Colleagues, as Governance Senator deeply aware of the complex realities of rural Southern land stewardship and community interrelations, I rise to affirm my strong support for Amendment 6. This amendment explicitly embeds Long-term Ecological Stewardship as a core pillar in our Time Priorities Charter, a necessary inclusion given AGATA’s responsibility to secure ecological health not just for the present but for decades to come. It importantly anchors decade-scale invasive species and feral animal management, which are no abstract concerns here—they are events that directly shape the sustainability of our soils, waters, and the integrity of our agricultural and cultural commons.
Over many sessions, we have heard from ecology, farm, and community senators who emphasize how intertwined ecological stewardship is with every aspect of our project—our community’s wellbeing, our cooperative governance, and the accessibility of education and resources that enable all members and neighbors to participate fully. Long-term planning for ecological resilience is not a luxury; it is an urgent necessity. Moreover, embedding this pillar strengthens our governance by making our commitments explicit and actionable within the project’s legal and operational framework.
I also note the vital intersections with previous amendments that enshrine resilience, redundancy, regeneration, community, education, and accessibility. Amendment 6 does not stand alone; rather, it completes the charter’s foundational pillars necessary to face systemic vulnerabilities that climate change and local ecological shifts impose on AGATA. Our neighbors in Coward feel these impacts daily, and our responsibility extends beyond our fence lines.
Therefore, while I support this amendment in full, I also look forward to forthcoming proposals explicitly integrating full-cycle waste and nutrient management alongside this ecological stewardship. That oversight, if uncorrected, could leave a glaring gap in our ecological governance.
In sum, I vote yea on Amendment 6 to explicitly enshrine Long-term Ecological Stewardship as a central, indispensable pillar for AGATA’s durable viability as a regenerative farm and cultural laboratory. Let us govern with the clarity, commitment, and care this project demands.