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The Decisions We Make and the Actions We Take

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The Decisions We Make and the Actions We Take

The choices we make every day—what we buy, what we support, what we demand—have real impact. And at a time when it feels like environmental responsibility is slipping from the hands of those in power, it’s more important than ever to recognize that our collective actions matter. 

The Decisions We Make and the Actions We Take


In times like these, it’s easy to feel powerless. When decisions are being made that threaten the environment - when protections are rolled back, when short-term gains override long-term sustainability - it can feel like we’re moving backward. But history shows us something different: progress doesn’t only come from the top. It comes from us.

The choices we make every day - what we buy, what we support, what we demand - have real impact. And at a time when it feels like environmental responsibility is slipping from the hands of those in power, it’s more important than ever to recognize that our collective actions matter. 

This Earth Day isn’t just about awareness. It’s about being loud and proud in how we show up for the planet.

We’ve Done It Before, We Can Do It Again

There’s power in what people can achieve when they refuse to wait for permission. We’ve seen it in action:

  • When the Elwha River’s salmon population was nearly wiped out by dams, it wasn’t government that led the charge to bring them back - it was the persistence of a community. When the dams were finally removed, the river healed itself, proving that nature can recover when given the chance.

  • In Houston, when flooding devastated neighborhoods, locals didn’t just demand change - they made it happen. Through restoration projects, Buffalo Bayou was transformed from a concrete flood channel into a living, breathing ecosystem that benefits both people and wildlife.

  • When industrial pollution destroyed oyster reefs in New York Harbor, volunteers didn’t accept the loss. They launched the Billion Oyster Project, working with restaurants, schools, and businesses to rebuild reefs and restore marine life. Today, the harbor is coming back to life, thanks to everyday people taking action.

Three Actions You Can Take Right Now

So what can we do, today, that moves the needle? Beyond recycling and reducing plastic, here are three powerful ways to make a meaningful impact, backed by research:

  1. Leverage Your Workplace for Impact
    Companies are some of the biggest consumers in the world, which means your voice inside an organization matters. Studies from Harvard Business Review show that employee-driven sustainability initiatives lead to stronger environmental commitments from corporations. Whether it’s pushing for more sustainable swag, reducing waste at events, or advocating for ethical supply chains, small shifts inside businesses can create massive ripple effects.

    Example: French company Vendredi rewards employees with additional vacation days when they opt for low-carbon travel like trains, buses, or biking instead of flying, showing how workplace policies can support sustainability from within.


  1. Regenerate Your Yard (or a Nearby Green Space)
    Instead of traditional lawns, which require chemical fertilizers and constant watering, research from the National Wildlife Federation shows that native plant gardens support 10x more pollinators and absorb more carbon than conventional grass. Whether it’s replacing part of your lawn with native plants, building a community pollinator garden, or even convincing your workplace to rethink landscaping, small patches of biodiversity add up in a big way.

    Example: In San Francisco, Other Avenues, a worker-owned cooperative grocery store, has integrated sustainability by offering affordable produce bags to minimize food waste, demonstrating how urban spaces can be repurposed to support the environment.

  2. Harness the Power of Community-Led Buying Where we spend our money matters, but often, how we spend it carries even more weight. Research from Project Drawdown highlights that cooperative purchasing—where groups of individuals, neighborhoods, or businesses unite to source sustainable goods—can drive market change faster than individual buying decisions. Think of local food co-ops, bulk purchasing of sustainable office supplies, or even community solar programs that allow multiple households to share renewable energy. When people come together, their collective economic power sends a clear message to industries: sustainability isn’t optional, it’s expected.

    Example: In Melbourne, the MPower initiative brings together residents and small businesses to bulk-buy renewable energy, reducing costs and increasing access to sustainable power.

We Are Not Powerless

It’s easy to feel discouraged when policies don’t align with what we know to be right. But we don’t have to wait for leadership to decide the future - we shape it every day.

The decisions we make and the actions we take matter. They always have. They always will. And this Earth Day, more than ever, we need to make them count.

Make it Matter.