A Pep Rally for Change
At Bioneers, scientists, environmentalists, and forward thinkers tend the grass roots
September / October 2006
Joseph Hart Utne magazine
Somewhere in the middle of last year's Bioneers conference,
wiped out from a packed schedule of sessions designed to, among
other things, expand the organic food movement, revitalize urban
centers, and attack global warming, I donned a swimsuit and padded
barefoot through the hushed midnight corridors of our hotel in San
Rafael, California, heading for the hot tub and relaxation.
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In spite of the hour, I found five or six other conferees
already assembled. 'You don't know what you're getting into,' one
of them warned me as I slipped into the water. Another let me in on
the rules: 'If you're coming in,' she said, 'you have to tell us
your name, your age, where you're from, the state of your love
life, and what cause you're fighting for.'
Over the next several hours, I learned all about the trials and
triumphs of editing a newspaper, making a documentary film, working
with troubled kids, and, yes, the love lives of young activists.
(What happens in the hot tub, stays in the hot tub!)
For the rest of the weekend, this after-hours story swap stood
out as an embodiment of what makes Bioneers so inviting and
inspiring. The annual conference, which now draws more than 3,000
activists of all stripes to Marin County every October, is an
information exchange, an opportunity to network, and a chance to
meet like-minded souls who dream of a better world and do their
best to have fun along the way.
Kenny Ausubel started Bioneers (the organization's official name
is the Collective Heritage Institute) back in 1990 as an incubator
for projects and organizations that conserve and restore the
environment. The group's annual conference has since mushroomed
into one of the largest consistently edifying gatherings of
grassroots organizers in the nation.
'This aspect of bringing people together is almost as important
as our central mission to restore the earth,' says Ausubel, a
journalist and documentary filmmaker who, before he started
Bioneers, founded Seeds of Change, an organic seed company and
research farm that specializes in diverse species and heirloom
varieties. 'The connections and cross-pollination that take place
at the conference help build a long-term movement. It's a central
part of what we're doing.'
The conference schedule is structured around morning speeches
that are intended to rally and inspire as much as to convey
information. This year's speakers include a variety of voices (many
of them Utne contributors), including biologist and
entrepreneur Paul Stamets, who wants to save the world with
mushrooms; New York Times Magazine writer Michael Pollan,
an advocate of local foods; Jungian psychologist James Hillman;
Lois Gibbs, the environmental activist who made 'Love Canal' a
household phrase; and Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!
Afternoon sessions often feature panels of organizers and activists
who speak on related topics-organic and local foods, media freedom,
and urban nature restoration, to name just a few.
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