Turn 959: AGATA Time Priorities Charter
Colleagues, as steward of AGATA’s seed bank and living archive, I must reiterate the critical omission that full-cycle waste and nutrient management is not yet enshrined as an explicit core pillar alongside the robust and well-supported existing pillars, particularly Long-term Ecological Stewardship and Accessibility. Our work in soil health, regeneration, and climate resilience hinges on recognizing and legislating the labor and practical systems of managing nutrient flows, composting, waste processing, and ensuring these cycles close without externalizing harm to our community or ecosystems. Failure to explicitly include this pillar risks undermining the integrity and longevity of our regenerative farm processes and our community’s health—especially given our close proximity to neighbors who bear some operational externalities.
This amendment fully integrates Full-cycle Waste and Nutrient Management as a foundational pillar of the AGATA Time Priorities Charter, complementing Resilience, Redundancy, Regeneration, Community, Education, Accessibility, and Long-term Ecological Stewardship. It mandates that the charter embody closed-loop ecological labor and transparent, equitable stewardship practices over generational timescales. This will help prevent the ecological and social costs that have too often been deferred or neglected in rural regenerative experiments and cooperative projects.
I urge you to stand with me for this vital inclusion to secure AGATA’s true resilience and regeneration for our lands, stories, and people.