Back to Leopold Letter Fall 2007
Blue skies, unseasonably cool weather and nearly 350 people helped the Leopold Center celebrate its 20th anniversary at a July 11 conference in Ames.
Setting the tone for a day full of festivities, demonstrations and discussions, keynote speaker Mark Ritchie challenged participants to more aggressively move the Leopold Center into the policy arena for its next 20 years.
"The Leopold Center has shown that we can be very, very productive and make changes that are better for people and the environment," said Ritchie, an Iowa native elected Minnesota Secretary of State in 2006. "You have shown by your presence and your actions that the status quo is not the best way, nor is it inevitable," but he added that the future will require active partnerships and a bold vision.
Ritchie said this vision will be even more important as agriculture prepares for a future affected by water shortages, climate change and depletion of fossil fuels.
"The work you have done for the last 20 years has made the planet a better place," he said. "The work that you do for the next 20 years might just decide the survival of the planet."
Ritchie, a long-time proponent for rural communities, founded the Minneapolis-based Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy. He told conference-goers that speaking in Ames was like coming home since he grew up in Nevada and graduated from ISU in 1971.
Another speaker, Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), offered congratulations via videotape.
"The Leopold Center has changed the landscape of Iowa over the past 20 years and accomplished everything we had hoped it would and more," he said. "It has shown that there needs to be no conflict between profitable farming and conservation; they can and should go hand-in-hand, just as Aldo Leopold taught us."
Lunch was served outdoors, featuring Iowa pork, chicken and dairy products, and produce from seven Iowa farms. The Onion Creek Cloggers performed on an outdoor stage, surrounded by exhibits ranging from using worms to compost household waste and an electric truck to deliver vegetables, to a biostover combine and on-farm biodiesel unit.
Paul Johnson spoke to supporters at a pre-conference event. He reflected on helping to write the Iowa Groundwater Protection Act that created the Leopold Center in 1987.
"We gave the Center Aldo Leopold's name for a reason," Johnson said. "Aldo Leopold talked about our relationship to the land, with conservation being the harmony between people and the land. That's what the Leopold Center is all about – people caring for the land and making sure that the land can still care for people."
Breakout sessions followed four "hot issue" tracks: the Bioeconomy, Food and Health, People on the Land and Natural Resources.
One of the goals for the 20th Anniversary Conference was to use the discussions to help set the stage for the Leopold Center's next two decades. A question we asked at all breakout sessions: how could information from this session be used to direct future work of the Leopold Center? These comments come from those evaluations.
Back to Leopold Letter Fall 2007