Details
Co-Chair Recall |
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ID: | AFPUB-2020-GEN-007-DRAFT01 | Date Submitted: | 24 Nov 2020 |
Author: | Version: | 1.0 | |
Status | Expired | Amends: | Section 3.5 of the CPM |
Proposal
1. Summary of the problem being addressed by this proposal
The current CPM does not have a full mechanism in place to complete a recall process. A Recall is a method of election in which voters can oust elected officials before their official terms have ended. The current process is ambiguous and does not ensure that PDWG Chair(s) will not be arbitrarily distracted, it also does not also spell out the process of recall after the board might have agreed to the recall, The current process does not also spell out the recall process because a recall cannot take place without a vote from the community that elected the chairs in the first place. Therefore, the process outlined in this document would help with the entire recall process.
2. Summary of how this proposal addresses the problem
The proposal addresses the problem by defining clear and explicit procedures and guidelines for co-chair recall.
3. Proposal
Amending section 3.5 of the CPM, as follows:
Current |
Proposed |
3.5 Conflict Resolution
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3.5 Conflict Resolution
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Revision History
Revision History
Date |
Details |
24 Nov 2020 | Version 1: AFPUB-2020-GEN-007-DRAFT01
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AFRINIC Policy Impact Assessment
AFRINIC Staff Assessment
Date of Assessment: 26 October 2021
1.0) Staff Interpretation & Understanding of the proposal
This proposal aims at revoking the existing Section 3.5 of the Consolidated Policy Manual (CPM) which cover the appeal and recall processes respectively and replacing them with the text submitted in this proposal.
As per this proposal, In the case of appeal in 3.5(2) of this proposal, the following text is being removed - “The Appeal Committee shall issue a report on its review of the complaint to the Working Group”.
In the case of the recall of the PDWG Chairs 3.5(3), this proposal brings forward new requirements to the recall process that include a more active Board involvement in the recall as well as an involvement of the community in the endorsement of the Recall Committee members appointed by the Board and the Recall Committee’s determination that the recall of a PDWG Chair is justified. Section 3(10) of the proposal mentions that in case the Recall Committee determines that the co-chair(s) need to be recalled, a vote within the community must take place.
2.0) AFRINIC Staff Comments on clarity of policy
At the outset, it is important to note that to date, only 2 recall petitions have been submitted to the board of directors. In the first case, both the PDWG’s co-chairs had been recalled whereas in the latter case, the board of directors has recently instituted a recall committee to investigate the matter and the outcome is yet to be determined.
AFRINIC is not aware of any real or reported issue(s) or difficulty that the first recall committee encountered in dealing with the matter and/or any real problem requiring a review of the recall process. This proposal pre-dates the consideration of the first recall in 2020 and has not been amended to cater for any particular problem encountered by the recall committee.
The recall procedure in 2020 took a total of 12 weeks from the submission of the recall to the publication of the recall committee report. The recall process as formulated in this proposal is lengthy and time-consuming as it may last up to a maximum of 30 weeks starting from the submission of a recall request to the recall of the PDWG Chair.
Therefore, it is unlikely that the outcome of a recall petition will be determined expeditiously.
Holding a vote within the community will necessitate guidance as to who shall be in charge of this vote as the CPM is silent in this regard.
3.0) AFRINIC Staff Clarification Requests
It is important that the author(s) clarify whether the reference made to “community” in the draft proposal relates to AFRINIC general Internet Community or is restricted to the PDWG wherein policy proposals are discussed.
The voting register(community) as explained in Section 3(10) is dependent on the conditions prevailing at the time PDWG Chairs were selected in accordance with the Consolidated Policy Manual. Can the author clarify as to how they expect a vote to happen if current or previous PDWG Chairs were selected by consensus or elected as a result of the only candidate for the position?
Authors to provide guidance as to who shall be in charge of this vote as the CPM is silent in this regard.
4.0) Staff Comments On Areas of Impact
4.1) Impact on Registry Functions
This proposal does not impact the AFRINIC registry functions and systems.
4.2) Impact on Elections Platform
A vote within the community will require AFRINIC to implement an election.
4.3) Impact on Processes and procedure
- Appeal procedure - Once the Appeal procedure has been completed by the Appeal Committee, the latter is no longer mandated to issue its report on its review of the appeal to the Working Group.
- Recall Procedure - The recall process as formulated may last up to a maximum of 30 weeks starting from the submission of a recall request to the recall of the PDWG Chair. The Recall Committee will have to adhere to the conditions mentioned in the proposal.
- RPD Mailing List - Report on active mailing list participants
- Elections Process - The elections process is silent about the ‘elections’ mentioned in the CPM. Guidance is therefore required as to who shall lead in the organisation of said elections/voting.
- Voting Register - The voting register is an important element of an ‘election or voting process and the conditions of eligibility need to be very clear for the sake of fairness and transparency.
4.4) Legal Assessment
The fundamental issue with the present proposal is that, unlike the existing provision of section 3.5(3) of the Consolidated Policy Manual, the new proposal requires the board of directors to conduct a preliminary investigation into the recall petition before the appointment of a recall committee. Consequently, it goes without saying that the recall committee will be influenced by the outcome of the preliminary investigation conducted by the board of directors.
Likewise, the proposal mentions that the appointment of an eventual recall committee ought to be made in consultation with the AFRINIC’s Internet community. Doing so will only add to the existing chaotic environment that the PDWG currently finds itself in.
The other most unrealistic and impractical features of the policy proposal are as follows:
- Publication of the names of the members of the Recall Committee for the purposes of inviting comments from the AFRINIC Internet community.
- The avenue for the AFRINIC Internet Community to challenge the appointment of the members of the recall committee.
- The requirement that the recall committee’s report must be endorsed by a supermajority of the board of directors.
- It is important to note that decisions of the board of directors, unless a higher majority is required by the Companies Act, shall always be by way of an ordinary resolution, i.e. simple majority.
- Paragraph 9 of the proposal is contradictory with the intended powers attributed to the board of directors pursuant to paragraph 1 thereof.
- The requirement for a vote by the AFRINIC Internet community makes the process even more complicated and unworkable in practice.
- The appeal avenue to the board of directors catered in paragraph 11 is even more contradictory and unreasonable inasmuch as the board of directors cannot sit on appeal against the effect of its own preliminary investigation (paragraph 1 of the proposal refers).
- Paragraphs 8 and 11 of the proposal may be viewed as excessive, disproportionate, and unfair for the simple reason that the co-chairs cannot reasonably be called upon to defend themselves twice during the whole process – one before the recall committee and another before the Community.
4.5) Financial Assessment
Elections or Voting Platform is outsourced and therefore budget needs to be planned accordingly.
5.0) Implementation
The timeline of implementation can be within 6 months of the Last Call as prescribed by the CPM.