https://www.icann.org/news/announcement-2018-05-31-en
[icann.org]
31 May 2018
LOS ANGELES – 31 May 2018 – On 30 May 2018, the Board of Directors of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) adopted ICANN's FY19 Operating Plan and Budget, and updates to the Five-Year Operating Plan. Under
ICANN's post-IANA Stewardship Transition Bylaws [icann.org], the Empowered Community has the faculty to review, consider, or reject these documents before they go into effect.
ICANN's
FY19 Operating Plan and Budget and updates to the Five-Year Operating Plan [icann.org] are the result of 11 months of collaborative work between the ICANN organization, the community, the PTI Board, and the ICANN Board Finance Committee. These documents
include:
The continuous participation of the community in the planning process is a cornerstone of ICANN's transparency and accountability to the global multistakeholder community. ICANN thanks all community members who contributed to the development of the budget.
Access budget documents for FY19 and previous years are published
here [icann.org].
According to the
ICANN Bylaws Annex D, Section 6.2 [icann.org], the Empowered Community now has the opportunity to consider if the following powers should be exercised:
These documents will go into effect after giving the Empowered Community the time to consider if they will raise a petition rejecting the budgets and/or operating plans. Decisional participants of the Empowered Community have 28 days to bring forth a petition
rejecting any of these documents. In this sense, under Annex D, Section 2 of the Bylaws, there is a 21-day period for any decisional participant to raise a petition to reject documents, followed by a 7-day period to obtain support for the petition. For more
information on the petition process, please refer to the
ICANN Bylaws [icann.org].
If the Empowered Community does not raise a petition, the budget will become effective 1 July 2018.
The Empowered Community is the mechanism through which ICANN's Supporting Organizations (SOs) and Advisory Committees (ACs) can organize under California law to legally enforce community powers. The community powers and rules that govern the Empowered Community
are defined in the ICANN Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws.
All of ICANN's SOs, At-Large, and Governmental ACs, can be decisional participants in the Empowered Community, including:
The Empowered Community has an escalation process to reject ICANN's FY19 Operating Plan and Budget, the FY19 IANA Budget, and updates to the Five-Year Operating Plan. This escalation process gives SOs and ACs opportunities to discuss solutions with the ICANN
Board.
Find more information on the Empowered Community's ongoing petitions, and upcoming opportunities,
here [icann.org].
ICANN's mission is to help ensure a stable, secure, and unified global Internet. To reach another person on the Internet, you need to type an address – a name or a number – into your computer or other device. That address must be unique so computers know
where to find each other. ICANN helps coordinate and support these unique identifiers across the world. ICANN was formed in 1998 as a not-for-profit public-benefit corporation with a community of participants from all over the world.