
This spring, students, faculty, and staff from The Evergreen State College traveled to — the Washington Oregon Higher Education Sustainability Conference — held this year in Portland, OR at the Portland Community College Sylvania Campus.
Themed around “Cultivating Sustainable Communities,” the 2025 gathering brought together changemakers from across the Cascadia bioregion to envision more just, resilient, and regenerative futures.
Representing Evergreen were delegates from across campus:
– The Center for Climate Action and Sustainability (CCAS)
– The Clean Energy Committee, funded by the student green fee
– The Changemakers Lab academic program
– Several Master of Environmental Studies (MES) Sustainability Fellows
This marked a milestone year for Evergreen’s involvement. For the first time, an Evergreen staff member led a workshop at WOHESC. Michael Joseph, Assistant Director of CCAS and MPA candidate, presented an interactive session titled “Solarpunk and You: How We Can Change the World,” developed with CCAS student staff, with facilitation assistance from Aeowyn Isobel, the Center’s chief editor.
The workshop introduced attendees to the Solarpunk movement—a growing genre and framework for envisioning sustainable, just, and hopeful futures—through the lens of Tabletop Role-Playing Games (TTRPGs) as educational curriculum and scenario training simulators. Participants engaged in guided imagination and reflection activities designed to build creative agency and climate resilience, drawing connections between personal strengths and systemic change.
“Rejecting dystopia isn’t just about hope—it’s about building capacity for collaborative futures,”* said Michael Joseph. “Solarpunk invites us to imagine forward together, and that’s what this session aimed to model.”
In another first, Evergreen also supported a student participant in WOHESC’s Sustainability Design Challenge, a hands-on experience rooted in Design Thinking. The student explored how this methodology could be adapted and brought back to campus—particularly to enrich academic learning and campus projects through innovation and user-centered systems thinking.

Throughout the conference, Evergreen participants engaged in interactive panels, connected with regional peers, and brought home new insights and strategies for strengthening our campus-wide sustainability efforts. The experience emphasized not only Evergreen’s commitment to environmental leadership, but also our dedication to building inclusive, imaginative communities ready to face the challenges of climate justice head-on.
To learn more about the conference and upcoming events, visit the WOHESC website.

Pictured Above: Students spelling WOHESC and taking a goofy picture before the van-ride home!

In 2016 a pair of undergraduates took up a faculty question to assess and design a solar array installation. However with higher costs and the recent purchase of the Sankofa building, they saw an opportunity to pivot and bring the first CEC funded project, largest Evergreen solar project at the time, to the Tacoma campus, through an Evergreen 


