South Austin Ecovillage Prepares for a Radically Different Future
By Cat DeLaura
Reporting Texas
On a cold night in November, Troy Baker demonstrates to seven people gathered around a rickety kitchen table how to form seed bombs out of wildflower seeds, compost and clay. Later the bombs will be hurled out of car windows into barren front yards. “Guerilla gardening,” Baker calls it.
Most of the attendees live in the house. It’s an unassuming home on a quiet residential street in South Austin. The only thing that sets it apart from others in the neighborhood is a hand-painted sign declaring in colorful letters, “Radical Organization for Organic Teaching and Sustainability.”
Roots members consider the enterprise an ecovillage — an intentional community of people that strive to live in an ecologically sustainable way. Responding to increasingly dire warnings about climate change and social isolation, the members of Roots see themselves as the leaders of a new way of life for the post-capitalist future they say is inevitable.
Devotion to a cause is typical of intentional communities popping up around the country, said Sky Blue, director of the Foundation for Intentional Communities, a grassroots organization focused on supporting and promoting intentional communities. Blue defines them as “cooperative, place-based groups of people, who are living together, sharing resources with some kind of shared purpose and some kind of governance, management, decision making structure.”
In Blue’s experience, intentional communities often form as a reaction to problems their members see in the world. Instead of seeing the communities as a way to escape, Blue said, “it’s much more useful to see them as laboratories, as training grounds, as microcosms of larger society where we can examine what’s going on in the world.”
Interest in intentional communities is “substantially on the rise,” Blue said, basing the assessment on increasing web traffic, social media mentions and news coverage. “Now, whether or not that’s translating into more intentional communities existing is much harder to say.”
Roots’ longevity — it started in 2012 — sets it apart. In a 2016 update to the Foundation for Intentional Communities’ directory, which documents both forming and formed communities, roughly half of the over 2,000 listings had to be removed due to inactivity or closure.
Nearly 25 people have lived at Roots during its existence, but currently there are only seven. They have an application and interview process to vet candidates, and they try to maintain a wait list of people who would be a good fit. Besides rent, utilities and a voluntary $85 a month to pay for the shared meals on weekdays, there is no fee to join.
For Roots member Monica Bahtia, 23, “The goal is to be as ecologically sustainable as we can be and to teach other people how they can also live in ecologically sustainable ways.”
Bahtia joined Roots in 2018 when she moved to Austin to get a doctoral degree in sociology from the University of Texas at Austin. Roots’ sustainability focus and goals are nonnegotiable for Bahtia. “We know we’re facing catastrophic climate change, so we literally have to do those things. Someone has to start figuring out a way to live that way that’s doable and realistic for the society we live in.”
The group has lofty goals — a permaculture garden that can feed the community and their own renewable energy source disconnected from the power grid, among others. Meanwhile they are taking small practical steps: setting up rainwater collection, growing what food they can on their property, reducing energy use, dumpster diving for food, especially outside bakeries, which often just toss their baked goods at the end of each day, and doing more things together.
“Even beyond the specific sustainability projects we do, just the fact that we’re living together is something that in order to fight climate change people have to start doing,” Bahtia said. “They have to stop having this really individualistic mindset and start doing things together as a community.”
For Baker, 25, an undergraduate student at UT studying sociology, “a lot of it is trying to live a preindustrial life as much as possible.” To reduce energy waste, he uses only candlelight in his bedroom after dark. Baker joined the community in September 2018 and previously lived in the 21st Street student co-op. From a young age, he knew he wanted to live his life differently.
“I didn’t believe in personal property. I don’t believe that humans could own land,” Baker said. “We’re a part of nature. We’re not above it or have dominion over it. To me it’s important to be able to share things, to give to people but not just to other people but to all of nature.”
Blue said intentional communities face two big challenges: money and interpersonal conflict.
Roots’ members believe they have navigated those issues with consensus-based governance. Members meet every Monday, and anyone can propose agenda items. There is no formal voting, but anyone can block any proposition. If something is blocked, members collaborate to find a compromise that works for everyone. Nothing is approved without everyone’s consent, and members say the process works well.
“It’s actually really smooth,” Baker said. “It’s just a way to make sure everyone is on the same page and everyone has a voice in every decision that’s made.”
In 2018, Roots survived an unplanned move. After six years in their original home at Manchaca and Ben White, their landlord asked them to move out. A concerned neighbor had noticed various code violations on the property.
“Moving was definitely a blessing in disguise,” Baker said. After a six-month interim, the group found its current house.
Their long-term goal is to buy property and create a fully sustainable off-grid community. Ideally, they will grow to about 30 people. The group is optimistic it can own land within five years, but finding affordable options around Austin has been difficult.
“We’ve also talked about the possibility of not even staying in the Austin area,” Bahtia said, “Because it’s not necessarily the best climate for the kind of stuff we want to do.”
Most members see Roots as a long-term commitment, not a cheap place to live until they figure something else out. This is their home.
“I would love to raise my kids in this community,” Bahtia said. “I’m really committed to being here for the long term, and I think most people who are here feel the same way.”