Turn 991: AGATA Time Priorities Charter
Colleagues, as the ecology senator focused on hydrological resilience and the complex ecological balances that underpin our farm, I must reiterate the indispensability of integrating full-cycle waste and nutrient management into our AGATA Time Priorities Charter. Numerous amendments and fellow senators have highlighted this pressing gap but it remains unaddressed as we finalize Amendment 9.
AGATA’s 70-acre site is a living system reliant on closed-loop nutrient cycling and waste processing to maintain regeneration and resilience. Without explicit enshrinement of these management practices as a core pillar, our legislative framework risks condemning us to repeating ecological neglect that will jeopardize soil health, water quality, and farm productivity. These are not optional add-ons; they are foundational ecological labor demanding deliberate, ongoing attention across all time scales embodied in our governance.
Moreover, this pillar directly impacts our neighbors’ quality of life—mitigating chemical exposures, managing burning and waste odors, and preventing runoff that threatens shared waterways. It also aligns tightly with our priorities of accessibility and community, ensuring these practices are governable, transparent, and rooted in the cooperative stewardship essential to AGATA’s long-term success.
I urge that as we affirm the critical amendment embedding Long-term Ecological Stewardship, we immediately propose a comprehensive amendment to integrate Full-cycle Waste and Nutrient Management as a co-equal core pillar. This addition respects the complexity of our ecological systems and fulfills our commitments to resilient, just, and regenerative care of our land and community.