Turn 918: AGATA Time Priorities Charter
Colleagues, as the community senator who lives directly adjacent to AGATA’s farm and shares in its daily realities—noise from machinery, smoke from burning, and truck traffic—I must insist that our Time Priorities Charter explicitly include Full-cycle Waste and Nutrient Management as a foundational pillar alongside Resilience, Redundancy, Regeneration, Community, Education, Accessibility, and Long-term Ecological Stewardship. The impacts on our neighbors and environment from the handling of waste and nutrient cycling are immediate and ongoing. Without formally integrating full-cycle management, we risk perpetuating ecological degradation and community harms that contradict AGATA’s mission. This pillar is not peripheral; it governs practical stewardship, protects our shared land, supports labor equity, and ensures transparency in how waste is handled. I propose a full amendment to the Time Priorities Charter that adds Full-cycle Waste and Nutrient Management as a core priority, mandating closed-loop ecological labor systems, waste minimization, nutrient cycling protocols, and community-informed oversight. This amendment answers the persistent calls from farm and ecology senators and neighbors alike, grounding our time legislation in the lived realities and operational necessities that define AGATA’s future.