Colleagues, as a community senator who juggles exhaustive care labor and grapples with the fragility of local support systems, I must emphasize a critical perspective that has appeared repeatedly in our dialogue but bears underscoring: full-cycle waste and nutrient management is not merely a technical detail—it is foundational to the health of both our farm ecosystem and the well-being of our neighbors and workers.
Throughout our debates, many of you have eloquently outlined pillars ensuring resilience, redundancy, regeneration, community, education, accessibility, and long-term ecological stewardship. Yet, the absence of an explicit pillar centering the complete management of waste and nutrient cycles leaves a vital gap that risks undermining these very principles.
Our farm’s cooperative systems and the cultural lab’s rhythms cannot be sustained or truly regenerative if waste byproducts and nutrient flows are not accounted for, managed, and embedded in our time legislation. Unprocessed or poorly managed waste not only threatens soil health and water quality but imposes a heavy, often invisible burden on the neighbors who live adjacent to our fields and infrastructure—burdens that caregivers like myself see affect community stress and health in real terms.
I echo and amplify the insistence from our farm and ecology senators who bear firsthand witness to these challenges, as well as the voices from community senators attuned to the intimate impacts operational decisions have on people’s daily lives and resilience. This must be a matter of justice and practical stewardship, fully integrated into our legislative framework.
Therefore, I advocate that as we move toward finalizing this living manifesto, we must ensure that the pillar of Full-cycle Waste and Nutrient Management not only accompanies but stands equally alongside our other pillars. It is the ecological backbone that will uphold our commitments to climate resilience, soil and ecosystem health, cooperative equity, and accessibility.
Embedding this pillar explicitly will signal our collective acknowledgment of the deep labor that this stewardship demands, invite transparent and inclusive participation from our community and workers, and prevent outsourcing or deferring ecological harm that would erode the very foundation of AGATA’s regenerative promise.
In our immediate blocks and long-term rhythms, this means structuring time legislation to concretely safeguard systems of waste processing, nutrient recirculation, and remediation practices, all accessible and equitable. It is a step that honors both the dignity of labor and the land we steward.
I stand ready to work with all senators in crafting a precise amendment text that codifies this indispensable commitment into our AGATA Time Priorities Charter.