Hi all
As much as I want us to strengthen the accountability process, it amounts to gagging or censoring the councillors in the case of directed voting.

 We should allow those we have elected to act on our behalf, that is trust and report back to us, that is the climax of participatory engagement of stakeholders and take responsibility for their actions or inactions.

I am sure there is no voting among the councilors that happens by accident, which means councillors will be forewarned of the pending vote round. In such a case we may take a queue from Stephanie by way of alerting leadership of the group we represent if not the entire house to bounce the opinion off them, which I think some of us have used same methodology in the past, which amounts for collective responsibility.

On the other hand, Bill raised the issue of briefing during meetings which is not out of place and should be support so as to carry everyone along, otherwise we can consider quarterly briefing, depending on our meeting schedules.

Regards
Remmy

On Wednesday, August 17, 2016, Stephanie Perrin <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

I think this is an excellent idea.  Personally, I think we should at least coordinate council votes, if not direct them.  I always tell folks how I am going to vote, but frankly a better process is necessary, especially with the important matters coming before us on human rights, accountability, and privacy.  Time to debate a better process.  Councillors have to be accountable to the folks they represent.

As for a one pager on each council meeting....hardly that onerous, with 6 councilors taking turns that is two reports each a year.  I am not looking for more work, but this does not seem impossible.

Stephanie Perrin


On 2016-08-17 4:39, William Drake wrote:
Hi

On Aug 16, 2016, at 23:38, Robin Gross <[log in to unmask]');" target="_blank">[log in to unmask]> wrote:

Agreed.  It is important for members to become more acquainted with our representatives and resumes are extremely helpful for that.

Sharing candidates’ resumes is not a bad idea.  But I’d like to suggest we go beyond this.  Two issue we might want to consider on tomorrow’s call:

When I joined Council in 2009, we discussed the need for better reporting to members as to what their reps were actually doing in Council.  We launched an attempt to deal with this by having Councilors take turns doing brief reports about Council meetings. Alas it didn’t get far, after a couple times the sense of urgency faded, people told themselves “well, members can always look at the Council archive to see what’s happening," and the effort drifted off.  But of course it’s actually not easy for a member to dive through the Council archive and try to reconstruct what’s happening, and it’s not so hard to compose a one or two paragraph summary of a monthly Council meeting indicating how our reps voted on which issues, especially if the workload is rotated among six Councilors, making it just a few times per year each.  So while it’s a bit uncomfortable suggesting work to be done by others, I’d like to put this idea back on the table ahead of our Meet the Candidates call tomorrow.  It need not be an one onerous thing, and after all we exist to participate in the GNSO, so surely we should be able to know how our reps are representing us in the GNSO.  Especially when we’re being asked to vote them into ‘office’ (for incumbents) on the basis of past performance.

More generally, we have long debated the matter of coordination among Council reps.  Unlike most if not all other parts of the GNSO, NCSG by charter doesn’t normally do ‘directed voting,’ where the members are bound to vote in conformity with a rough consensus position.  We have a charter provision to do this in exceptional cases, but I don’t recall it ever being invoked.  We’ve always been content to operate on the notion that the Councilor does what s/he thinks is in the best interest of civil society @ GNSO, and if members don’t approve of anyone’s action they can vote them out in the next cycle.  But as that has not really happened, it’s sort of a meaningless check and balance.  And this is not without consequence, as we’ve sometimes had internal differences within our contingent that have arguably undermined our effectiveness and credibility in the eyes of the community and staff, and can even allow our various business stakeholder group counterparts to exploit the differences in order to push through what they want in opposition to our common baseline views.  So at a minimum, we need to do better somehow at team coordination and make sure all our Councilors know what each other is doing and why and so there’s no real time surprises, especially during meetings with high stakes votes.

Thoughts?

Best

Bill



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