[At-Large] Paris debrief
Thompson, Darlene
DThompson at GOV.NU.CA
Thu Jul 3 13:23:33 EDT 2008
Evan,
I definitely agree with you on this.
On the issue of certain ones of ALAC shouldering almost all of the
policy work - we need to build in some kind of accountability framework
for ALAC. For example, how could any ALS that didn't attend those
meetings have any idea if their elected ALAC members (both voting and
NomCom) are doing the work they should be or not? How can they
effectively vote if they don't have access to this information?
Even if we could all see how many meetings our reps attended (during the
year as well as in person) and how many were missed. Also, have they
given input into any policy items during the year?
Without even this bare bones information, its impossible to ascertain
the effectiveness of ALAC.
This is just one point of the many that you raised.
D
Darlene A. Thompson
Community Access Program Administrator
Nunavut Dept. of Education / N-CAP
P.O. Box 1000, Station 910
Iqaluit, NU X0A 0H0
Phone: (867) 975-5631
Fax: (867) 975-5610
E-mail: dthompson at gov.nu.ca
-----Original Message-----
From: alac-bounces at atlarge-lists.icann.org
[mailto:alac-bounces at atlarge-lists.icann.org] On Behalf Of Evan
Leibovitch
Sent: Thursday, July 03, 2008 12:44 PM
To: At-Large Worldwide
Subject: [At-Large] Paris debrief
Hello everyone,
On behalf of ALSs who didn't go to Paris, and indeed at least some of
those who did, I would like to find out from the various At-Large
attendees how you perceived At-Large's strategies and accomplishments.
We were involved in a number of issues; the Summit, GNSO review, gTLD
creation policy, and of course the ALAC Review. There were first (and in
most cases very productive) meetings with GAC, NCUC, SSAC, GNSO and the
registrar constituency. There was effectively no time to play tourist,
though I do recall driving past the Louvre once or twice.
Smokers will remember Paris as their dream venue, where you could light
up without dirty looks, at least some of the people rolling their own
cigarettes in the street were actually using tobacco. And Sebastien was
as perfect a host as anyone could ask for, right up until the final
evening at "Jimmy the Frog's" (or whatever the French name for it
is...).
Yet I cannot come away from the Paris without having felt At-Large to be
the object of some kind of manipulation. I can't tell by how, or quite
how, but it was definitely there. We had zero response on a travel
policy that will certainly negatively affect At-Large's ability to
accomplish its role over the coming years. And while I stand behind the
positions taken on the issues, from a distance I can see how we came
across as shrill and obstructionist.
I am frankly tired of lurching from one panic-based ALAC reaction to
another. It is distressing to see so few members of ALAC shouldering all
the group's policy work. And I would really like, for once, enough
opportunity to understand issues early enough to be able to take
positions that are part of the solution rather than just trying to fix
problems.
Some of this is of ICANN staff's doing, through a pile of trivial little
things that while not technically incorrect _seemed_ designed to keep us
off balance. The timing of the release of the Westlake report seemed
almost deliberately timed to force hasty response during Paris. The
consultants themselves were clearly uncomfortable with the way that
timing played out, and I seem to recall one of them indicating privately
that they would have preferred to consult during Paris and release the
draft docs afterwards. I am especially and thoroughly disgusted with the
manipulation of the public forum, which was stage-managed to the point
of being considerably even more useless than usual. And ICANN's
translation strategy, while having made some improvements is still far
behind what it needs to be for ICANN to go beyond the anglophone world.
Of course At-Large is not without blame as well. The thing Westlake
recommended with which I most agree was for the need of a strategic plan
-- a prioritized list of issues and policies that require our focused
attention and resources, set out enough in advance to give us the
ability to be constructive participants. There are far too few ALAC
members doing work that should be spread around to 15 people. On issues
such as the RAA, my instinct says we should preparing ourselves for work
on this yet I don't even know where to start. And if the involved
people here don't know the basics upon which to discuss policy, I know
it will be even harder getting ALSs aware (let alone involved). I have
this sneaking suspicion that, sometime in the future, we will be in a
panic situation rush-releasing a response on this too.
Is this just me? Or does At-Large really need to seriously take stock of
its strategies, priorities, and the allocation of our eager-to-help
staff resources? In advance of the Summit I'd really like to see us with
our collective act together better than it is now. Just PLEASE don't
tell me that the response requires a return to obsession with process.
And finally, getting back to the stuff still on the table.
1) It is now up to At-Large to propose _constructive_ reaction to the
ALAC review, that builds upon whatever slivers of it that are agreeable
and offers something of substance to the governance committee.
2) Given that the gTLD thing is a done deal and Twomey is busy
contracting teams of mercenary Solomons ... what can we do to keep the
objection procedure narrow enough to serve its obvious intended purposes
(keep off TLDs that are of widespread revulsion) without using it to
stifle communities that are large and benign but objected to by some
cultures (ie, .gay)?
3) Are we ever going to have an internal debate on the travel policy? Is
there a way to craft input that doesn't sound totally self-serving?
Please keep some of this in mind when planning for the ALAC call next
week.
- Evan
_______________________________________________
ALAC mailing list
ALAC at atlarge-lists.icann.org
http://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/alac_atlarge-lists.icann
.org
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
More information about the At-large
mailing list