Not only that but the ICANN Board, as part of its priorities, *"...has recently taken a decision that all future Board resolutions will not only be supported by a clear rationale but will also contain an analysis of how each resolution aligns with ICANN**'s Mission.* *"* They intend to as ask SOs, ACs, and CCWGs to* "...include a similar analysis in recommendations, policies, and advice submitted to the Board for consideration."* -ed On Wed, Oct 25, 2017 at 5:42 PM Alan Greenberg <alan.greenberg@mcgill.ca> wrote:
We have a discussion of Public Comments scheduled to occur on Sunday. The intent is that come to an agreement on how to decide on issuing a comment and the process to follow.
Currently, when a new Public Comment opens, or we receive a request for input from some group, either the ALAC or the ALT reviews the issue at one of its meeting. If it is an ALT meeting and a recommendation is made, it is conveyed to the ALAC. Typically we either decide not to respond, or ask someone for a more detailed analysis. Sometimes a comment is written at that stage, without really "deciding" to do so.
This process is problematic for a number of reasons. The time lost before a meeting or before someone looks at the issue is critical and tends to use most of the available time. This results in little time for review and revision. A new method must be found.
The question of when to respond is perhaps easier:
- We have something SUBSTANTIVE to say - We feel a token Thank you (we agree) is felt to be important - There are users implications - There are implications related to ICANN's overall organization, effectiveness, finance or credibility.
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