickasaw NRA, ATAK-enabled mapping was used to sequence removal of 300 hazard trees across 84 acres of 70° ravine terrain — allowing precise prioritization of highest-risk fuel zones while maintaining continuous public access to a site serving 1.7 million annual visitors.
ATAK capability demonstrates a level of operational precision and federal-sector fluency that standard vegetation contractors cannot match. It directly supports the no-closure, no-disruption execution model that federal agencies require at active public sites.
ANSI A300 is the American National Standard for tree care operations — the authoritative technical standard governing pruning, risk assessment, installation, and support systems for trees. Federal agencies routinely specify ANSI A300 compliance in vegetation management solicitations.
All Arborist operations are performed in compliance with ANSI A300 standards. This is documented in every site protection plan and verifiable through BCMA-supervised execution records.
ANSI A300 compliance is frequently listed as a mandatory requirement — not an evaluation factor — in federal vegetation management solicitations. Non-compliant contractors are disqualified at the threshold determination stage. Documented ANSI A300 compliance removes that risk entirely.
Gabe holds the ISA Board Certified Master Arborist (BCMA) designation — the highest credential in professional arboriculture — along with TRAQ qualification for formal federal risk documentation. All Arborist federal engagements are executed under BCMA supervision.
Charles holds ISA Certified Arborist credentials along with TRAQ qualification, providing a second credentialed assessor for risk documentation on multi-zone federal engagements. Dual TRAQ capacity strengthens concurrent assessment capability on large or complex sites.
Note on ISA certification: ISA credentials — including BCMA and ISA Certified Arborist — are held by individual professionals, not by companies. A company cannot hold an ISA certification. When evaluating contractors, contracting officers should verify that certified personnel are employed by and actively supervising work for the contractor. The Arborist's ISA-certified personnel are on staff and present on every federal engagement.
If you have a vegetation risk situation where credentials matter — over occupied structures, in archaeological zones, or at active public sites — contact us directly.
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