- From: David (Standards) Singer <singer@apple.com>
- Date: Tue, 16 Sep 2014 13:10:47 +0100
- To: chaals@yandex-team.ru
- Cc: Revising W3C Process Community Group <public-w3process@w3.org>
On Sep 13, 2014, at 23:05 , chaals@yandex-team.ru wrote: > Hi, > > There are very few groups who still use the concept of good standing, and it is not at all clear that the very specific rules are actually useful ones anyway. > > I would like this issue to be opened - I propose that we remove the entire section and instead move the statement from chapter 7 allowing groups to use specific procedures to the section on chartering, and clarify that it can include rules on standing, entitlement to attend meetings, etc. I also think any such rules need to be applied either universally or not at all, rather than leaving them at the discretion of chairs. > I think that: * good standing needs to move from being a normal part of the process, to being a tool available to groups and their chairs; so define it but don’t require it * a group intending to have good standing available as a tool needs to say so in their charter (“may use the good standing process”) * we need to look at other places in the process where it is used (e.g. TAG and AB, formally elected groups) * on the question of chair discretion — it’s fine for the chair to say “to affect this decision/vote, you need to be in good standing” (e.g. because it really needs people to be up to speed); but only if participants have the opportunity to get into good standing; it’s not needed that good standing is used for every decision — it is not OK for the chair to use discretion about who is affected; it’s either a uniform requirement, or not; you cannot exclude person A for lacking good standing while accepting person B who also lacks it David Singer Manager, Software Standards, Apple Inc.
Received on Tuesday, 16 September 2014 12:11:25 UTC