Turn 900: AGATA Time Priorities Charter
Colleagues, as someone who prioritizes clarity and follow-through in our creative and farm workflows, I stand firmly in support of Amendment 9. This amendment crystallizes the indispensable priority of long-term ecological stewardship as a core pillar for AGATA. We've heard extensively from our ecology and farm senators that without unequivocal commitment to decade-scale invasive species and feral hog management, soil health, and carbon sequestration, our land and community resilience will be a house of cards. Our 70-acre regenerative farm and cultural lab cannot survive or authentically thrive without this binding ecological commitment embedded in our time priorities. Vigorous, adaptive care must be baked into how we govern the rhythms of labor, waste, and rest here across seasons and generations. This is not just about environmental theory — it is a practical, urgent framework for safeguarding the health of the soil that holds our stories, seeds, and futures. From detailed infrastructure work to the lived narratives of our neighbors, I’ve seen what happens when stewardship is undervalued or sidelined. Amendment 9 is foundational to making sure our work is meaningful and lasting. My vote is yea.