- From: Léonie Watson <tink@tink.co.uk>
- Date: Sat, 10 May 2014 15:28:44 +0100
- To: "'WebAIM Discussion List'" <webaim-forum@list.webaim.org>, "'Phill Jenkins'" <pjenkins@us.ibm.com>
- Cc: <info@accessibilityassociation.org>, <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>, <ddikter@atia.org>, <Rob.Sinclair@microsoft.com>
John Foliot wrote: "At the risk of sounding negative, I read three action items there: networking, education, certification (where education and certification seem to be intrinsically linked), so, outside of a committee working on networking, and one on education and certification, what other committees and task forces could you envision for this association? (It seems that currently the scope of this organization is relatively small and focused - certification and education.)" My understanding is that IAAP members will be able to create communities that focus on specific topics, should they wish. I'm not sure of the finer points of how you'd go about doing that right now, but the connections area of the IAAP site will facilitate this (when it goes live) with resources like homepage, wiki, email list etc. I don't think we should be looking at the IAAP board to suggest which communities are set up under the IAAP umbrella. I'd be much happier if those ideas came from the grassroots of the industry. Léonie. -- @LeonieWatson Carpe diem. -----Original Message----- From: webaim-forum-bounces@list.webaim.org [mailto:webaim-forum-bounces@list.webaim.org] On Behalf Of John Foliot Sent: 09 May 2014 23:01 To: 'Phill Jenkins' Cc: info@accessibilityassociation.org; w3c-wai-ig@w3.org; webaim-forum@list.webaim.org; ddikter@atia.org; Rob.Sinclair@microsoft.com Subject: Re: [WebAIM] Questions about the International Association of Accessibility Professionals (IAAP) Hi Phil, Thanks for jumping in. I think our community needs to continue to have these discussions. I'd like to examine your comments a little closer: benefits include: Eligible to participate in committees and task forces Q: Committees and task forces to do what? The IAAP's current mission statement states: "The mission of the International Association of Accessibility Professionals (IAAP) is to define, promote and improve the accessibility profession globally through networking, education and certification in order to enable the creation of accessible products, content and services." At the risk of sounding negative, I read three action items there: networking, education, certification (where education and certification seem to be intrinsically linked), so, outside of a committee working on networking, and one on education and certification, what other committees and task forces could you envision for this association? (It seems that currently the scope of this organization is relatively small and focused - certification and education.) Happily open to ideas however (as I am sure is the current Board of Directors). "Examples of when if ever all the individual IAAP members would ever vote on anything" Article 6 of the Bylaws and Policies (http://www.accessibilityassociation.org/content.asp?contentid=239#A6) states: "Directors shall be elected by the members at the annual meeting of the members, or as soon thereafter as conveniently possible." It occurs to me that any association of professionals that comes together would have, at its core, a key goal of the association reflecting the values and desires of its membership - its community. This is why I am also asking about who constitutes a voting member: if the only members who get to vote are large corporations who purchase one of the corporate memberships, what does that mean to the rank-and-file members who may not have corporate backing? Will they have a say in how *their* association is run, or will it be dictated to them by corporate overseers? The association is not "selling" anything (except maybe it's going to sell education packages - or should those packages be developed by and for the membership, and shared freely amongst the members?), so there is no Profit and Loss deliberations to consider (although financial management of the association *would* be a consideration - they are managing *our* money and dues after all). The association is not creating standards or policy for any group outside of its own members (is it? not according to the mission statement) - with perhaps the exception of a "certification" process which hopefully would be recognized 'internationally' as a certification worthy of its name. Given the importance of *that* effort to this association, I would hope that both consensus AND voting would come into play. So I would think that ensuring that the right people are at the helm, to ensure that the association DOES reflect the desires and will of its membership, would be something the general membership would want to vote on - I know *I* would want to do that. "For example, consider a tiered approach, like at the W3C, where working groups are operated by chairs that try to reach consensus rather than voting all the time." Interestingly, the organizational structure of the W3C is actually one that I am quite well acquainted with. While the *work* of the W3C Working Groups operate under a consensus model, there *is* an annual membership meeting (TPAC - held this year in Santa Clara: http://www.w3.org/2014/11/TPAC/), where members of the Advisory Committee meet behind closed doors to discuss W3C business, and where consensus and voting does take place. Minutes of those meetings ARE NOT public, and are only available to the (paid) membership of the W3C. One aspect of the AC worth noting is that every paid member to the W3C has one AC Rep (ergo, 1 vote), no matter whether they are Microsoft/Google/Apple/IBM or WilliesWebWonders, a small 2 person web development shop who chose to be paid members of the W3C. There is a certain egalitarianism to that model that *could* be adopted by the IAAP, but currently we don't know who gets to vote, or how the votes are counted. And outside of any work coming from either the "networking committee" or the "education and certification committee", we really don't know today what else *might* be voted on (but it is my guess at this writing that many would want to have a "voting" say on a certification program and an educational curriculum). Again, I applaud the efforts to date to stand up a Professional Association for our industry. The time is right to be doing so, and the need is readily apparent. But like everything, the devil is in the details, and as I investigate whether the IAAP is right for me, I will continue to ask questions to get those details, so that I can make an informed decision. Cheers! JF From: Phill Jenkins [mailto:pjenkins@us.ibm.com] Sent: Friday, May 9, 2014 1:58 PM To: John Foliot Cc: ddikter@atia.org; info@accessibilityassociation.org; Rob.Sinclair@microsoft.com; w3c-wai-ig@w3.org; webaim-forum@list.webaim.org Subject: Re: Questions about the International Association of Accessibility Professionals (IAAP) A few things to consider in this thread: 1. By-Laws vs Member benefits 2. Examples from other associations and consortiums 3. Examples of when if ever all the individual IAAP members would ever vote on anything 1. IAAP Member benefits include: Eligible to participate in committees and task forces http://www.accessibilityassociation.org/content.asp?contentid=153 I recommend including some level of "voting benefits" to the list of benefits, but scope it (limit the scope with example) as in vote on committees and task forces. And give some example of when if ever the general membership of the IAAP would ever vote on anything. 2. Use example from other associations, such as the W3C For example, consider a tiered approach, like at the W3C, where working groups are operated by chairs that try to reach consensus rather than voting all the time. See <http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/policies.html#Votes> http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/policies.html#Votes and distinguish between if and when groups of members that get to vote and groups of members that don't vote - meaning the same members can vote and at other times the same members don't get to vote. So, although all members get to nominate and vote on who gets to be on the Advisory Committee, only members on the Advisory Committee get to vote on things the Advisory votes on [smile]. See the section describes general policies for W3C groups regarding participation, meeting requirements, and decision-making. These policies apply to participants in the following groups: Advisory Committee <http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/organization.html#AC> , Advisory Board <http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/organization.html#ABParticipatio n> , TAG <http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/organization.html#tag-participat ion> , Working Groups <http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/groups.html#wgparticipant> , Interest Groups <http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/groups.html#igparticipant> , and Coordination Groups <http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/groups.html#cgparticipant> . 3. Examples of when all the IAAP indivisual members would vote on something? I can't think of any. I've never heard of a vote of all individual members of the W3C (companies get to vote once in a while, but not individuals) , or IEEE members, or even the ACM members that I can remember. I do get to vote at the annual IBM Stockholder's meeting, based on the number of shares I have - but that is a business model, not a democracy government model of one citizen one vote. At the annual stockholders meeting the deck is stacked, but so is the vested interest. Even as a citizen I do not get to vote on everything - for example I do not get to vote at the Senate Committee meetings or the local Citiy Council meetings. I wouldn't expect IAAP members to get to vote on something like raising the membership fee - that's the job of the board and/or CEO and staff. OK, maybe, just maybe I could see IAAP having a popularity vote on a new logo competition or something like that. . . but if we're talking about a scenario where there is an IAAP committee or task force that can't reach consensus, and the chair has to call for a vote of the members participating, then should all the members participating get to vote, even if those members come from the same company, government, non-profit agency, country, or group of independent consultants? Yes, in my opinion becasue IAAP is not a consortium, but an association. In the W3C's process, the group of invited experts only gets one vote for their group. In IAAP every individual member pays a individual membership fee. The payment may come from either themselves or their employer pays for them, or via your tax dollars, or by scholarship - however it doesn't matter who or how its paid - its about whether the individual is a member or the organization is a member. Because the individual is the member (representing themselves, not the company, not the government agency, not the country they live in, not the non-profit, and not the group of independent consultants) each member gets a vote, if or when ever one is called. Which is what I think the by-law is saying. See W3C's guidance on 3.3.1. Managing Dissent <http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/policies.html#managing-dissent> http://www.w3.org/2005/10/Process-20051014/policies.html#managing-dissent ___________________________________________ Regards, Phill Jenkins, _______________________________________________ To manage your subscription, visit http://list.webaim.org/ Address list messages to webaim-forum@list.webaim.org
Received on Saturday, 10 May 2014 14:29:13 UTC