PROGRAM
Eco
Summit
+Expo
To preserve quality of life, we must find a new balance with nature.
PROGRAM
Monday December 4, 5:00 pm-8:00 pm
KICK-OFF RECEPTION
The Bay Park Nest
1055 Boulevard of the Arts, Sarasota
Let’s kick it off with a drink and movie under the stars! Join us for a very special family-friendly screening of 2040 with the film’s creator, award-winning Australian documentary filmmaker and EcoSummit Keynoter Damon Gameau. It’s a journey to explore what the future could look like by the year 2040 if we simply embraced the best solutions already available to improve our planet and shifted them rapidly into the mainstream. Free and open to the public.
5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Meet and mingle with a complimentary beverage for registered EcoSummit attendees and snacks for purchase at the Nest concession.
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Set up your lawn chair or spread a blanket at The Bay’s outdoor cinema. Director Damon Gameau and his daughter Velvet will introduce his film 2040 then take audience questions after the screening. The film runs 90 minutes.
Tuesday December 5
Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall
9:00 am-10:00 am
OPENING KEYNOTE
Documentary film writer, director, and producer Damon Gameau journeys to uncover how stories shape our community understanding of who we are and what is possible. The story of mankind’s relationship with the earth has changed over millennia as have our stories of how we measure our own success and happiness. Now we must seek new stories of planetary boundaries, a new balance with nature, and growing and regenerating the environment to safeguard our communities and quality of life.
10:00 am-12:25 pm
SESSION 1: GROWTH AND BALANCE
Sponsored by Live Wildly Foundation
Over the past century, population growth and development patterns have increased pollution and decreased the environment’s capacity to process it. In the face of continued rapid population growth, loss of environmental function and connectivity, and climate stressors, how can we grow the environment as we grow communities? Can we find balance through more sensitive land development practices that contain and minimize impacts?
10:05 am-10:30 am
Viewpoint: Our Story of Growth and Balance
Sarasota native and three term Sarasota County Commissioner Jon Thaxton brings the last half-century of growth into focus with thoughts on our community-driven legacy of environmental stewardship and advocacy.
10:30 am-10:50 am
Break
10:50 am-11:50 am
Panel Discussion: Growth and Balance
There is a better way. Led by smart growth expert Paul Owens from 1000 Friends of Florida, expert panelists discuss strategies for sustainable land development practices that grow environmental infrastructure, resiliency, and quality of life.
11:50 am-12:20 pm
Case Studies: Green Development
Case studies demonstrate that we can build back nature's ecosystem services into projects. Nature-based infrastructure becomes a critical "utility" that cleans water, protects against flooding, provides habitat, cools, and captures carbon.
12:25 pm-1:25 pm
LUNCH BREAK
Take an hour to fill up and refresh.
- Use your lunch coupon at the food trucks for your choice of one: entree salad (vv/gf), personal pizza (v), greek wrap (v), or street tacos (v) plus a drink.
- Unwind and restore with a quick wellness session with Petra on the bayfront, including breathing, gentle movement, and healing sound to make you feel energized and rejuvenated. We will take a standing position and no special clothing, equipment, or skills are needed to participate.
- Stretch the legs with a short, guided walk around The Bay to learn about the amazing environmental restoration techniques built right into the landscape. The Bay's COO and landscape architect Bill Waddill is your expert guide.
1:25 pm - 3:00 pm
SESSION 2: LAND, LEGACY & SPECIAL PLACES
The fate of our last remaining natural lands and wildlife will be decided in the next decade. Saving land protects wild places for wildlife, waterways, and people. What lands have we saved and what’s left to protect? What is the value of natural open spaces to community health and prosperity? We can restore and recharge natural systems on conservation and agricultural lands to support habitat connectivity, biodiversity, water flow, soil health, and local food systems. It’s an insurance policy on our changing future.
1:30 am-2:30 pm
Panel Discussion: Saving our Natural Areas and Working Lands
Locally and statewide, voters overwhelmingly support protection of our natural lands through acquisition of public lands and easements on private lands. Panelists discuss how this may not be enough to protect the last remaining critical lands.
2:30 pm-3:00 pm
Storytelling: Stories from the Field
Perspective is everything. Some see a threat, some see beauty. Through the lenses of time and culture, these storytellers will open your eyes to the magic and danger of Florida's wildlands and beasts.
3:00 pm-3:20 pm
Break
3:20 pm - 5:00 pm
SESSION 3: MAKING A PLACE FOR NATURE
Sponsored by Sarasota County UF/IFAS Extension & Sustainability
Where have all the birds gone? Has a generation lost touch with nature herself? Our urban and suburban environments are built for people not nature, but we can invite nature back. How could making space for nature in our urban and suburban places make us healthier and more resilient to heat and floods? We can safely regenerate and recharge natural systems right in our own backyards, neighborhood parks, and regional recreation areas to bring back water quality and wildlife.
3:25 am-4:25 pm
Panel Discussion: Recharging Nature with Urban Restoration
Urban and suburban restoration matters at all scales from backyard to local golf course to regional park. University of Florida Professor Mark Hostetler, author of the how-to book Green Leap, is joined by three experts with big successes to their credit.
4:25 pm-5:00 pm
Storytelling: Fish Tales
Three Stories. Only Two Are True. You Decide. It takes guts and grit to make a career out of studying wild Florida. These accomplished scientists can tell you some stories you won't believe.
5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
DINNER BREAK
Take two hours to fill up and refresh.
Dinner is on your own. There are several delicious spots within a 10 minute walk, such as The Nest at the Bay, H2O Bistro at Hotel Indigo, Currents at the Hyatt, or make a reservation at Duval's on Main Street and their free 9-passenger shuttle will pick you up!
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
FLORIDA STORIES
Sponsored by Gulf Coast Community Foundation
Enjoy an unforgettable evening with Carl Hiaasen, Florida’s most savagely funny, riotous, and cathartic storyteller. Hiaasen has published 13 novels for adults, among them nine national bestsellers – including Strip Tease, Sick Puppy, Skinny Dip, Nature Girl, and Bad Monkey. Carl Hiaasen has also taken his humor and irreverence to the pages of kids’ books. His most recent, Wrecker, debuted in September as a New York Times #1 Bestseller.
Hiaasen will be joined by bestselling author and environmental journalist Craig Pittman, local storyteller and dolphin expert Dr. Randy Wells, and award-winning Americana songwriter Karen Jonas and her band, who Rolling Stone Germany calls "a bit wicked, a bit dangerous." It’s an irreverent evening of Florida Stories and music recounting Floridians’ relationship with our enchantingly wild lands, waters, and creatures.
Craig Pittman underwritten by Florida Humanities.
5:30-6:30 pm
Pre-show Reception for VIP ticketed guests
Sponsored by Chiles Hospitality
Enjoy delicious and artful wines and hors d'oeuvres from the sustainability leader Chiles Hospitality. Ed Chiles famously owns a family of three waterfront restaurants serving sustainable seafood, an in-house bakery, and Gamble Creek Farm with 26 acres of organic vegetables, fruits and flowers delivering local and sustainably sourced ingredients.
Wednesday December 6
Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall
9:00 am-12:00 pm
SESSION 4: BILLION DOLLAR BAYS
Estuaries are engines for wildlife, fisheries, tourism, culture, real estate, and recreation. From Charlotte Harbor to Tampa Bay, our region has three of America’s 28 prestigious Estuaries of National Significance. Can conservation and restoration gains keep up with impacts from population growth and climate change? What’s our plan to reduce macroalgal blooms and red tide? What is the status of our fish and wildlife populations? Are we at a tipping point with pollution?
9:05 am-10:05 am
Panel Discussion: Recharging Nature with Estuary Restoration
Award-winning Florida environmental journalist and author Craig Pittman joins the Directors of the three National Estuary Programs charged with protecting and restoring our estuaries from Estero Bay to Tampa Bay.
10:05 am-10:35 am
Case Studies: Bay Habitat and Wildlife Restoration
From sportfish to oysters to dolphins, restoration and protection efforts are underway to support the recovery and resilience of habitat and wildlife in the face of human and climate induced pressures.
10:35 am-10:55 am
Break
10:55 am-11:25 pm
Case Studies: Community In Action Protecting Wildlife
Community-driven initiatives are energized and making a difference across the Suncoast. Meet some of the heroes from 100% volunteer run organizations who work the early, late and weekend shifts to protect wildlife.
11:25 am-11:55 am
Storytelling: Cultural Stories from the Estuary
The stories we tell define our culture - who we are and what we believe is possible. These storytellers explore relationships with our watery world: our political, divine, and cultural right to coexist and flourish together.
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
LUNCH BREAK
Take an hour to fill up and refresh.
- Use your lunch coupon at the food trucks for your choice of one: entree salad (vv/gf), personal pizza (v), greek wrap (v), or street tacos (v) plus a drink.
- Unwind and restore with a quick wellness session with Petra on the bayfront, including breathing, gentle movement, and healing sound to make you feel energized and rejuvenated. We will take a standing position and no special clothing, equipment, or skills are needed to participate.
- Stretch the legs with a short, guided walk around The Bay to learn about the amazing environmental restoration techniques built right into the landscape. The Bay's COO and landscape architect Bill Waddill is your expert guide.
1:00 pm - 2:35 pm
SESSION 5: IT'S ALL ABOUT CLEAN WATER
Sponsored by Sarasota County Stormwater Environmental Utility
There is no new water on earth, only the same raindrops cycled over and over again. The water we drink and use to wash, flush, and irrigate is borrowed from the environment. In turn, whatever we put on land, or down the drain, eventually winds up back in our waters. How can we follow nature’s example for building efficient and resilient wastewater and stormwater systems that protect our water supply and prevent pollution? There are smart ways to keep us and our waterways healthy, in an endless cycle.
1:05 pm-2:05 pm
Panel Discussion: Reducing Pollution with Holistic Water Management
Erica Gies has been around the world as a National Geographic Explorer and journalist collecting stories about water, society and climate change captured in her book Water Always Wins. She joins a trio of regional water professionals to discuss our water future.
2:05 pm-2:35 pm
Case Studies: Water Management and Resilience
Building communities using last century's techniques leads to the flooding and water pollution that those techniques were designed to prevent. Case studies show how nature-based water management techniques can help us adapt to a changing future.
2:35 pm-2:55 pm
Break
2:55 pm - 4:50 pm
SESSION 6: WHEN POLLUTION IS PERSONAL
Sponsored by Tervis
Home is where we produce most of our trash – about three pounds per adult per day. How can we create less waste in the first place by refusing, reducing, reusing, repurposing and recycling — so we don’t let waste go to waste? Homeowners also play a big role in reducing carbon pollution because our homes consume more than half of all Florida’s electricity. Improving home energy efficiency to reduce energy use and installing home rooftop solar for clean renewable energy is easier than you think.
3:00 pm-3:55 pm
Panel Discussion: Reducing Personal Pollution: Don't Let Waste Go To Waste
What do we do with all this stuff? From throw-away containers, to worn out household goods, to unwanted food, our panelists show how these waste streams can be redirected to good use and reused as materials that feed the circular economy.
3:55 pm-4:50 pm
Panel Discussion: Reducing Personal Pollution: Efficient & Renewable Energy Use
Energy experts on policy, financing, solar, transportation, and home improvement, provide myth-busting advice for transitioning your lifestyle to the carbon and cost savings of energy efficiency and renewable energy.
4:50 pm - 5:00 pm
CLOSING
A final burst of inspiration to propel your next steps towards a more green, healthy, and sustainable future.