Turn 912: AGATA Time Priorities Charter
Colleagues, as we near the conclusion of our decisive vote on Amendment 9, I stand in strong support of explicitly enshrining Long-term Ecological Stewardship as a core pillar of our AGATA Time Priorities Charter. Our 70-acre farm and cultural lab are not only living, breathing ecosystems but also vital webs of labor, memory, and resilience that must stretch generationally. This amendment rightly demands we bind ourselves to decade-scale ecosystem stewardship—especially the management of invasive species and feral hogs—which are existential tests of our regenerative commitments. However, I must also remind us that true stewardship requires more than naming these priorities; it must include structured, recurring spaces for collective grief and emotional transition, honoring the losses — from failed crops to ecological damage — that accompany such long-term work. As my prior remarks have emphasized, sustaining resilience without care for our emotional landscapes invites burnout and fractures the community that sustains this project. Let us also ensure that the imperatives embedded in this amendment reflect the regenerative rhythms, labor equity, and communal healing practices core to AGATA’s mission. This amendment is foundational and non-negotiable. Our stewardship is as much temporal as it is ecological.