- From: John Foliot <john@foliot.ca>
- Date: Fri, 1 Jul 2022 13:03:09 -0400
- To: AGWG Chairs <group-ag-chairs@w3.org>
- Cc: "WCAG list (w3c-wai-gl@w3.org)" <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>, Silver TF <public-silver@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAFmg2sUkNOf3mXDLZ0zM0s1aHpDMaeRWPdp2ODaMenvzin+J3Q@mail.gmail.com>
Hello Chairs, > We want to emphasize that everyone’s feedback and thoughts are welcome Reading through this email, and I must offer the following correction/observation related to Participation. The current charter <https://www.w3.org/2019/12/ag-charter#participation> states: The Chairs, specification Editors, and Test Leads are expected to contribute four hours per week towards the Working Group. *There is no minimum requirement for other Participants.* Expecting every member of this Working Group to now contribute 4 hours a week is an onerous and unworkable demand - that constitutes 10% of most people's work-week, *which is a lot of weekly volunteer time*. (As it is, most of us are already contributing 2 hours for the weekly calls, and likely another hour+ responding to emails, CfC's / WG Surveys, etc.). Looking at previous characters <https://www.w3.org/2017/01/ag-charter.html#participation> and the Participation requirements HAVE NOT insisted on this amount of participation for many years now. So I am now reading this as the Chairs *raising the bar for participation*, which concerns me greatly (as well as directly contradicting our current Charter). Rather than fostering a "less exclusionary culture" my suspicion and concern is that this minimum expectation will actually *reduce the number of active participants*, as some of our current group will simply not be able to contribute that much time every week. This may also potentially impact the 15-member minimum requirement also enshrined in the current Charter. ("To be successful, this Working Group is expected to have 15 or more *active participants* for its duration") I also note that our current Charter is set to expire this Fall (Oct '22), and at this time I will strenuously Object to any change to our Charter that mandates a minimum of 4 hours participation from all of our individual members as being fundamentally exclusionary in its outcome. (Should this be a consensus decision of the WG during our Charter renewal however, then I would withdraw that objection.) But having an imposed change to the current or future Charter without the consensus of the WG is something that I fundamentally reject as being outside of the current W3C Process <https://www.w3.org/2021/Process-20211102/#Consensus>. Respectfully, JF On Fri, Jul 1, 2022 at 10:47 AM Bradley-Montgomery, Rachael < rmontgomery@loc.gov> wrote: > Hello, > > > > During the June 21st AGWG call the working group was asked to participate > in an exercise of categorizing existing WCAG 3.0 success criteria. About > half the group participated in this exercise, for which we (the AG chairs) > want to thank you. Notably, we observed that about half the participants on > that week’s call did not attempt the exercise, neither during the time > reserved for it on the call or afterwards. We spoke to this during this > week’s AGWG call (June 28th), and it resulted in a number of questions and > comments afterwards. As a result, we want to follow up to better explain > what we meant. > > > > As part of moving our efforts more towards WCAG 3.0, the AGWG chairs feel > it is important that the group change from a group that spends most of its > time fine-tuning, to one focused on rapidly developing new ideas and > delivering content in support of those ideas. We intend that for the next > charter, all active participants will be involved in subgroups. Meeting > time will place emphasis on presenting and building a shared understanding > of proposals. Critiquing and fine-tuning those proposals will shift to > other asynchronous mechanisms. > > > > We discussed minimum time commitments at the meeting and took an action to > follow up with you. Previous charters set an expectation of 4 hours but our > current charter has no minimum time commitment for participants. The chairs > believe that subgroup participants should have about 4 hours per week > available to meet and work, to ensure the productivity of subgroup. See the Subgoup > Handbook > <https://docs.google.com/document/d/1_caRiZaTQDmsd2Vq415sz4AIullNse-GeGtohUfg_5M/edit?usp=sharing> > for more on subgroups. > > > > Our plan is that everyone who regularly attends AGWG meetings participates > in multiple subgroups throughout the year. Based on the time needed, we > expect participants will only be in one subgroup at a time. We also > understand that there will be gaps in participation due to personal and > professional commitments. > > > > We need active participation in order to publish WCAG 3 in a reasonable > time frame. The AG chairs will track who participates in subgroup work, as > well as exploratory and writing exercises during calls, in order to: > > - Ensure that no individual is “spread too thin,” > - Create a more productive and less exclusionary culture, and > - Better estimate AGWG’s workload and bandwidth. > > > > We want to emphasize that everyone’s feedback and thoughts are welcome. > What will change is that some comments and thoughts will be considered > outside of AGWG calls through other asynchronous methods, to better focus > our productivity within our meetings. Various other mechanisms exist for > providing feedback, and we will increasingly steer the AGWG towards using > those mechanisms, so that calls can be used for knowledge sharing, > brainstorming, and other exercises needed to develop WCAG 3.0. > > > > Lastly, we want to let you all know that if you have any questions, > concerns, suggestions, or if at any point you experience difficulties > joining, contributing to, or participating in any of our meetings to please > contact us at group-ag-chairs@w3.org. We received feedback on how to > better support participants engaging in exercises and will be trying that > out over the next few months. > > > > We want your participation, and we will work with you to help you find out > how you can best contribute. > > > > Kind regards, > > > > The AG chairs > > > > > > --- > > Rachael Bradley Montgomery, PhD > > Digital Accessibility Architect > > Library of Congress > > Email: rmontgomery@loc.gov > -- *John Foliot* | Senior Industry Specialist, Digital Accessibility | W3C Accessibility Standards Contributor | "I made this so long because I did not have time to make it shorter." - Pascal "links go places, buttons do things"
Received on Friday, 1 July 2022 17:03:43 UTC