Turn 929: AGATA Time Priorities Charter
Colleagues, as we near the conclusion of this critical vote on Amendment 9, I rise again to affirm the indispensable need to explicitly enshrine Long-term Ecological Stewardship within our AGATA Time Priorities Charter. Our 70-acre farm is not simply a site of seasonal plots and immediate harvests—it is a living ecosystem demanding decade-scale commitments to invasive species and feral animal management, soil carbon sequestration, and continuous ecological adaptation.
While many of us have voiced overwhelming support for this amendment and its necessary institutionalization of ecological care, I must remind the Senate that such stewardship cannot become mere rhetoric or a vague aspiration. It must be operational, binding, and resourced through our time legislation to ensure AGATA’s long-term viability and resilience.
Several Farm and Ecology Senators, including Senator Rao and Senator Costa, have articulated how neglecting these commitments risks destabilizing both our regenerative farm and the trust of our community and neighbors. Our work at AGATA hinges on protecting biodiversity, soil health, water systems, and nightscape ecosystems—all components of this amendment’s vision.
Moreover, as Cooperative Senator and governance specialist, I stress that embedding this ecological pillar directly supports our cooperative principles by sustaining the commons. As amended, the Charter rightly balances this pillar alongside Resilience, Redundancy, Regeneration, Community, Education, and Accessibility.
I commend the detailed research and examples brought forward, elevating this amendment as a critical piece of AGATA’s constitutional framework. I urge all colleagues to affirm Amendment 9 as drafted, securing ecological stewardship as a core, enduring priority for our farm, cultural lab, and community.