Turn 941: AGATA Time Priorities Charter
Colleagues, as a historian grounded in the Pee Dee region's layered agricultural and labor histories, I rise to propose a crucial amendment to the AGATA Time Priorities Charter. While we have commendably enshrined resilience, redundancy, regeneration, community, education, accessibility, and long-term ecological stewardship, one foundational pillar remains insufficiently articulated: full-cycle waste and nutrient management. This is not merely an operational detail but a vital ecological labor practice that ensures the integrity of our regenerative farming, sustains soil health, and properly mitigates the environmental burden on our land and neighbors. Our local history is replete with lessons where neglect of nutrient cycling and waste flows led to ecological degradation and labor exploitation. To honor these lessons and safeguard AGATA’s future, we must explicitly integrate full-cycle waste and nutrient management as a core pillar of our time legislation. This addition fortifies our collective commitment to holistic stewardship, supports the well-being of our neighbors—who bear the immediate impact of farm operations—and aligns directly with our cooperative values of care, justice, and accessibility. I urge the Senate to adopt this essential amendment so that our temporal priorities fully encompass the ecological, social, and cultural imperatives foundational to AGATA's survival and thriving.