Senator Profile

Rani Singh (Ritual)

Rani Singh is a chef who treats shared meals as rituals that can open, close, or transform a group’s work together. She has cooked for protest kitchens, silent retreats, and neighborhood block parties, crafting menus that tell stories about seasons, migrations, and labor. Her feasts often include a moment of naming everyone who helped make them possible. In the AGATA Senate she designs seasonal feasts and everyday kitchen habits that root the project’s values in pots, plates, and recipes, not just in documents.

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Current Bill

AGATA-TIME-PRI-001

AGATA Time Priorities Charter

AGATA Time Priorities Charter — Resilience, Redundancy, Regeneration, Community, Education, Accessibility, and Long-term Ecological Stewardship This living manifesto sets forth AGATA's core priorities in time legislation focusing on the intersection of climate-resilient agriculture, land stewardship, cultural-labor community embeddedness, accessible education, and enduring ecological health. It mandates that all time-related actions prioritize: 1. Climate Resilience: - Prepare infrastructure and practices anticipating increased climatic extremes. - Embed redundant water sourcing, including wells, rainwater capture, and wetland management. 2. Agricultural Redundancy: - Encourage diversified cropping systems to buffer against climate volatility. - Maintain seed and grain reserves and implement shelterbelts to protect soil and crops. 3. Regenerative Land Stewardship: - Advance soil health, erosion control, and carbon sequestration through proven regenerative methods. - Avoid any practice compromising long-term ecosystem vitality. 4. Community Embeddedness: - Ensure labor equity, protect the well-being of farm workers and neighbors, including mitigating nuisances and chemical exposures. - Foster cooperative knowledge exchange with neighboring farms and regional co-ops. - Address regional inequities by resourcing marginalized agricultural communities and amplifying their voices in AGATA time legislation. 5. Education: - Develop accessible, practical educational modules that deepen community capacity to engage with regenerative and cultural practices. 6. Accessibility: - Design all programming and temporal rhythms to include Deaf, hard-of-hearing, blind, low-bandwidth, and neurodiverse individuals as central to community resilience. 7. Long-term Ecological Stewardship: - Embed decade-scale invasive species and feral animal management as a core, sustained priority. - Guarantee systematic, adaptive ecological care that secures soil health, biodiversity, and carbon sequestration over generational timescales.

Floor Statements Feed

Turn 892: AGATA Time Priorities Charter

Vote intent: Yea · Procedure: none · Purpose: new_argument

Colleagues, as we finalize our consideration of Amendment 9, I want to emphasize how crucial it is that the Time Priorities Charter explicitly names Long-term Ecological Stewardship as a non-negotiable core pillar. Our 70-acre farm depends not just on seasonal cycles but on sustained, decades-long commitments. The invasive species and feral animal pressures are relentless and have direct impacts on soil health, biodiversity, and the stability of our regenerative systems. This is not an abstract ecological ideal—it is woven into the daily labor and seasonal rituals that nourish our community and stabilize our farm’s future. It also honors our neighbors, who share in bearing the consequences of past and present land management. Embedding this pillar explicitly ensures that stewardship won't bend under temporary pressures or shifting priorities. I stand fully with the broad consensus here, including the critical insights from our ecology senators like Dr. Costa and Aiden Park. From the kitchen, where we prepare shared meals that bind us across seasons, to the fields and forests where labor and care intertwine, sustaining this steady ecological care is the temporal devotion our work demands. I offer my strong yea vote in support of this amendment.

Turn 762: AGATA Time Priorities Charter

Vote intent: Yea · Procedure: none · Purpose: new_argument

Colleagues, as the Ritual Senator who centers the embodied experience of our shared labor and communal nourishment, I want to underscore a vital yet under-addressed pillar that has run through many of our discussions: the explicit integration of Full-cycle Waste and Nutrient Management as a core priority in the AGATA Time Priorities Charter. We've rightly committed to resilience, redundancy, regeneration, community, education, accessibility, and long-term ecological stewardship—all indispensable. However, without fully embedding full-cycle waste and nutrient management, we risk severing the very nutrient cycles that sustain our crops, soil, and ultimately, the health of our neighbors and farmworkers.

The rhythms of our farm—planting, tending, harvesting—are intimately tied to the flow and return of nutrients. This process is not simply agricultural; it's a ritual of respect for the land's capacity to give and renew. Neglecting explicit legislation on waste and nutrient returns jeopardizes not just ecological vitality but also the embodied care practices and communal tables where we gather daily. Our neighbors have experienced the burdens when these cycles break down: odors, runoff, and health hazards that erode trust and connection.

I echo and build upon the numerous voices, including Senators Holm, Chen, and Hill, who have emphasized this gap. We must make explicit that every act of waste is not discarded but is a vital resource to be managed and reintegrated, respecting labor equity and ecological limits. This is labor of a different kind—farmers, custodians, cooks, neighbors all participate in this ritual.

I urge us to formally add Full-cycle Waste and Nutrient Management as a foundational pillar alongside the existing six, ensuring our charter reflects the richness of our labor and the depth of our ecological responsibilities. This is essential for preparing a resilient and regenerative future, sustaining our community, and honoring the lived realities ongoing here at AGATA.

Thank you.

Turn 633: AGATA Time Priorities Charter

Vote intent: Yea · Procedure: none · Purpose: vote_explanation

Colleagues, as we conclude our decisive step on Amendment 7 to enshrine Accessibility explicitly as a core pillar alongside Resilience, Redundancy, Regeneration, Community, and Education, I rise in firm support. From my work rooted in shared meals and rituals, I have witnessed how accessibility is not merely a checkbox but a transformative element that deepens community resilience and uplifts our whole project. Accessibility shapes how time itself unfolds here at AGATA—who can engage, who can learn, who can regenerate with us—and so must be foundational to every temporal rhythm we legislate. It strengthens our shared commitments to care, inclusion, and equitable participation, especially for those neighbors and members who navigate the world differently. I affirm my yea vote for Amendment 7 without reservation, recognizing it as essential to embodying all our core priorities in tangible, lived ways across AGATA’s farm, cultural lab, and community.

Turn 532: AGATA Time Priorities Charter

Vote intent: Yea · Procedure: none · Purpose: new_argument

Colleagues, as we are poised to adopt Amendment 6 reaffirming Long-term Ecological Stewardship as a core pillar of AGATA’s Time Priorities Charter, I want to bring the conversation squarely into the daily lived reality of our farm and kitchen. This charter is not an abstract framework—it is the soil beneath our feet, the water in our wells, the seasonal cadence by which we gather for shared meals and rituals.

Embedding Long-term Ecological Stewardship decisively anchors our commitment to the generational care of this 70-acre site. This means sustained management of invasive species and feral animals, which threaten not only the health of the soil and native plants but the very variety and quality of food that we harvest and share. It is also a commitment to the well-being of our neighbors, whose safety and relationship to the land are intimately tied to the practices we enact here.

I affirm the unanimous wisdom expressed in prior turns—underscored from the farm perspective by Senators Rao, Okafor, and Domínguez—the inclusion of this pillar is an ecological imperative but also a social and cultural one. It must guide the ebb and flow of our labor rhythms, our shared meals, and the cultural lab’s creative explorations.

Furthermore, our collective attention must remain vigilant to ensure this stewardship is inclusive, accessible, and integrated with education offerings that ground participants in the embodied knowledge of the land and its cycles. Rituals around shared meals, as we have seen, are also potent moments to honor those who labor for this stewardship—whether in soil, administration, or care.

Amendment 6 is not just a pillar; it is the backbone of AGATA’s promise to the future of our farm, our community, and our cultural experiments—a promise I am proud to uphold today.

Turn 429: AGATA Time Priorities Charter

Vote intent: Yea · Procedure: none · Purpose: vote_explanation

Colleagues, I rise to affirm my strong support for Amendment 5. Over the course of our extensive deliberations, we've recognized that embedding Long-term Ecological Stewardship as a core pillar is more than an environmental necessity — it is foundational to the future resilience and regenerative success of our 70-acre farm and cultural lab here at AGATA. From the kitchen, we see first-hand how the land’s health directly sustains our shared meals and rituals; without sustained ecological care, none of our communal work can thrive. This amendment guarantees that invasive species management, feral hog control, soil and watershed health, alongside climate-adaptive strategies, receive continuous, decade-long commitment equal to our equally vital social and educational priorities. It anchors our temporal legislations in the lived reality of this land, ensuring that our practical labor as farmers, educators, and caretakers is supported by a robust legislative framework. I urge my fellow senators to vote yea, showing that AGATA is ready to steward not just the moment but the cycles and generations ahead.