Chuck, Mary, et al.:
I am not entirely sure that this will help resolve the confusion, but the absences and vacancies procedures are contained in Section 3.8-Incidental Absences of the GOP, not Section 4.5. I copied out the following paragraph (3.8.1-a) that pertains to your discussion…
a. Planned Absence: It is understood that, from time to time, it may be necessary for a GNSO Council member to miss a scheduled meeting due to a conflicting personal or professional obligation or other planned event that cannot be reasonably altered.
i. When a Councilor anticipates being absent or late for a Council meeting, the Councilor is expected to notify (e.g. telephone, e-mail) the GNSO Secretariat as soon as practicable before the meeting begins.
ii. A Councilor is expected to vote on such motions as may come before the GNSO Council using the alternative means provided in Section 4.4-Absentee Voting, if applicable. If circumstances will not permit voting using the alternative means available, the Councilor may declare an intention to abstain on those motions that are scheduled to be voted upon during the GNSO Council meeting at which the Councilor expects to be absent. In such an instance, the procedures in Section 4.5-Abstentions will apply.
In essence, in the case of a planned absence, the Councilor is permitted to declare an intention to abstain and that action affords the SG/C of the remedies in Section 4.5 (e.g. proxy). Unplanned absences, covered in 3.8.1(b), are not remediable due to lack of advanced notice.
To execute any voting remedy does not require that a Councilor determine or indicate whether an abstention is “volitional” or “obligational.” Those categories were drafted to explain the types of abstentions that can occur -- illustrated with a few examples that were not intended to be exhaustive. A planned absence could possibly be interpreted as volitional or obligational depending upon the circumstances; but, again, it is not necessary to disclose which classification applies in any abstention situation. Once a Councilor knows, in advance of a Council meeting, that he/she will be absent, that is sufficient declaration to request a voting remedy from the SG/C.
If you have any other questions, I would be pleased to answer them.
Ken Bour
From: Mary Wong [mailto:Mary.Wong@law.unh.edu]
Sent: Saturday, September 25, 2010 11:34 AM
Cc: Council GNSO; robert.hoggarth@icann.org; ken.bour@verizon.net
Subject: RE: [council] Proxy Voting Procedures
Thanks for the prompt and helpful answer, Chuck. I actually agree and understand that the inclusive language in 4.5.2(a), regarding examples of volitional absence, was intended to also cover the sort of situations I'd raised (particularly when read with the "either/or" voting universe contemplated by 3.8.1.)
The underlying problem, as I see it, is that the actual language of 4.5.2(a) in two respects creates potential uncertainty going forward (particularly some time down the road when many of those involved in drafting and initially implementing these new procedures are no longer on Council). These two respects are (1) the use of the words "elects to refrain from ... voting" in 4.5.2(a) (which implies a positive choice rather than one required by a necessary absence); and (2) the examples used to illustrate possible basis for such a choice. Although inclusive in nature, all three examples point toward instances which relate to a Councillor's substantive inability to discharge his/her duties responsibly. Either or both of these issues could result - down the road - in possibly narrower interpretations of the abstention voting procedures than we now are contemplating.
Helpful though our email discussions are, unfortunately they are not official minutes of a Council meeting or formal resolutions of a Council discussion. It occurs to me that issues of interpretation such as the one I raised could appropriately be referred, as a matter of implementation oversight, to our Standing Committee for a formal confirmation that this particular interpretation is correct for the record.
I'm not sure how we are supposed to do this, but I'd be happy to draft and submit a brief motion for Council consideration at the next meeting, if that's the way to do it.
Thanks and cheers
Mary
Mary W S Wong
Professor of Law
Chair, Graduate IP Programs
>>>
Mary, I think you are missing something. In my opinion, if a Councilor cannot make a meeting, the procedures apply, as long as there is sufficient lead time to follow the procedures. What makes you think that “instances where a Councilor simply cannot be at a meeting” are not covered? Note the following from Section 4.5: · “When circumstances regarding a potential voting abstention occur that would otherwise prevent a Councilor from discharging his/her responsibilities (see Paragraph 4.5.2), the Councilor’s appointing organization is provided a set of remedies (see Paragraph 4.5.3) designed to enable its vote to be exercised.” · “Circumstances may occur when a Council member elects to refrain from participating and voting for reasons that may include, but are not limited to . . .” (Section 4.5.2.a) Please note the phrase “not limited to”. I believe that “instances where a Councilor simply cannot be at a meeting” are covered here. BTW, I definitely do not view you as “being a pest”. It is essential that we all learn the nuances of the new procedures so that we can use them appropriately and as easily as possible. Chuck From: owner-council@gnso.icann.org [mailto:owner-council@gnso.icann.org] On Behalf Of Mary Wong Hi, Besides the procedural issue, my concern was, and is, the sense (from reviewing the new Council operating procedures) that if a Councilor is going to be absent from a vote, the only way he/she can actually get to vote - assuming the issue is not one that relates specifically to a PDP Bylaw, Council procedure or vacancy (which triggers the Absentee Voting procedures in 4.4) - is on issues that dictate an abstention. The problem is that 4.5 (on Abstentions) presuppose only 2 situations where an abstention is justified: (1) volitional (where a Councillor "elects to refrain from participating and voting", see 4.5.2(a); and (2) obligational (i.e. professional, personal or political conflicts), see 4.5.2(b). These then trigger the procedural remedies we've discussed (including a proxy vote). I completely agree that Councilors are fully expected and required (including in 4.5.1) to participate actively and discharge their duties responsibly, such that instances of absent and/or proxy voting are minimized and not encouraged. However, it seems to me that there will be instances where a Councilor simply cannot be at a meeting, but fully wishes to vote on a motion that is not one that triggers either 4.4 or 4.5. In other words, he/she does not need to "elect to refrain" from voting, and is not otherwise obligated to abstain. As currently worded, neither 4.4 nor 4.5 (including the language on proxies) would seem to cover this type of situation, which arguably could be handled via a relatively straightforward proxy process. Am I missing something, reading the procedures too narrowly, or ... ? (maybe being a pest? :) Thanks and cheers Mary In such a case, the new Operating Procedures do not seem to allow for a relatively simple - but documented and accountable - mechanism by which such a case could be handled through a proxy. Mary W S Wong Professor of Law Chair, Graduate IP Programs
As of August 30, 2010, Franklin Pierce Law Center has affiliated with the University of New Hampshire and is now known as the University of New Hampshire School of Law. Please note that all email addresses have changed and now follow the convention: firstname.lastname@law.unh.edu. For more information on the University of New Hampshire School of Law, please visit law.unh.edu |
As of August 30, 2010, Franklin Pierce Law Center has affiliated with the University of New Hampshire and is now known as the University of New Hampshire School of Law. Please note that all email addresses have changed and now follow the convention: firstname.lastname@law.unh.edu. For more information on the University of New Hampshire School of Law, please visit law.unh.edu