{"id":27146,"date":"2023-01-18t15:20:35","date_gmt":"2023-01-18t15:20:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dev.planetforward.com\/2023\/01\/18\/essay-who-do-we-find-hope-in-finding-community-at-youth-climate-summits\/"},"modified":"2023-01-18t15:20:35","modified_gmt":"2023-01-18t15:20:35","slug":"youth-climate-summits","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/youth-climate-summits\/","title":{"rendered":"essay | who do we find hope in? finding community at youth climate summits"},"content":{"rendered":"
coming of age amidst a climate crisis can be scary, isolating, and confusing. youth, who will bear the brunt of this crisis, also have the least agency in decision-making. <\/p>\n
finding places where you know you matter is life-changing. i clearly remember the first time i knew my opinion mattered and that i was not alone in these feelings. during my sophomore year of high school i, along with about 100 other students, attended the western new york youth climate summit, hosted by buffalo state college.<\/p>\n
i left that summit feeling less doubtful about my place in my community, and the connections i made there encouraged me to study the environment in college. when i saw a poster for a climate summit just outside of my college town, i knew i had to attend.<\/p>\n
shortly after signing up for the event, i was connected to amy samuels, the education coordinator at the onondaga environmental institute<\/a>, a nonprofit local to syracuse. along with a few local teachers, samuels was leading the efforts to organize the first climate summit in central new york. <\/p>\n much of the framework for climate summits comes from the wild center<\/a>, an outdoor education center in new york\u2019s adirondack mountains. they hosted the world’s first youth climate summit in 2009, and since then more than 70 have occurred in 11 states and 5 countries. <\/a><\/p>\n