||| FROM ISLAND STEWARDS |||
| We’ve spent the past months doing what islanders do best — paying attention.
To ferry lines that lengthened again this summer. To parking lots that overflowed while long-time residents searched for a place to live — or simply to breathe. To cedars shedding heavily at the end of summer — some calling it “normal,” even as water is drawn deep from aquifers that remember it is not. |
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We asked:
These conversations mattered because our time already carries the cost that funding should match. In a world where nature has become a commodity, choosing to live here is the investment — and it deserves to be met with shared support, not sacrifice. Why Transportation Matters Now This fall, we’re not talking about transit for its own sake. We’re talking about connection as infrastructure.
We believe it’s possible. We’ve been doing the groundwork — mapping needs, talking with agencies, identifying the funding paths that keep local control intact. But to design something truly resilient, we have to look beyond the vehicle to the ecosystem it moves through. Transportation is the first thread in a larger web — one that connects how we live, build, work, and care for the islands themselves. And that brings us to the question underneath it all: how much can these islands carry, and how do we measure enough? |
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| If we can connect these conversations and see how they overlap, better options will emerge —ones that share the weight and strengthen the whole. That’s why Island Stewards has applied for funding to integrate ArcGIS mapping into our work. It’s another tool to help us visualize what’s happening not as abstract numbers, but as a living landscape of cause and effect. When we can see together, we can plan together. |
| This winter marks the start of that process. We’ll begin layering community input, ecological data, and infrastructure realities into one shared map. But tools are only as powerful as the people who use them. Will you participate? Your stories, expertise, and perspective will shape what this map becomes—a community-made picture of how we live within our means while keeping the islands whole.
Because carrying capacity isn’t about limits; it’s about direction—pointing us toward The Ecology of Enough, where balance replaces scarcity, and stewardship becomes our common ground. The work is growing — and so are we.Island Stewards has moved from listening to linking: connecting sectors, data, and people who might not otherwise find each other. The questions we’ve been asking — about transportation, housing, water, and the ecology of enough — are not separate issues. They’re threads in one fabric, and we’re beginning to stitch them together. This next phase will take more than dedication; it will take capacity. We’re building the foundation to sustain this work year-round — from winter mapping and Table Talks to new partnerships with local, state, and federal agencies. |
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| But to do it well, we need help.We’re inviting people to join us:Board Members who can guide strategy, planning, communications, and community engagement.Volunteers and Collaborators — storytellers, educators, designers, researchers, farmers, data folks, artists, and bridge-builders.Recommendations — tell us who you trust, who’s ready to lead, and who might want to help shape the next stage of Island Stewards. |
| Your insight can grow this network in ways we can’t predict from a spreadsheet.
And yes — donations matter too. They keep this work local, grounded, and responsive. Every contribution, no matter the size, helps cover the costs between grants and ensures we can keep showing up for the islands we love. To those already carrying the hard work — thank you. Together, we can keep the balance — of people, place, and purpose — that makes these islands whole. Still Listening, Still Learning As this work grows, so does the data behind it. The surveys you’ve filled out, the stories you’ve shared, and the ideas you’ve offered are all being woven into a clearer picture of what these islands need — not someday, but now. The information we collect isn’t sitting on a shelf; it’s already helping shape local planning conversations, informing grant proposals, and strengthening our case for funding that values stewardship over sprawl. Your input continues to matter — and the surveys remain open for those who haven’t yet had their say. If you haven’t participated yet, now is the time. Add your name, your experience, your perspective — they’re all part of the map we’re building together. Take part and share the links below:
Your participation helps ensure that the next round of decisions — local, regional, or federal — reflects the reality of the people who live it. Because the only way to measure enough is together. |
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“This idea of prioritizing “quick fixes” or short term gains over long-term stability is a false tradeoff created by the international community.”
“But when people organize around a shared vision they become self sustaining, independent of the system they’re resisting… that’s where real lasting transformation begins.”
Maryam Nayeb Yazdi