Colleagues, as your farm senator deeply engaged with the day-to-day realities and long-term stewardship of AGATA's agricultural ecosystem, I rise in strong support of Amendment 8. The explicit enshrinement of Long-term Ecological Stewardship in our Time Priorities Charter reflects the urgency and necessity of sustained, decade-scale commitments to managing invasive species, feral animals, and the delicate balance of our land’s regenerative capacity. This is no abstraction: these ongoing efforts directly safeguard the foundation of our farm’s resilience, soil health, and ultimately the viability of every cooperative, cultural, and educational endeavor we pursue.
I want to emphasize that sustaining this stewardship demands robust integration with other pillars—particularly accessibility and education—so that ecological labor is shared, practiced, and respected openly within our community. Moreover, we cannot lose sight of the vital cohesion between this amendment and the sprawling web of existing and pending amendments that rightly call for full-cycle waste and nutrient management, and reparative justice. Together, these form the bedrock for AGATA’s future: a resilient, redundant, regenerative, and just land and community stewardship.
Let us move forward affirming Amendment 8 as a clear, binding declaration that our project is committed to the long haul, mindful not only of our land’s ecological rhythms but also the livelihoods and interconnections that depend upon them. This is the kind of temporal legislation indispensable in the face of intensifying climate challenges and historical inequities. I urge this Senate to vote yea and give our farm—and our neighbors—the committed stewardship we owe.