Board of Trustees
Minutes of Meeting 30
16 - 17 November 2002, Atlanta, GA, USA
Author(s): C. Huitema
Date: 2002-11-17/18 Committee: BOT
Document: 00-30
Revision: 0
Supersedes:
Status: Unconfirmed
Maintainer:
Access: Unrestricted
Minutes taken by Christian Huitema.
The following members of the board of trustees attended the meeting in person:
Fred Baker
Brian Carpenter
Rosa Delgado
Östen Frånberg
Barbara Fraser
Alan Greenberg
Don Heath
Erik Huizer
Latif Ladid
Veni Markovski
Kees Neggers
Wawa Ngenge
Glenn Ricart
George Sadowsky
Lynn St-Amour
Philippe Courtot and Toshio Miki were excused.
I. Introduction
Fred Baker welcomes the participants, and asks for potential additions
to the meetings agenda. At Alans request, the trustees agree
to debate the perceived lack of board participation.
II. Approval of the minutes of the 28th meeting
The minutes of the 28th meeting held June 18 are approved.
III. Approval of past resolutions
Four resolutions were approved by electronic votes, and must be confirmed
at this face to face meeting.
Resolution 2-16 is approved unanimously:
Resolution 02-16. Thanking the organizers of INET 2002
RESOLVED, that
the Board of Trustees records its gratitude to those who made the INET2002
Conference a success in unusually difficult circumstances, namely Richard
Perlman, Mike Nelson, Alejandro Pisanty, Hans Klein, and Francois Fluckiger,
with special thanks to Riina Reinumagi for her exceptional work in not
only managing all the speakers and presentations, but also for helping
create an online conference program management system that now belongs
to ISOC; and notes its gratitude for the hard work of the Foretec conference
staff which made this conference possible.
Resolution 2-17 is approved by 13 yes, while Erik abstains:
Resolution 02-17. Election Revision Committee
RESOLVED, that
an Election Revision Committee be approved composed of Alan Greenberg
(chair), Brian Carpenter, Barbara Fraser, and Richard Perlman, with
Erik Huizer and George Sadowsky as non-voting members. The committee
will report back to the Board in a timely manner to ensure that new
procedures are approved prior to or at the November 2002 Board of Trustees
meeting. Furthermore, to the extent possible, issues relating to the
Nominations Committee will be discussed early with the intent of securing
Board approval in principle as soon as possible and with due haste.
Resolution 2-18 is approved by 12 yes, while Erik and Wawa abstain:
Resolution 02-18.
No direct election of Trustees by Individual Members in 2003
RESOLVED, that
there will be no direct election of Trustees by Individual Members in
2003. However, the Board wishes to retain the direct election of some
Trustees by Individual Members, and will investigate alternative approaches
with the goal of reinstating such a process in 2004.
Resolution 2-19 is approved by 13 yes, while Wawa abstains:
Resolution 02-19.
Revision of Trustees Selection procedure
RESOLVED, that
the Board accept the recommendations of the Election Revision Committee
for the revision of the ISOC "Procedures for Selecting Trustees".
The text of the Committee recommendations is appended in appendix A.
IV. Lack of board participation
Alan mentions his concerns with the lack of participation to the board
discussion: sparse e-mail exchanges, spotty participation to votes. Glenn
is less worried: we dont want to micro-manage committees and staff;
it is fine to not devote time to detailed issues, e.g. those handled by
the election committee. Brian as past chairman, observed active participation
in executive committee, much less in the board at large; on the other
hand, the board should focus on key issues, which does not necessarily
requires high volume of exchanges. Barbara points out that the volume
of e-mail increases when there is a controversy; when we have consensus,
there is less incentive to exchange mail. For Latif, we are an introvert
society, with a large fraction of the exchanges concerned with internal
organization. Fred supposes that there may be cultural issues.
On a related point,
Erik asks why we have so many e-mail lists. There are in fact two main
lists, the trustees list that only includes trustees, the lawyers and
the secretary; and the board list that is extended to officers. Richard
Perlman asks whether there is a reason to conduct business on a private
list; for him, listening to random messages may be boring, but democracy
is boring. The explanation is that the trustees list
is mostly used for the equivalent of an executive session.
V. PRESIDENT & CEO's REPORT - L. St.Amour
We have implemented the new governance model, implemented a conflict of
interest policy, and reviewed the fiduciaries obligation of trustees.
The new (free) membership model resulted in a significant membership growth,
to 13,000 members to date. Kees asks: what kind of new members; Lynn:
we rely on chapters for the servicing of these members; however, 3700
are not affiliated with any chapter; this number is actually slowly decreasing
in absolute value, fast decreasing in percentage of total membership.
We are also developing a code of conduct for the members.
ISOC placed a bid
for management of the .ORG domain; that bid has been accepted, but the
contract is not yet finalized with ICANN; it will have to be approved
by the US-DOC. We chartered and launched the PIR organization.
The fundraising task
force has started its work, albeit very slowly. This has resulted in a
new platinum member, Qualys, supporting the education program. We are
increasing our efforts on sponsoring programs or projects,
e.g. education projects, a hall of fame project, and security
projects. These projects will be reviewed by e-mail by the board as appropriate.
We are working to
upgrade our individual members initiative. Under the new individual
membership model (e.g. free Global membership),we now have 127 paying
members who have joined at the higher levels of membership, compared to
207 last year under the old model. We are focusing on increasing the value
proposition to members and we need a professional structure to grow the
chapters; in particular, we need to evolve from the current structure,
in which chapter are defined largely by whoever happens to be the founding
members. We also need to find a place in the structure for regional coordination
councils.
On public policy,
we have identified the key areas in which ISOC need to be active and vocal;
however, this has progressed slowly. The board should be aware that David
Maher is resigning as VP of Public Policy, following his nomination to
the board of PIR. Brian opines that we should be careful to choose a new
VP who is starting from neutral positions, in order to avoid polarization.
We have prepared several member briefings, and several press releases.
Alan: do we track the number of publications who pick our press releases?
Brian: this has value, but it is a very expensive professional service.
We have chartered
a publication task force during the last Board meeting, but it took some
time to get started. We have added a publication section to the ISOC web
site, which includes member briefings, G. Hustons/Telstars
Internet report, invited papers from IEEE Communication society,
data about the Internet History which will be upgraded and other soon
to be launched features such as an ISP column. Rosa: we need information
in several languages, e.g. Spanish and French, in particular Internet
statistics. Lynn: we dont have actual statistics, just pointers
to them; we could study the possibility to republish some data but we
would have to find volunteers for publication in other languages. Barbara:
we should identify available content, rather than just creating our own.
A task force has prepared a report on conferences that will be discussed later.
We will have a detailed
presentation of the .ORG bid later. The process has been marked by significant
delays. We dont have a signed contract yet, which prohibits PIR
from hiring staff; the load has to be picked up by the ISOC staff. Many
contracts have had to be negotiated, involving 3 or 4 parties: ISOC, PIR,
Affilias, ICANN, DoC. We are committed, and the paperwork simply needs
to catch up with us. Operation will start January 1, 2003. Kees observes
that Lynn is spending money on the .ORG operation start without a mandate
from the board; we were expecting start up expenses to be financed by
Affilias or covered by our loan agreement; Lynn responds that all out-of
pocket expenses are being covered by Afilias or the loan agreement and
we clearly have to support the start-up given the delay in ICANN with
regards to signing the contracts; apart from her time, for which specific
negotiations are underway, expenses will be later reimbursed by Affilias
or PIR.
VI. 2002 FINANCIALS and 2003 BUDGET - L. St.Amour
Lynn presents the September financials, which were already presented to
the trustees by e-mail. Year-to-date, we have a $261K loss, which will
be partially compensated by the arrival of Platinum revenues in the last
months of the year. There are questions about the continuation of the
Platinum program: it was an exceptional program, to bring ISOC back to
a stable situation; we cannot expect this program to continue indefinitely.
The projection of
organizational member revenues shows end-of-year revenues of $1300K to
$1400 (including Platinum membership revenues); this can be used as a
prediction of revenues for next year. Barbara asks whether we know the
average drop of revenues from existing members, year to year; Lynn observes
that, if we normalize the revenues by removing the exceptional Platinum
program, the organizational member revenues stabilize at around $1.1M
per year.
Projecting to the
end of the year, we foresee revenues for 2002 of $1.629M, expenses of
$1.79M, and a loss of $161K. This assumes that $100K of PIR startup expenses
will be reimbursed, otherwise the loss would be $261K. The budget variance
is ($28K) for organization revenues, ($243K) for Platinum revenues, loss
of the ThinkQuest program, a small loss in the NDSS conferences, somewhat
compensated by unexpected miscellaneous revenues. The RFC editor is slightly
underspending, at ISIs initiative; additional expenses are INET-02,
fundraising staff, and some G&A expenses.
We met our sponsorship
requirement for INET 2002, but at the expense of significant staff involvement;
we will end up with $160K of staff and miscellaneous expenses, which is
hardly compensated by $15K of revenue. We show that we have a 50% rate
of overhead in this sponsorship operation.
NDSS 2002 will just break even, with projected net revenue of $0.5K.
Lynn presents a first
draft of the 2003 budget. The 2003 budget calls for $2M of expenses, including
$325K for PIR education activities, $1.2M for standards, $260K for education,
and $270K for public policy. She expects to present the final proposed
budget later, in December. Kees objects: given our difficult financial
position, we need to have a very conservative budget, and we need to have
it discussed in the board. There are speculative lines in the budget,
e.g. program that will only be started if a sponsor is found. A problem
in the presentation is that it fails to recognize the fixed cost
nature of some G&A items. A general advice of the board is to present
the budget as two parts: activities that we commit to do, which should
be funded through known revenues minus fixed costs, and conditional activities,
depending on the occurrence of incremental revenues.
The governance cost
(board meetings, etc.) is $56,500. The total G&A before salaries is
$372K, which will be reduced by $41K when we sublet some space to PIR.
Adding governance costs and G&A salaries (accounting,
etc.), we get a total G&A of $561K. Barbara observes that we are operating
in one of the most expensive real-estate markets in the US; we might want
to consider moving to a lower cost area. Brian suggests that cost cutting
measures should be discussed in an executive session; this is agreed.
VII. STRATEGIC REVIEW
Fred presents the objective of the strategic session.
A. Mission and Objectives and key activities - L. St.Amour
As an introduction to the strategic review, Lynn recalls ISOCs mission.
The principle purpose of ISOC is to maintain and extend the development
of the Internet these objectives are stated on the ISOC web page.
Lynn believes that
if we had enough staff to seed some efforts, then we might be able to
start self funding new activities, e.g. in the education pillar. Starting
these efforts would require either more staff, which is not compatible
with budget, or more volunteer involvement, e.g. from board and officers.
B. Brainstorming
session
Glenn suggests that
we follow a classic approach: look back at what we did right, look forward
at the coming risks, and then look at the changes that need to be made.
Glenn asks board members to put up their thoughts on what we did right
on paper. While these are collected, we discuss the risks facing ISOC.
For Fred, we are competing with many other organizations in the same place,
without a clear differentiation. Wawa notes that the developing countries
workshop gave us a lot of credibility in these countries, but we are not
nurturing this asset; for example, we are not getting linked
with the follow-on work organized in Africa. Glenn points out the financial
risk by looking at the history of deficits since 1999; other obvious risks
are the lack of revenues from INET, the lack of a budget for 2003, the
difficulty in fundraising in the current economic climate, relations with
our members that are sometimes perceived as weak, and lack of board activity.
Glenn presents a break down of the ISOC budget that roughly shows 1/3
overhead, and 1/3 IETF activities; the rest is split between ISOC/PIR
education activities and miscellaneous. Alan mentions that we have a lot
of good will because of what we did in the past, but that the good will
is running out. Barbara shows that there is almost no link between this
good will and income to ISOC that would let us pursue these activities.
Another risk is the lack of critical mass: our budgets are small, compared
to that of other organizations.
Votes on the most
important issues:
Lack of execution
on our core purpose 13
Budget issues 13
Organizational members dont see value to them 7
Relation with our members 7
Goodwill 6
Democratic process 4
Board engagement 3
Lack of critical mass 3
So what are going
to do about it?
Organization:
Glenn computes our overhead to be $941,000 in cost, not including dedicated
people/expenses. This is 53% of budget in 2003; is this OK? How can we
aggressively reduce this? Reduce expenses? Share expenses? Move offices?
Standard Pillar:
it basically works. However, the RFC editor is expensive; the IETF selected
ISI based on legacy; the IETF could possibly entertain competing offers.
The consensus is that the functions that ISOC executes for the IETF are
required; if it was not ISOC, IETF would have to invent a similar function.
Also, the overhead allocated to this may be a bit too high, not properly
accounted.
Education: we
would like to have a speakers bureau, update the materials, make
them re-purposable for regional workshops possibly with a chapter focus.
For Barbara, the problem with pushing the activities to the regions is
a lack of ISOC visibility; Wawa observed that we would get credibility
and visibility if ISOC was in charge of program committees or organization.
Rosa mentions that regional workshops can indeed be successful, and maintain
an association with ISOC. Other education initiatives could be training
for IPv6 and security, training on behalf of PIR, and a hall of
fame activity. Possibly also, a follow-on for INET. IPv6, security
and .ORG training obviously apply to developing countries, but the difference
with the workshop is that they apply to all other countries as well.
Policy:
we need a new VP. We have a proposal by the US government to fund efforts
on Internet Security; there is support for going on, but a desire to involve
other geographies, e.g. European. Our traditional role has been to educate
policy makers; should we move to the development of actual policies? Maybe
facilitate the development of policies? Fred points out that there are
many consortiums that are already representing the industry in policy,
for example the wireless forum. What is the specificity of ISOC in this
domain? Which constituency do we represent? Another policy is to provide
some kind of umbrella to operators of the Internet; this would involve
developing relations with the existing organizations, e.g. NANOG. Another
policy is to make sure that the Internet policy is developed by a technical
organization (ISOC), rather than a political organization (e.g. UN or
ITU). We must be aware however that ICANN is perceived as an US organization,
as ISOC; Wawa reminds us that there is a large amount of anti-americanism
floating around. Brian suggest that in order to counter this sentiment
we hire a personality of international stature as VP of policy. Another
possibility that was floated last year was to organize an intellectual
property pool for the IETF; Fred comments, from Cisco point of view,
that this would only work if all the large interested parties were part
of the pool; this does not seem realistic now.
Conferences:
Christian presents a brief overview of his report. Erik believes that
having a multi-disciplinary conference is fine, provided we keep the expenses
low, single track, etc. George argues for co-branded conferences in multiple
countries. Östen agrees that regional conferences can be successful;
a speaker bureau managed by ISOC would help. Another possibility
is to endorse the IPv6 conferences, which may help our fundraising effort
according to Latif. Rosa mentions that the ITU has a major conference
every 4 years, and a set of regional conferences in between; we could
consider this arrangement. Barbara mentions that we should not use the
INET brand, as it is quite weak.
Publications:
The natural thing to do is to have a professional publication, and to
charge for it; there is however a debate on how to reconcile that with
our tradition of open publications. Nick Trio suggests that the new VP
of Publication should be a board appointed position.
Chapters: We
want the chapters to develop local policies, regional education activities.
We want to develop a code of conduct, and also a more bottom up process.
Alan asks that we consider the opposite evolution, the development of
a professional membership organization. Jim suggests that, whenever we
develop a new activity, we consider the role of chapters in these activities.
Rosa adds that chapters can also be in charge of autonomous projects.
Fred heard complaints from chapters that they are sometimes blindsided
by ISOC initiatives; we should make sure that we establish proper process
and tools. On the contrary, Erik is a non-believer in chapters: they are
very diverse, engage in unpredictable ways, and cannot be relied on in
the current state; Wawa and Don agree.
PIR: cohabit
with ISOC to reduce costs? Erik suggests that on the contrary we disregard
PIR for ISOC strategy and budget.
C. Wrap-up the
strategic review.
Glenn then proceeds
to get a sense of the board, and unwraps the what did we do well
poll. The main consensus is, the developing countries workshop; then supporting
the IETF, and supporting INET; there were some support for supporting
our policies; supporting the chapters; NDSS; a community of Internet founders;
the educational part of the IETF; to have guided the development of the
Internet; to be responsible for the success of the Internet; there was
even one vote claiming credit for ICANN.
VIII. VP & Key Project/Committee Reports
A. Education - R. Bush & Z. Wenzel
Randy Bush, VP for education, presents with Zita Wenzel, associate VP.
Their original vision was to leverage successful developing country workshops
and train the trainers in situ, encourage cross country technology
transfer. Education supports ISOC by supporting the idea of the
Internet is for everyone, by helping bring the Internet to developing
countries, aiding regional connectivity, and helping countries become
producers and not just consumers of technology. They recommend having
a global strategy, coordinate with other organizations, integrating NSRC
work with AfriNIC, AfNOG, Francophones; work with Cisco to train
the trainers; and develop public policy education slates. The current
activities include AfNOG, a real francophone track, and AfNIC; EsLaRed/WALC;
Thailand Regional Training Center. The Workshop Courseware project attempts
to identify existing material, provide consistency, fill in the gaps,
add IPv6 and IPSEC, add information on organization and logistics, and
publish the materials. More regional centers are planned.
B. Conferences
- C. Huitema
Christian presents the report of the conference committee.
The board agrees that
there will not be an INET 2003.
The board asks Veni
to propose the organization of a single track single theme multidisciplinary
conference, with the help of Erik, Alan, Östen and Rosa. The proposal
should be ready by the end of the calendar year, for a conference taking
place in Spring 2004.
C. IAB - L. Daigle
IAB continue monitoring ICANN implementation of IANA protocol number services.
IAB work with the
IESG to increase architectural support to IETF working groups; two documents
have been proposed, one about so call UNSAF, and another on
architectural considerations in general.
IAB will use open
calls for nomination to ISOC board, select a candidate, and have confirmation
by the IESG.
D. Chapters - J.
Galvin
Jim has two issues for the board to decide. He has spent his first month
of mandate getting organized, and drafted a policy on the establishment
and conduct of chapters (http://www.isoc.org/isoc/general/trustees/2002/nov-02-chapters/shtml).
A motion to approve these guidelines is proposed by Veni, seconded by
Brian. The motion is delayed until tomorrow, to allow for study of these
guidelines.
Jim proposes to formally
define the role of regional councils such as the ECC. The idea is to consider
regional council useful in so far as they support chapters; the suggestion
si to consider them as a chapter, with two exceptions: they will not vote
in ISOC elections; they must have at least 10 chapter members, instead
of 25 individual members. Brian note that while there were exchanges of
mail during the creation of the ECC, there is no trace of this approval
in the minutes. Östen mentions that chapters do not want an intermediate
level between them and ISOC. Alan and Kees opine that calling the coordination
councils chapters will confuse the issue. The sense of the board is that
we should continue studying the issue on the mailing list, and encourage
mutually friendly interactions with the ECC.
There are 7 new chapter
applications in process. Jim has started a project to renew existing chapters,
which he expects to complete before the end of the year.
E. Fundraising
- L. Ladid
The group has looked at the impediments to fundraising: some image and
recognition, but low visibility and low press coverage; some deliverables
from specific projects, but a significant requirement from INET that diverts
resource and staff attention. Existing non profits are mostly funded by
individuals: in the US, 75% of the budget are individual donation, 8%
from bequest, 12% from foundation, and only 5% from organizations. The
most frequent reasons to give are: being personally asked, or being a
volunteer in the organization; other reasons are hearing from the organization
in their work or living place. 36% of collected funds go to religious
groups; education is 14%, public society 13%. Our organizational sponsors
are the marketing and technical departments, not the corporate foundations.
The classic steps
to fundraising are program quality, and a good knowledge of the givers.
Most of the money comes from the board itself, then high involvement individuals,
then family, and then ever decreasing circles. The priority is to develop
and train volunteers. People give 80% of the time when asked to, only
50% of the time when not asked.
Fundraising is a board
activity; 100% of board members should contribute. The 2000 board set
an example. If we want to be the Internet voice, each board
member should raise $100K in 2003; each board member should appear in
the press, and conduct an interview about what ISOC is.
IX. PIR REVIEW and PIR & ISOC Board discuss objectives for PIR
The member of ISOCs and PIRs board are introduced; for PIR,
Gerry Barañano, Frode Greisen, Alan Levin, David Maher and Marc
Rotenberg are present; Larry Landwebber and Andy Linton are absent.
Fred presents our
common goal: to implement the commitments made to ICANN during the bid
process. PIR responsibility is to operate the registry; ISOC will implement
the outreach actions; Affilias will act as a back end services sub-contractor.
It is important to agree on the objective early in the startup process,
and to build a good cooperation during the first 6 months.
David Maher presents
the commitments from PIR to ISOC, through highlights of the application.
PIR will soon issue an advertisement for a CEO, and possibly a CFO. The
elements of commitments are: differentiating .ORG; responsiveness to non
commercial users; commitment to the Verisign endowment. The .ORG domain
will be differentiated by a combination of marketing and public relations;
they cannot distinguish easily who is non-profit and who is not, which
implies that .ORG will remain open. The ISOC heritage will ensure responsiveness
to non commercial users. The endowment will be used primarily to reach
out and educate non commercial organizations, accelerate the development
of new services, and help these organizations access the Internet; the
programs will be undertaken by ISOC and PIR.
Kees asks how the
involvement of ISOC in meeting ICANNs requirement plays with our
arms length management decision; David Maher and Lynn provide
synchronization. Brian and also Latif ask how we will jointly contribute
to the good of the commons; there is a consensus that we will
certainly end up agreeing, and that it does not matter much, for any given
project, who comes with the idea first. Alan Levin points that most of
the nonprofit organizations that have not yet embraced the Internet are
in the developing word; he is looking at the ISOC board for leadership
and guidance.
Answering to Östen,
David Maher points out that the first task of PIR is to manage a successful
transition. Barbara asks when PIR will be able to actually manage the
transition; for David, this is as soon as the contract with ICANN is actually
signed; this is expected to occur Monday or Tuesday next week; however,
PIR will still need a few weeks before their own staff can start working.
For David, it is perfectly clear that PIR must reimburse ISOC for its
startup expenses.
Marc Rotenberg believes
that we will together give a new start to the non commercial Internet.
If we view this with some amount of enthusiasm, we may well get support
for initiatives beyond simply PIR and ISOC.
David Maher mentions
that Affilias is ramping up, and they have started testing procedures
with registrars. Alan asks whether there is a risk from the competition
between .ORG and the CCTLD; there is certainly competition, but there
is no reason that this should become a confrontation. Brian mentions that
the IETF has just approved the International Domain Name specification;
this is an opportunity for PIR, to make sure that .ORG be among the first
to support the new standard.
X. Executive session
The board met in executive session for 1 hour to discuss personnel and
budget matters.
XI. Individual Membership Review
Fred opens the debate on the issue.
Brian bases his opinion
that chapters should manage members on his personal experience with several
chapters.
Erik sees value in
chapter, but also sees their instability, and the benefit of having membership
at large he informs us that the Dutch chapter, which was very effective,
is now bankrupt; also, many chapters are dominated by a small number of
individuals.
Alan observed that
a main argument for getting rid of paid membership was the high cost of
management, and the non-standard software that we used. Yet, we have kept
the nonstandard software and the proposed budget shows that we have come
no where near achieving the planned lower management costs.
George mentions that
there are wide discrepancies between the situations in countries at various
stages of development; the chapter structure appears promising in developing
countries; it is important to empower chapters to fulfill these needs.
George also notes that board members, as a group, travel a lot; they should
use their travels to energize local chapters.
Wawa mentions that
even with the easy-to-get free members, we wont have a zero management
cost; on the other hand, we can have professional members who pay a sensible
fee, sufficient to cover management. The free membership allows for easy
high-jacking of chapters, and is counter productive. A massive amorphous
membership is hard to maintain.
Rosa mentions that
out of the many members of the Geneva chapter, only 50 are really active;
they make presentations, report on ongoing projects; attempt to support
developing countries.
Alan observes that
all board members will agree to empower chapters; we may want to have
paying members, but we have to give members some reason to pay. People
have shown that they want to be members of a professional organization,
e.g. ACM; they could be attracted to ISOC as well.
Kees suggests that
we have to get over the former bigger is better message; we
want to have real professional members; it does not matter that they be
few in numbers, if they are the right ones their number will grow over
time.
What is a professional
member? For Alan, anyone who is willing to pay; for Glenn, paying, subscribing
to the objectives and code of conduct; we could have affiliate membership
for free, but we should require adherence to a code of conduct. Being
a member of ISOC must mean something. Wawa mentions that chapters
should be required to have a sufficient number of paying members.
Rosa asks that chapters
be required to show some form of activity before they are re-certified.
Veni mentions that
chapters are very diverse; using the name Internet Society should imply
dues to ISOC. Veni supposes that high costs would deter membership in
developing countries. Wawa disagrees; in the part of the world where he
lives, Africa, professional are not poor, and do indeed pay substantial
fees to other professional societies.
Alan considers the
case of some chapters in North America that only exist because they are
chartered in populated areas, and members just tick a name in a list,
without any actual activity.
Richard Perlman asks
what the members get for their membership fee; if we charge a substantial
amount, we should provide some value, not just a receipt: maybe a publication,
maybe a vote.
Wawa: chartering a
chapter will be more difficult than in the past; there has to be some
activity; being a chapter means something. We need to refocus on being
a professional society.
Jim Galvin: there
are two questions, whether we should have professional members, and then
what are the benefits.
Brian: how can we
make ISOC membership actually valuable as a professional identity?
Jim is willing to
work on these benefits, and to deliver a proposition by March 1. The proposal
shall address the financial side of supporting members, and also the qualification
issue: we cannot simply say that everybody can become a member and call
it professional membership.
A. ECC question
The board has received a letter from the ECC, asking for modifications
of the governance procedures, asking for reinstatement of paid membership,
and more representation of individual members to the board. These suggestions
will be considered in the report that Jim is preparing. On a related issue,
the board observes that there is no formally defined role of the European
Chapter Coordination in the Internet Society structure. As mentioned in
the chapters session, the VP of chapter is working on a formal
structure for the regional coordination councils.
XII. Code of Conduct - B. Carpenter
Brian set up a committee with Rosa, Jean-Claude Guédon and Jiwoong
Lee. The report has been published two weeks ago; some comments have been
received. A suggestion is to have a couple of translations prepared in
several languages, to enable comments and also to provide an official
reference to members in various countries; however the committee lacks
translation resource and would need the help of volunteers. The board
agrees with Brians suggestion to have an extended review period.
The board also agrees that after the extended review the code of conduct
will be translated in several languages.
XIII. Continuation of VP & Key Project/Committee Reports
A. Chapters - J. Galvin
The board discusses the motion prepared the previous day by Jim. Jim proposes
a modification to the document, to better specify the obligations of chapters;
there is a strong sense that this modification is one sided:
it expresses obligation of chapters to ISOC, not expectation of chapters
from ISOC; the board prefers to retain the original document, unmodified.
Motion passes, 14 votes (unanimous).
Resolution 02-20,
Establishment and Conduct of Chapters
Resolve to adopt
the Policy on the Establishment and Conduct of Chapters of the
Internet Society proposed in the November 2002 report of the VP
of Chapters.
B. 2003 ELECTIONS
PROCEDURE COMMITTEE REPORT - A. Greenberg
Alan proposes that the board adopts the procedures proposed to the list
on 11/9/2002; George seconds the motion. Kees suggests aligning the validity
date for the right to vote and the right to petition; Alan suggests that
the exact date be left to the staff as an implementation detail; Barbara
on the contrary insists that there be a cut-off time that is clear and
correctly publicized, so we have a more professional organization. Brian
suggests that we stick to the document as written, and only choose a date
for next year, without committing the decision for the next year. Alan
believes that the cutoff date should be as late as possible, so as many
members as possible could be eligible to vote. Wawa observes that the
general meeting date fluctuates in a six week period, which implies that
a fixed eligibility date would be too rigid. Glenn supports the idea of
a fixed date. Lynn observes that a fixed date would ease the work of the
staff, and that if the float is only six week, this is not a problem.
Kees proposes a formal amendment fixing eligibility to participate to
December 31 of the previous year for all aspects of the election; Glenn
seconds the motion to amend. Alan asks that there be also a final date.
11 trustees in favor, Wawa abstain; George and Alan against. The motion
to amend is accepted:
Resolution 02-21,
specifying eligibility for election participation
Resolved that
the procedure document be amended, so that only members and chapters
in good standing by December 31 will be eligible for participation in
the next year election; the list of these members should be finalized
and passed to the election committee no later than January 31 of the
election year.
The motion to adopt the amended procedure is put to a vote. All trustees present vote in favor.
Resolution 02-22,
election procedures
Resolve to adopt
the procedures proposed to the list on 11/9/2002 by the election committee,
as amended by resolution 02-21.
The procedures referred
to in resolution 21-02 are presented in appendix B to these minutes.
C. 2003 ELECTIONS
PROCESSES/COMMITTEE - A. Greenberg
The key date of the
election process is the date of the next meeting. The board agrees that
the next meeting will be held in conjunction with the IETF meeting in
Vienna, which is tentatively scheduled July 13-18, 2003; the board would
meet the preceding weekend, July 11-12. The election committee will present
a time table to the board.
We will not try to
allocate the seat reserved for individual membership to another constituency;
the vacancy could be better filled in the 2004 election.
The election committee
will not concern itself with the possible selection of appointed board
members. Lynn would like more support from the board for fundraising,
publication and public policy. The board observes that these position
should be marked as available rather vacant, in
order to not imply that they must absolutely be filled. The sense of the
board is that it is reasonable to invite to the board personalities who
can reinforce our fundraising effort, and also our public policy actions,
although whether the title should be trustee or VP is debatable.
D. 2003 NOMINATIONS
COMMITTEE REPORT- K. Neggers
Work will start immediately, as election procedures have just been adopted.
XIV.Other business
The board approves the minutes of the interim meeting 29.
Minutes of meeting
26 and 29 have been approved, but are not published on the web site. The
sense of the board is to publish as much of these minutes as possible
given with non disclosure and other contractual agreement with third parties.
The secretary will establish a public version of these minutes for publication
on the web site.
XV. POSTEL AWARD & New "Social" Award - S. Crocker
Steve observes that the description of the award is not explicit enough,
too tied to what Jon was like; the committee presents a new
version: mention focus on substantial and sustained technical contributions,
service to the community, and leadership.
The committee found
itself in a dilemma when a very interesting candidate was nominated, who
did not meet the technical competency requirements of the Postel award.
The committee proposes to also create a new award for less technical contributions,
with a size and status to match the Postel award. The award will focus
on social goals, achievements, conscience, and action of individuals who
have made significant contribution to societal use, accessibility, and
effect of the Internet in the developing world.
There is an issue
of funding: we only have $37K in the restricted funds. The sense of the
board is that the award should be annual. For Steve Crocker, we should
try to build an endowment of about $1M for the two awards.
Alan observes that
the name recognition of Jon Postel has a major public relation effect.
Barbara asks that we consider extending the scope of the Postel award
itself; Steve believes that a different award is probably more appropriate.
Don asks whether focusing on technical aspects is appropriate; Steve strongly
believes so, as Jons reputation was indeed rooted in his technical
skills. Wawa strongly believes that we should not dilute the Postel award
by creating another one. Steve fears that creating multiple Postel award
would create confusion.
The board supports
the alternative description of the Postel award proposed by the committee.
List of resolutions
Resolution 02-16. Thanking the organizers of INET 2002
RESOLVED, that
the Board of Trustees records its gratitude to those who made the INET2002
Conference a success in unusually difficult circumstances, namely Richard
Perlman, Mike Nelson, Alejandro Pisanty, Hans Klein, and Francois Fluckiger,
with special thanks to Riina Reinumagi for her exceptional work in not
only managing all the speakers and presentations, but also for helping
create an online conference program management system that now belongs
to ISOC; and notes its gratitude for the hard work of the Foretec conference
staff which made this conference possible.
Resolution 02-17.
Election Revision Committee
RESOLVED, that
an Election Revision Committee be approved composed of Alan Greenberg
(chair), Brian Carpenter, Barbara Fraser, and Richard Perlman, with
Erik Huizer and George Sadowsky as nonvoting members. The committee
will report back to the Board in a timely manner to ensure that new
procedures are approved prior to or at the November 2002 Board of Trustees
meeting. Furthermore, to the extent possible, issues relating to the
Nominations Committee will be discussed early with the intent of securing
Board approval in principle as soon as possible and with due haste.
Resolution 02-18.
No direct election of Trustees by Individual Members in 2003
RESOLVED, that
there will be no direct election of Trustees by Individual Members in
2003. However, the Board wishes to retain the direct election of some
Trustees by Individual Members, and will investigate alternative approaches
with the goal of reinstating such a process in 2004.
Resolution 02-19.
Revision of Trustees Selection procedure
RESOLVED, that
the Board accept the recommendations of the Election Revision Committee
for the revision of the ISOC "Procedures for Selecting Trustees".
The text of the
Committee recommendations is appended in appendix A.
Resolution 02-20,
Establishment and Conduct of Chapters
Resolve to adopt
the Policy on the Establishment and Conduct of Chapters of the
Internet Society proposed in the November 2002 report of the VP
of Chapters.
Resolution 02-21,
specifying eligibility for election participation
Resolved that
the procedure document be amended, so that only members and chapters
in good standing by December 31 will be eligible for participation in
the next year election; the list of these members should be finalized
and passed to the election committee no later than January 31 of the
election year.
Resolution 02-22,
election procedures
Resolve to adopt
the procedures proposed to the list on 11/9/2002 by the election committee,
as amended by resolution 02-21.
The procedures referred
to in resolution 21-02 are presented in appendix B to these minutes.
Appendix A: Revision
of Trustees Selection procedure
ISSUE A: Candidate
selection procedures for Chapter and Organization Member elections.
Recommendation: For both Chapter and OM elections, revert to candidate
selection method used for IM elections:
a) a nominations period (no less than 30 days) following by NomComm deliberations;
b) the number of individuals nominated shall exceed the number of Trustees
to be elected in each election.
c) announcement of NomComm slate following by a Petition period (no less
than 30 days);
Petitions will require the signatures of a minimum of 7% (rounded up)
of the Chapters/OM eligible to sign petitions. Only the officially designated
representative (see Issue F) may sign a petition. There is no restriction
on who may submit a petition under either constituency.
ISSUE B: Nominations
Committee involvement in Board-Appointed Trustees selection?
Recommendation: Remove any reference to Appointed Trustees from the description
of the NomComm.
ISSUE C: Discussion
process following announcement of candidates
Recommendation: Candidates will be encouraged to issue statements, perhaps
with ISOC suggesting issues to be addressed (at the candidate's discretion).
Statements will be distributed electronically only, and will not be restricted
in length or format. There will be no formal public discussion (moderated
or un-moderated). Campaigning will be discouraged.
ISSUE D: Board/Officer
involvement in candidate discussion process.
Recommendation: None - No longer an issue due to removal of discussion
process.
ISSUE E: Minimum
time allowed for ballot preparation and for voting.
Recommendation: Keep the one week ballot preparation period. Set the voting
period at 4 weeks.
ISSUE F: Processing
of multiple ballots from same Chapter/Member.
Recommendation: Allow only 1 voting representation per Chapter or OM.
If due to voting methods, multiple ballots can be submitted, the first
to be received counts. Any votes for withdrawn candidates will be discarded
with no provision for re-voting.
ISSUE G: Cutoff
date for eligibility to submit/sign a petition and for voting.
Recommendation: Use different cutoff dates to allow maximum participation
in the processes.
ISSUE H: Clarification
of which chapters can vote.
Recommendation: The VP Chapters will be responsible for issuing a statement
which will also be made available to all Chapters, stating which Chapters
are eligible to participate in the Petition and the Election processes.
The procedures must ensure that there is adequate opportunity for Chapters
to rectify errors in the list(s) prior to final publication.
ISSUE I: Use
of paper mail and paper ballots.
Recommendation: All communications with Chapters and OM relating to the
election, and all balloting will be solely through electronic means.
ISSUE J: Disclosure
of Chapter voting statistics.
Recommendation: ISOC will publicly disclose which Chapters voted and which
did not. ISOC will not disclose further details regarding the ballots.
ISSUE K: Disclosure
of voting details of a Chapter/OM to the representative of that entity.
Recommendation: E-mail acknowledgements the receipt of e-ballots is deemed
to be mandatory and should be in the procedures. Further manual queries
from an official rep (presuming the acknowledgement was not received for
whatever reason) will be replied to indicating whether a ballot has been
received, information related to the receipt (date/time received, mail
headers, etc.), and a statement of whether the ballot is deemed to be
in a valid format. Information regarding the contents of the ballot will
not be disclosed.
ISSUE L: Deadline
for submitting ballots.
Recommendation: The Elections Committee will annually set deadlines applicable
to each type of ballot(s), and these deadlines will be strictly adhered
to. Late ballots will not be included in the vote tallies.
ISSUE M: Voting
weight of grand-fathered Startup class of OM.
Recommendation: Set weight to 1. Some time in the future, the Board should
revisit the concept of weighting, but not for this year.
ISSUE N: Handling
of tie votes.
Recommendation: Use random selection to determine outcome of ties, with
an emphasis on a selection method that will be viewed as being free from
bias and potential manipulation.
ISSUE O: Clarification/change
of who can issue election challenges.
Recommendation: Allow all candidates to Challenge. Only Chapters/OM that
are eligible to vote can Challenge.
ISSUE P: Announcement
of Standards Trustee selection.
Recommendation: Announce at the same time as the announcement of elected
Trustees if practicable.
ISSUE Q: Editorial
Changes: Remove assumption that the first meeting of a new Board is only
for organizational issues; use common terminology in sections on Elections
Committee and Nominations Committee regarding member standing for election,
selection process, etc.; remove transition wording related to Standards
Trustees and 2002 election.
Recommendation: Accept the corrections.
Appendix B: ISOC
GOVERNANCE PROCEDURE
The procedures described herein relate to the selection of Trustees by
ISOC Organizational Members, ISOC Chapters, the ISOC standards organizations
and by the ISOC Board of Trustees. They are generally harmonious with
the existing Individual Member Trustee Election Procedures already in
force but currently suspended. Should ISOC restart Individual Member Trustee
elections, the two sets of regulations will need to be integrated.
GENERAL TERMS
Trustee Selection
ISOC By-Laws and Policies
call for the Trustees on its Board of Trustees to be elected or selected
by various constituencies, namely Organizational Members, Chapters, the
ISOC standards organization embodied by the Internet Architecture Board
(IAB) and Individual Members. The Board of Trustees itself is empowered
to appoint a limited number of Trustees over and above the constituency-based
Trustees. The procedures for Individual Member Elections (currently suspended)
are defined in the Board document "Procedures for the Nomination
and Election of Trustees by Individual Members". This present document
addresses the procedures for electing/selecting the other classes of Trustee.
Candidate/Trustee
Uniqueness
A person may be a
candidate in only one election in any given year. If a candidate is nominated
(by whatever means) for more than one election, that candidate must decide
which election to participate in. Should a Trustee for whatever reason
find that he/she would occupy more than one Board position simultaneously,
that Trustee must relinquish all but one of these positions. Failing such
action, the Board will take appropriate action.
Terms of Trustees
Trustee terms are
limited by By-Law to three years and to no more than two consecutive terms.
The normal term for a non-Board-Appointed Trustee will be three years.
The Board may alter this from time to time to meet transition requirements
or to accommodate casual vacancies.
Assumption of Office
The term of office
of elected/selected Trustees shall commence at the adjournment of the
next regularly scheduled Board meeting following the completion of the
Election process. The term of office for departing Trustees shall end
at the adjournment of the same meeting. The Board meeting is defined as
having one agenda, which may extend over several days. The new Board may
convene a meeting after the completion of the meeting of the outgoing
Board.
Board-appointed Trustees
take office immediately after their appointment unless the Board explicitly
designates another time.
Elections Committee
The Chair of the Elections
Committee is elected by a majority vote of the Board of Trustees. The
Chair of the Elections Committee shall be a member of the Board of Trustees
or an Emeritus Trustee. The Chair shall identify no fewer than two other
Individual Members of the Society to sit on the committee, subject to
formal Board Approval. None of the Elections Committee members may be
elected/selected as a Trustee in the year during which they sit on this
Committee. The Committee will be responsible for establishing and supervising
all elections, and interacting with the ISOC Standards organization regarding
their Trustee selection(s).
The role of the Elections
Committee is to establish the parameters for annual elections, and to
oversee the entire process, with the exception of the explicit responsibilities
and duties of the Nominations Committee.
GENERAL TERMS - TRUSTEE (ORGANIZATIONAL MEMBER) AND TRUSTEE (CHAPTER)
ELECTIONS ONLY
Nominations Committee
The Chair of the Nominations
Committee is elected by a majority vote of the Board of Trustees. The
Chair of the Nominations Committee shall be a member of the Board of Trustees.
The Chair shall identify committee members, subject to formal Board approval.
The Chair shall be elected as soon as possible following the assumption
of office of newly elected/selected Trustees. The Chair shall act with
due haste to identify prospective committee members for Board ratification.
The Nominations Committee
will consist of no fewer than 7 Individual Members of the Society, where
5 committee members shall constitute a valid quorum. At least 2 members
of the Nominations Committee shall be people who are not currently serving
in any elected or appointed capacity in the Society. The membership of
the Nominations Committee should reflect the various constituencies on
whose behalf it is working. None of the Nominations Committee members
may be elected/selected as a Trustee in the year during which they sit
on this Committee.
The Chair of the Nominations
Committee must establish some form of liaison with the IAB to ensure that
both groups do not name the same Trustee/candidate.
The role of the Nominations
Committee is to:
- Establish selection
criteria for prospective Trustees;
- Advertise the
nominations/petition process;
- Pro-actively solicit
potential candidates for the Nominations process;
- Name a slate of
candidates for both Chapters and Organization Member constituencies;
- Oversee the Petitions
process;
- Monitor the nominations
and petitions processes to ensure that an individual is a candidate
in no more than one constituency at the same time.
Candidate Selection
There is no requirement
that a candidate (by nomination or petition) be affiliated with an Organizational
Member or Chapter.
For each constituency,
certain members/chapters are deemed to be allowed to participate in the
nominations process and the election itself. For the purposes of this
policy, these members/chapters are called Participating Members.
There are two methods by which a candidate may stand for election:
Nominations by
Committee
The Nominations Committee
will notify the Society members, Organization Members and Chapters of
the procedures for nominating individuals for election to the Board of
Trustees, and will provide a minimum period for receiving nominations
of 30 days. There are no restrictions regarding who can submit a name
to the Nominations Committee.
The number of individuals
nominated in each constituency shall exceed the number of Trustees to
be elected. The Nominations Committee will notify the participating members
of each constituency, as well as other interested groups of the names
of individuals nominated by the committee for election to the Board of
Trustees not less than 67 days prior to the date established for Trustee
elections.
Nominations by
Petition
Additional nominations
for election to the Board of Trustees may be made by petition filed with
the Chair of the Nominations Committee. Petitions will be accepted for
no less than 30 days following the notification of individuals nominated
by the committee. Petitions shall be filed electronically. All candidates
seeking to petition will be listed in periodic announcements to participating
Chapters and Organization Members via electronic mail and the ISOC web
site.
For each constituency,
the Nominations Committee shall specify the number of signatures of Participating
Members required for petitions, which shall be equal to seven percent
(rounded up) of the participating members of the appropriate constituency.
Participating Members can sign petitions for candidates running within
their own constituency only. A Participating Member may sign more than
one petition.
For the purposes of
this policy, a signature shall be an email sent by an Election
Representative and is subject to ISOC verification.
Each signature must
come directly from the supporter via email to an address designated by
the ISOC staff (in effect, the electronic mailbox is a candidate's petition).
A supporter must send a separately emailed signature for each candidate
he/she wishes to support, each to that candidate's petition mailbox. Each
petitioner shall be provided with copies of all petition e-mails for his/her
candidacy and periodic reports about his/her status in obtaining signatures.
Announcements regarding successful petitions shall be made as soon as
practical, and need not await the end of the petition period. Petition
results shall not be disclosed by ISOC staff to anyone else other than
the election staff and Nominations Committee until a general announcement
is made.
Candidates for
Election
The Nominations Committee
will announce the complete slate (nominated plus successful petitions)
no less than 35 days prior to the election day.
Casual Vacancies
A casual vacancy is
defined to have occurred where a Trustee does not complete their full
term of office. This shall be deemed to include a person certified as
elected but who informs ISOC that he/she cannot or will not take office.
If a candidate withdraws or is disqualified after ballots have been mailed,
but before the election is certified, the Elections Committee will assign
that candidate a total of zero votes, regardless of the actual number
cast.
The Board may appoint,
by a 2/3-majority vote, a Trustee to serve in place of the one who resigned/cannot
serve until the next election. If there are any remaining years of the
Trustee's term, at the next election, the Organizational Members or Chapters
will elect an additional Trustee to serve the remainder of the term.
Where a casual vacancy
exists on the Board of Trustees which is to be filled by an elected Trustee
in the next election, the vacancy shall be deemed to be filled by the
candidate elected with the least number of votes in the election. The
Board will determine the period of office for the casual vacancy to be
one term of office as it relates to the provisions of the ISOC By-laws
Where multiple casual
vacancies exist, the elected candidate with the least number of votes
will be deemed to fill the casual vacancy with the shortest period remaining,
the elected candidate with the second smallest number of votes will be
deemed to fill the next shortest casual vacancy, and so on.
Use of Electronic
Mail
All formal communications
between ISOC and the Organizational Members or Chapters related to elections
will use electronic mail.
Election Conduct/Promotion
of Election to Organizational Members and Chapters
Candidates will be
given the opportunity to submit biographical information and an election
statement. The Elections Committee will put in place a process for appropriate
electronic dissemination of candidate information. Active campaigning
other than the aforementioned statements is discouraged.
Ballot
Ballots will be distributed
via e-mail. Votes may be cast electronically by method(s) designated by
the Elections Committee.
Receipt of Ballots
For each election,
the Election Committee shall define what it deems to be a secure electronic
return. Only ballots returned by electronic methods designated by the
Elections Committee are considered to be a valid return of the voting
ballot. The deadline for returning ballots shall be specified by the Elections
Committee. A minimum of 28 days will be allowed for the receipt of ballots.
ISOC will send an email to the Election Representative or the voter confirming
receipt of cast ballots.
Counting of Ballots
The counting of ballots
will take place on the election date, at a time and place established
by the Elections Committee. At least two members of the Elections Committee
shall be present at the counting of the ballots. The committee will establish
procedures to ensure the privacy, validity and accuracy of all ballots.
In the event of a tie vote for any position, fair and unbiased random
selection will be used to determine the order of the tied candidates.
Certification of
Vote
The Elections Committee
shall certify the results of the annual Trustee election to the Board
of Trustees within 10 days following the election.
Publication of
the Result
Only the vote counts
of the elected candidate Trustees and the total vote count are to be published,
while all candidates and the Board of Trustees will be provided with the
full list of candidates and the number of votes that each received.
Challenges
A challenge to any
nomination or election procedure or result may be raised only by a Trustee,
a member of the Nominations or Elections Committees, Candidate or Participating
Member. Participating Members may challenge only with respect to their
own constituency. Any challenge must be addressed to the President of
the Society with a recital of the reasons for the challenge, and must
be received no later than 20 days following the election date. The President,
after consultation with the Chairs of the Nominations and Elections Committees
and the members of the Board of Trustees, shall advise the author of the
challenge of the Board's decision, which shall be final, no later than
40 days following the election date.
"STANDARDS" TRUSTEES
There will be three
Trustees selected by the ISOC standards organization. The term will normally
be 3 years, with one Trustee selected each year.
The IAB, in consort with its related organizations, may from time to time
revise the procedures regarding how these Trustees will be identified.
This process must ensure that the prospective Trustees are identified
in sufficient time to attend the ISOC Annual General Meeting normally
held in the June-July time-frame. The ISOC Board must ratify these procedures.
The Board may refuse to ratify them, but may not alter them unilaterally.
The announcement of
new Trustees (Standards) will be made at the same time as the announcement
of newly elected Trustees (Chapters) and Trustees (Organization Members)
if practicable.
As part of the selection
of its ISOC Trustee(s), the IAB or its delegate will liaise with the Nominations
Committee which will provide non-binding guidance regarding the general
Board selection criteria for prospective Trustees.
If a Standards Trustee
is unable to serve his or her full term, the IAB will, at its discretion,
either select a replacement representative with due haste, to serve the
remainder of the term, or will select an additional Trustee to serve the
remainder of the term during the next annual selection process.
BOARD-APPOINTED TRUSTEES
The Board may, at
its sole discretion, appoint Trustees to the Board in addition to those
selected/elected by ISOC's varied constituencies. At any one time, there
shall be no more than five such appointed Trustees. As per the By-laws,
the appointment of a Trustee requires a 2/3-majority vote of the Trustees
then in office. Each appointment shall be for a maximum term of three
years, but the Board may decide on a case-by-case basis how long each
term shall be (factoring in the current By-law restriction of a maximum
of two consecutive terms).
The Board may, on
a regular or irregular basis, form a search committee to identify prospective
Trustees who satisfy desired qualifications. The search committee shall
report any findings to the Chair of the Board or his/her delegate. Search
committee notwithstanding, any Board member or other interested party
may suggest potential Trustee candidates. Such suggestions should normally
be made to the Chair or his/her delegate.
A formal proposal
to the Board to appoint a person to the Board must come from the Chair
of the Board, the President of the Society, or an individual Trustee.
In the latter case, the proposal must have the support of at least two
other fellow Trustees.
It is expected, but
not mandatory, that Board discussions, approval-in-principle polls, and
formal votes to appoint Trustees will be held in-camera (typically Board
members only, plus any explicitly invited others).
TRUSTEES (ORGANIZATIONAL MEMBER)
Constituency
Any ISOC Organizational
Member in good standing as of election eligibility cutoff dates may participate
in the Trustee (Organizational Member) election process. The ISOC Advisory
Council Charter reads:
"Each organization
member may designate a Principal and an Alternate Representative to the
Council with equal status and standing. However, on formal votes of the
Council, a single vote for each Organization Member will be authorized."
Prior to the election,
the above-mentioned representatives will be requested to name an Election
Representative, who will act as their spokesperson with respect to all
election actions. In the absence of such a representative being named,
the Principal representative will be deemed to be the Election Representative.
If ISOC receives multiple distinct actions with respect to any specific
issue (such as ballot submission), the first action will be acted on and
all subsequent actions will be ignored.
The above notwithstanding,
given suitable advance notice, ISOC will allow an Organization Member
to replace its Election Representative.
Trustee Positions
to be filled
In the steady state
there will be six Trustees elected by Organizational Members, 2 elected
each year.
Eligibility to
Participate in Election
An Organizational
Member may participate in the election Petitions process if they are in
good standing on the date to be specified by the Elections Committee,
where such date is no later than the date of the announcement of the Nominations
Committees initial slate of candidates. An Organizational Member
may participate in the election Voting process if they are in good standing
on the date to be specified by the Elections Committee, where such date
is no later than the date of the mailing of ballots; or if they were eligible
to participate in the Petitions process.
An Organizational
Member is deemed to be in good standing if their most recent payment due
is paid in full, or no more than X days past due where X is:
60 days for annual
payments;
30 days for quarterly
payments;
15 days for monthly
payments.
Voting
Each Organizational
Member is entitled to 1 vote for each Trustee position to be elected.
When these votes are enumerated, they will be weighted based on the organization's
class of membership. Only 1 vote may be cast for each candidate.
Weight Class
6 Platinum
5 Gold
4 Silver
3 Executive
2 Professional
1 Small Business, Startup
TRUSTEES (CHAPTER)
Constituency
Any Recognized Chapter
as of the election eligibility cutoff dates may participate in the Chapter
election process. Prior to the election process, each Chapter will be
requested to identify their Election Representative, who will act as their
spokesperson with respect to all election actions. In the absence of such
a spokesperson being named, the President of the Chapter (or whatever
title is used to designate the normal Chapter spokesperson) will be deemed
to be the Election Representative. If ISOC receives multiple distinct
actions with respect to any specific issue (such as ballot submission),
the first action will be acted on and all subsequent actions will be ignored.
The above notwithstanding,
given suitable advance notice, ISOC will allow a Chapter to replace its
Election Representative.
Trustee Positions
to be filled
In the steady state,
there will be three Trustees elected by Chapters, 1 elected each year.
Eligibility to
Participate in Election
A Chapter may participate
in the election Petitions process if they are in good standing on the
date to be specified by the Elections Committee, where such date is no
later than the date of the announcement of the Nominations Committees
initial slate of candidates. A Chapter may participate in the election
Voting process if they are in good standing on the date to be specified
by the Elections Committee, where such date is no later than the date
of the mailing of ballots; or if they were eligible to participate in
the Petitions process.
A Chapter is deemed
to be in good standing if they are included in the list of active Chapters
that is periodically issued by the ISOC VPChapters. The process followed
by the VP-Chapters must allow for reasonable appeal in the case of a Chapter
not agreeing with the list contents.
Voting
Each Chapter is entitled
to 1 vote for each Trustee position to be elected.
Disclosure of Ballot
Details
ISOC will make available
a list of all Chapters eligible to vote in an election, indicating which
Chapters exercised their voting privilege. This list will be made available
as soon as possible following the announcement of the election results.
No further details regarding Chapter voting will be publicly disclosed.
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