Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-27 Thread Stefan Keller
2014-10-24 9:20 GMT+02:00 Paul Norman penor...@mac.com:
 On Oct 23, 2014, at 03:00 PM, Clifford Snow cliff...@snowandsnow.us wrote:

 I think it is reasonable postpone elections for three months considering
 current turmoil.

 Leaving aside any question about the merits of this, I don't believe it is
 possible. Notice has been given of the AGM, and an election must be held at
 the AGM (AOA 31).

Frederik showed a way to make this possible. See thread Postponing
elections, or other alternatives (Was: Modus operandi of the board)

The merits would be - among others - 1. to let calm down things, 2. to
give OSMF electors a chance to inform themselves about the candidates
and 3. to give those candidates a chance to answer the questions
raised here [1].

Yours, S.

[1] https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Talk:Foundation/AGM14/Election_to_Board


2014-10-24 9:20 GMT+02:00 Paul Norman penor...@mac.com:
 On Oct 23, 2014, at 03:00 PM, Clifford Snow cliff...@snowandsnow.us wrote:

 I think it is reasonable postpone elections for three months considering
 current turmoil.

 Leaving aside any question about the merits of this, I don't believe it is
 possible. Notice has been given of the AGM, and an election must be held at
 the AGM (AOA 31).

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-24 Thread Paul Norman

On Oct 23, 2014, at 03:00 PM, Clifford Snow cliff...@snowandsnow.us wrote:

I think it is reasonable postpone elections for three months considering 
current turmoil.
 
Leaving aside any question about the merits of this, I don't believe it is 
possible. Notice has been given of the AGM, and an election must be held at the 
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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Sarah Hoffmann
Hi,

On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 03:47:03PM +0200, Frederik Ramm wrote:
 In theory, the OSMF members are the boss and board is just a group of
 people asked by the members to run business for them until they convene
 next time. In similar organisations I know in Germany, it is absolutely
 not uncommmon for members to discuss and submit proposals to the AGM
 that would be binding for the board; and for people to actually discuss
 and argue and vote at an AGM.
 
 OSMF has no culture of democracy really; and this is most likely due to
 the founding story: This is not a political body, it's mainly a
 safeguard for things like our trademarks and a legal entity to operate
 our servers.

The problem is that I don't see where the membership has any leverge on
the board apart from the elections. We have had discussions about
transparency before but they have been utterly fruitless so far. A good
part of the current members has promised to report from the work of the
board in their manifestos. None has ever done that more than once. We
have lost quite a few very active community members in den OSMF because
they have lost any hope that anything can be changed whatsoever by being
a member.

Going through the minutes, I am remaineded that the board has given itself
a set of rules already two years ago:
http://wiki.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Board_Rules_of_Order

It very clear states the obligations of a board member with respect to
board meetings and transparency. How does the board hold its individual
members accountable for following the rules of order? How can the
OSMF membership hold board members accountable for it?

Kind regards

Sarah

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Simon Poole


Am 23.10.2014 08:22, schrieb Sarah Hoffmann:
..
 
 It very clear states the obligations of a board member with respect to
 board meetings and transparency. How does the board hold its individual
 members accountable for following the rules of order? How can the
 OSMF membership hold board members accountable for it?
..

The board members are elected by the OSMF members and the board doesn't
really have control over its own composition outside of a couple of
nuclear options that naturally tend to not be invoked.

The rules of order can be seen as a contract between the board members
complementary to the law and articles of association, but just as in the
real world a breach of contract will make people unhappy, but given the
trade-offs tend to not have any consequences of note.

One thing has become obvious, that the current 1/3 of the board stands
for re-election per year rule has provided lots of continuity but not
enough change. Going forward I would suggest tweaking the articles to
limit consecutive terms to two (just reiterating what I've said earlier)
and require a minimum of 3 seats to be available at every election.

There has been some discussion between Michael, the board and myself on
changing the inner workings of the OSMF a bit which potentially could
address some of the remaining issues, however these are at a very early
discussion stage.

Simon







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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Kathleen Danielson


 There has been some discussion between Michael, the board and myself on
 changing the inner workings of the OSMF a bit which potentially could
 address some of the remaining issues, however these are at a very early
 discussion stage.


Simon, would you care to shed light on this? This seems like a good time to
bring conversation out into the open, so that the community can give input,
rather than waiting until things have already been decided. The deadline
for someone to announce their candidacy is in just over 12 hours, so today
is rather critical for OSMF. I would hate for something to come out in a
day or a week that could have compelled someone to run.

Speaking of timelines, I'd like to register my disappointment that it
wasn't made more obviously known that the deadline has already passed to
join the foundation to be eligible to vote in the upcoming election [1]. I
certainly understand why the 30 day rule is in place, but we talk about how
few community members are actually OSMF members, and yet the AGM wasn't
formally announced until *yesterday*, [2] only 17 days in advance. I also
absolutely understand the challenges around scheduling at conferences, but
I wasn't aware of this rule, and I think it's fair to assume many other
people weren't as well.  By failing to publicize this important deadline to
the larger community, a key opportunity has been lost to increase the
membership as well as to hear the voices of more community members in our
annual election. To me, this communicates either satisfaction with the
status quo (why expand the voting base if we're happy with how elections
have gone in the past?), or simply apathy. Both are disappointing.

There is still quite a bit that I want to say in response to the messages
of the past few days, but it's taking me some time to formulate the bulk of
my thoughts. That said, I would like to voice my support for Richard's
suggestion that the full board step down. I hope most of them will stand
for re-election, but I think we've heard that whichever 2 people we elect
are likely to be burnt out and sapped of whatever energy they have going
into the election. Don't think that I don't understand the challenge that
comes with the potential loss of institutional memory. It's something we've
discussed many times on the OSM-US board. I do think that it's a drastic
option, but I can't see anything short of a drastic option making a
substantial difference. If the past few days have taught us anything, it's
that the OSMF is fundamentally broken and doesn't have the energy needed to
fix that. This project can and should be able to and *has* done great
things, but it could be so much more. No, we don't always agree with what
more means, but with a governing body (which is what OSMF is, even if
that isn't made explicit) that cannot accomplish things, we're not going to
see any version of more.

Yes, I've decided to stand for election, and no, I don't expect my view to
make me particularly popular (or electable), but I truly care about this
project, and I want to see our community become a healthy one. I think a
shakeup in leadership could help us get there.

[1]
http://www.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Articles_of_Association#VOTING_AT_GENERAL_MEETINGS
(see
item 75)
[2]
https://lists.openstreetmap.org/pipermail/osmf-announce/2014-October/12.html
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[OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Richard Fairhurst

Simon Poole wrote:

Kathleen Danielson wrote:

That said, I would like to voice my support for Richard's
suggestion that the full board step down.

It simply is a very unrealistic option given that it would require a
mechanism that doesn't exist to force all board members to resign.


Absolutely no force required. I would hope that the existing board 
members would recognise the virtue of a fresh mandate and a clean start.


Incidentally, only three of the current board members (Simon, Frederik 
and Kate) have contributed to or shown any sign of being aware of this 
debate. Matt of course is stepping down but I hope Dermot, Henk and 
Oliver will take this chance to engage with the community they represent 
and serve.


Richard


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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Frederik Ramm
Hi,

On 10/23/2014 01:25 PM, Richard Fairhurst wrote:
 Absolutely no force required. I would hope that the existing board 
 members would recognise the virtue of a fresh mandate and a clean start.

A radical step, but I like it. I'd be more than happy to withdraw my
candidacy if there was a spirit of rebooting. We wouldn't even need
seven new candidates; we could simply elect a few and they could then
add new un-elected board members as they like (article 79 in the AoA).

Instead of rushing through such an unprecedented measure, we could also
do it in a more orderly fashion: Have this year's AGM decide that the
board should prepare to resign altogether at the next AGM, and prepare
the election of a full new board. This event would then be known long in
advance and people would have time to prepare their bids for a seat on
the rebooted body. Independent of the actual legal powers of the AGM,
certainly no board member could ignore such an express declaration by
the very people they're serving.

Another thing, while we're throwing doors wide open. In many political
systems around the world, the electorate doesn't elect a group of people
with wildly different goals. Instead, people form parties and the
electorate decides for a party, and the party will then form the
government. (Grossly simplifying, I know.) That way, people in
government have to fight each other to a much lesser degree than they
would if government were comprised of people following different
political views and goals.

By appointing seven directors individually, on the one hand we have the
advantage that they can keep each other in check; we, as the electorate,
don't have to be super careful, if we elect someone who's incompetent or
a kleptomaniac, the others on the board will hopefully notice and fix it
somehow. On the other hand, there's the danger of seeding the board with
a couple of difficult personalities that make life hard and reduce
productiveness for the rest of them.

Should we perhaps vote for teams? Just like a team can assemble and
bid for holding a SotM, should we allow a team to bid for being the OSMF
board for a year?

Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Frederik Ramm
Hi,

On 10/23/2014 08:22 AM, Sarah Hoffmann wrote:
 The problem is that I don't see where the membership has any leverge on
 the board apart from the elections. We have had discussions about
 transparency before but they have been utterly fruitless so far. A good
 part of the current members has promised to report from the work of the
 board in their manifestos.

Let me describe a purely hypothetical situation.

Say there's someone on the board who doesn't really do anything. They
rarely show up for meetings, don't participate in mailing list
discussions, and respond late if at all to inquiries by the rest of the
board. It's not however *so* bad that board would go through the trouble
of calling an EGM to have that board member removed or replaced,
especially since that would always require someone to be the first to
stand up and spread disharmony by pointing out the obvious.

A new election comes up and, lo and behold, that same board member even
stands for re-election. The other board members are a bit puzzled but
what can they do, they can't suddenly start a campaign against one of
their own, can they? In the absence of any communications from other
board members, the OSMF membership assumes that the board member in
question must have been doing a good job, and promptly re-elects them.

End of hypothetical situation. It is obvious that something has gone
wrong, but what, and how could it have been better? Can we expect board
members to report to the membership about the (perceived?) lack of
performance of their peers? Or does the membership have to ask questions
to find out what happens or does not happen?

Board members are expected to keep board matters confidential, something
that is also enshrined in the Rules of Order that you mention. This is
to avoid reading about the board meeting in 5 different twitter feeds
instead of on the OSMF wiki ;) but maybe the balance is not right. Maybe
individual board members should be asked to report about their work to
the electorate. But that would of course hardly be objective. Currently
not only have we no such reporting, but the secretary (me) has even been
asked not to specifically minute *who* voted for *what* in those few
cases where board votes on something.

 It very clear states the obligations of a board member with respect to
 board meetings and transparency. How does the board hold its individual
 members accountable for following the rules of order?

Not at all, really. The rules of order is something we spent quite some
time on during our face-to-face meeting last year. I had introduced that
document because I felt that being clear about expectations and
obligations would remove some of the problems. The bill didn't pass
fully (I think the draft is still on my user page on the OSM Foundation
Wiki, something I caught flak for internally BTW) but at the time I
hoped that the bits that passed, like that board members shouldn't keep
information from each other, would clear some obstacles. I think that
was one of those occasions where I was naive.

 How can the
 OSMF membership hold board members accountable for it?

Watch what the board are doing, and ask questions. Read the answers you
get, and ask the questions that arise from them. That's what I would
suggest, and as a board member I'd actually value it if I saw that
members were interested in my work. Even if I'd probably have to give
many an embarrassing answer.

Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Ian Dees
On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 9:06 AM, Frederik Ramm frede...@remote.org wrote:

 End of hypothetical situation. It is obvious that something has gone
 wrong, but what, and how could it have been better? Can we expect board
 members to report to the membership about the (perceived?) lack of
 performance of their peers? Or does the membership have to ask questions
 to find out what happens or does not happen?

 ...
  How can the
  OSMF membership hold board members accountable for it?

 Watch what the board are doing, and ask questions. Read the answers you
 get, and ask the questions that arise from them. That's what I would
 suggest, and as a board member I'd actually value it if I saw that
 members were interested in my work. Even if I'd probably have to give
 many an embarrassing answer.


I've seen members and non-members alike ask questions like What does the
OSMF do? and the response is something about putting on a conference (but
really volunteers outside the board do that) and holding on to money.
Essentially, the answer is Nothing, on purpose. When the community (not
just the membership) is told the board is designed not to do anything, then
we stop asking questions because one assumes you can't get doing nothing
wrong. It sounds like that's not the case, though.

The board-membership communications channel is definitely a two-way street,
though. In every other organization I've been a part of, we endeavored to
make sure the membership was aware of what we were doing. They had elected
us and expect results (or at least leadership to facilitate volunteers'
results), after all.

I would expect the board members that *want* to get things done to work as
hard as they can to expose the board-internal squabbles that prevent
action. I'm glad you started that conversation, Frederik.
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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Kathleen Danielson
Sorry-- looks like I forgot to copy the whole list.

On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 3:37 PM, Kathleen Danielson 
kathleen.daniel...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Frederik,

 You've got a few really interesting ideas in here. Some quick questions:

 On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 2:47 PM, Frederik Ramm frede...@remote.org
 wrote:

 Hi,

 On 10/23/2014 01:25 PM, Richard Fairhurst wrote:
  Absolutely no force required. I would hope that the existing board
  members would recognise the virtue of a fresh mandate and a clean start.

 A radical step, but I like it. I'd be more than happy to withdraw my
 candidacy if there was a spirit of rebooting. We wouldn't even need
 seven new candidates; we could simply elect a few and they could then
 add new un-elected board members as they like (article 79 in the AoA).


 I really like this idea, although, as I acknowledged earlier, I definitely
 know there are some challenges.




 Instead of rushing through such an unprecedented measure, we could also
 do it in a more orderly fashion: Have this year's AGM decide that the
 board should prepare to resign altogether at the next AGM, and prepare
 the election of a full new board. This event would then be known long in
 advance and people would have time to prepare their bids for a seat on
 the rebooted body. Independent of the actual legal powers of the AGM,
 certainly no board member could ignore such an express declaration by
 the very people they're serving.


 What if we had some sort of compromise, and we asked the membership if we
 could hold another AGM in 3 months, followed 2 weeks (or so) later by an
 election? We've already talked about decoupling it from SOTM, and given
 what a global project it is, it's unrealistic to expect a majority of
 voting members to be able to attend SOTM. I haven't checked the bylaws, but
 I would guess there's no rule against having *more* than one AGM per year.
 OSM-US has started holding our AGMs remotely. I'm sure other groups do as
 well.

 If we did a 3 month time scale, we still wouldn't be making rash
 decisions, but we would have more chance of maintaining the momentum we've
 seen over the past month or so. The current board could also focus energy
 on preparing things so that there can be a smooth transition, even if there
 is high turnover in the board.



 Another thing, while we're throwing doors wide open. In many political
 systems around the world, the electorate doesn't elect a group of people
 with wildly different goals. Instead, people form parties and the
 electorate decides for a party, and the party will then form the
 government. (Grossly simplifying, I know.) That way, people in
 government have to fight each other to a much lesser degree than they
 would if government were comprised of people following different
 political views and goals.

 By appointing seven directors individually, on the one hand we have the
 advantage that they can keep each other in check; we, as the electorate,
 don't have to be super careful, if we elect someone who's incompetent or
 a kleptomaniac, the others on the board will hopefully notice and fix it
 somehow. On the other hand, there's the danger of seeding the board with
 a couple of difficult personalities that make life hard and reduce
 productiveness for the rest of them.

 Should we perhaps vote for teams? Just like a team can assemble and
 bid for holding a SotM, should we allow a team to bid for being the OSMF
 board for a year?


 This is a really fun idea. I'm not sure if I agree with it, but I LOVE the
 creative thinking for the organization of OSMF.




 Bye
 Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Simon Poole
Sorry for sounding like a broken record to some: there are no EGMs or
AGMs any more under UK law, there are simply general meetings, there is
not even a requirement to have any at all (that is why we are suggesting
adding such a clause to the articles at the GM in Argentina) and you
could just as well have one on 365 days of the year.

The board could realistically schedule a GM with or without elections in
March or April, remote participation is possible since last year so
there are multiple ways to participate. Obviously this depends on the
board actually agreeing to do so except if you want to require one via
the mechanics of a request by the members (needs 5% of the regular
members). As I've pointed out there are other reasons to disassociate
the meeting from SOTM in any case so I wouldn't expect much resistance.

Simon

Am 23.10.2014 17:23, schrieb Kathleen Danielson:
 Sorry-- looks like I forgot to copy the whole list.

 On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 3:37 PM, Kathleen Danielson
 kathleen.daniel...@gmail.com mailto:kathleen.daniel...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Hi Frederik,

 You've got a few really interesting ideas in here. Some quick
 questions:

 On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 2:47 PM, Frederik Ramm
 frede...@remote.org mailto:frede...@remote.org wrote:

 Hi,

 On 10/23/2014 01:25 PM, Richard Fairhurst wrote:
  Absolutely no force required. I would hope that the existing
 board
  members would recognise the virtue of a fresh mandate and a
 clean start.

 A radical step, but I like it. I'd be more than happy to
 withdraw my
 candidacy if there was a spirit of rebooting. We wouldn't even
 need
 seven new candidates; we could simply elect a few and they
 could then
 add new un-elected board members as they like (article 79 in
 the AoA).

  
 I really like this idea, although, as I acknowledged earlier, I
 definitely know there are some challenges. 

  


 Instead of rushing through such an unprecedented measure, we
 could also
 do it in a more orderly fashion: Have this year's AGM decide
 that the
 board should prepare to resign altogether at the next AGM, and
 prepare
 the election of a full new board. This event would then be
 known long in
 advance and people would have time to prepare their bids for a
 seat on
 the rebooted body. Independent of the actual legal powers of
 the AGM,
 certainly no board member could ignore such an express
 declaration by
 the very people they're serving.


 What if we had some sort of compromise, and we asked the
 membership if we could hold another AGM in 3 months, followed 2
 weeks (or so) later by an election? We've already talked about
 decoupling it from SOTM, and given what a global project it is,
 it's unrealistic to expect a majority of voting members to be able
 to attend SOTM. I haven't checked the bylaws, but I would guess
 there's no rule against having *more* than one AGM per year.
 OSM-US has started holding our AGMs remotely. I'm sure other
 groups do as well.

 If we did a 3 month time scale, we still wouldn't be making rash
 decisions, but we would have more chance of maintaining the
 momentum we've seen over the past month or so. The current board
 could also focus energy on preparing things so that there can be a
 smooth transition, even if there is high turnover in the board. 
  


 Another thing, while we're throwing doors wide open. In many
 political
 systems around the world, the electorate doesn't elect a group
 of people
 with wildly different goals. Instead, people form parties and the
 electorate decides for a party, and the party will then form the
 government. (Grossly simplifying, I know.) That way, people in
 government have to fight each other to a much lesser degree
 than they
 would if government were comprised of people following different
 political views and goals.

 By appointing seven directors individually, on the one hand we
 have the
 advantage that they can keep each other in check; we, as the
 electorate,
 don't have to be super careful, if we elect someone who's
 incompetent or
 a kleptomaniac, the others on the board will hopefully notice
 and fix it
 somehow. On the other hand, there's the danger of seeding the
 board with
 a couple of difficult personalities that make life hard and reduce
 productiveness for the rest of them.

 Should we perhaps vote for teams? Just like a team can
 assemble and
 bid for holding a SotM, should we allow a team to bid for
 being the OSMF
 board for a year?


 

Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Stefan Keller
Hi Kate


2014-10-23 16:37 GMT+02:00 Kate Chapman k...@maploser.com wrote:
 Perhaps the issues in the board is a lack of respect for each other.

I don't see any disrespect from Simon when he referred to you speaking
about you (and others) wishing to see more OSMF members.
On the other hand I assume that you are aware that your accusation to
Simon is explicit and sidetracks this thread.

I'd love to come back to your suggestions - as far as I can follow you
- and to questions raised before I don't see any statements so far:

* I don't see any evidence that the OSMF is fundamentally broken.
* And I don't see enough reasons why the full board should step down
(not speaking about the lack of alternatives and bad timing)
* Of course community should be involved - but there are enough items
now on the agenda Frederik suggested (and I summarized above) which
simply need to be put on the boards agenda.
* Given board members are coming from several continents, I don't see
why the board should meet face-to-face when there exist video meeting
facilities.
* On the other hand I'd like to really know what you (and others)
think about Frederik's points raised in his manifesto as well as these
questions to the board members: [1].

Yours, Stefan

[1] https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Talk:Foundation/AGM14/Election_to_Board


2014-10-23 16:37 GMT+02:00 Kate Chapman k...@maploser.com:
 Hi Simon

 On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 4:06 AM, Simon Poole si...@poole.ch wrote:


 Kate was complaining about the on boarding of new board members, she got
 at least an order of magnitude more support than Frederik and myself
 did, I don't think that there is any -accessible- board related
 institutional memory of note that is tied to board members. I do have to
 point to and thank Andy Robinson for his support in providing filing and
 mail services to the foundation for a very long time.


 I suggest you rethink your choice of words about me complaining. I was
 suggesting there are better ways to onboard people to the board. Frankly I
 was fine with my on boarding, simply because I've served on other boards
 before so I understand generally how it works. That is not the case for
 everyone else who becomes part of the OSMF Foundation board.

 Perhaps the issues in the board is a lack of respect for each other.

 -Kate





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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-23 Thread Clifford Snow
On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 8:23 AM, Kathleen Danielson 
kathleen.daniel...@gmail.com wrote:

 What if we had some sort of compromise, and we asked the membership if we
 could hold another AGM in 3 months, followed 2 weeks (or so) later by an
 election? We've already talked about decoupling it from SOTM, and given
 what a global project it is, it's unrealistic to expect a majority of
 voting members to be able to attend SOTM. I haven't checked the bylaws, but
 I would guess there's no rule against having *more* than one AGM per year.
 OSM-US has started holding our AGMs remotely. I'm sure other groups do as
 well.

 If we did a 3 month time scale, we still wouldn't be making rash
 decisions, but we would have more chance of maintaining the momentum we've
 seen over the past month or so. The current board could also focus energy
 on preparing things so that there can be a smooth transition, even if there
 is high turnover in the board.


I think it is reasonable postpone elections for three months considering
current turmoil. With apologies to those that submitted their name in a
timely fashion, let's ask for more candidates. We should also expect them
to answer questions from the community. And as Richard said, maybe it the
time for the rest of the Board to step down. They are more than welcome to
submit their name for re-election. It appears to this outsider that not all
Board members have been present.

The new Board should take up a strategy to prevent burnout. As anyone who
has ever served on a board, it is a tireless job with people constantly
complaining about your decisions. At the same time, Board members need to
step down if they can continue to actively participate. If they don't the
Board needs to ask for their resignation.

There has also been derogatory comments made about Steve. While only have
playing with OSM for the past three years, I've known Steve that entire
time. He has been an energetic supporter of OSM. Hurricane and Steve
started and actively participated in the Seattle Meetup Group, which is one
of the more successful groups in the US. Steve even led by example. He
walked the streets in my neighborhood to prove that addresses don't have to
come from imports. Of course it turned out we were too lazy and decided on
an import instead.

I can't speak to the old Steve, but my experiences for the past three
years have been nothing but positive. (and no I didn't join Map Club.)

Lastly, I'd like to remind everyone that the Board works for us. We should
expect them to get our input before changing directions. As Kate has
proposed, the Board should annually survey the community to get our input.
As much as I respect Steve, if he get elected, even he needs consult with
the community before setting goals. And we the community needs to hold the
Board accountable to us. I'd like to propose that the new Board survey the
community annually. We should also expect them to build a vision for OSM.
While it appears that our current mission statement was constructed by the
board, the vision statement needs to be developed by the community with the
Board acting as a facilitator.

Clifford
-- 
@osm_seattle
osm_seattle.snowandsnow.us
OpenStreetMap: Maps with a human touch
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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-22 Thread Martin Koppenhoefer
2014-10-22 8:53 GMT+02:00 Oleksiy Muzalyev oleksiy.muzal...@bluewin.ch:

 What if we introduce a rule that one can write a message in English and
 then, for clarity, the version of the same message in another human
 language? If there is an original idea, it does not matter much in what
 language it was formulated.



I somehow like this idea, but the written language always has some problems
compared to spoken language, as the latter allows for variations to
transport additional meaning, relativize or even invert what the literal
meaning of the said words is. Also some languages cannot be written. If we
were to introduce this rule, I'd suggest to allow audio and video
recordings as well. Obviously requiring an English version will still
prevent a lot of people from contributing to the process so maybe this
should be optional.


Im Prinzip eine gute Idee, allerdings ergeben sich aus der Niederschrift
von Sprache grundsätzliche Probleme, da die gesprochene Sprache
Variationsmöglichkeiten (Intonation, Prosodie, Akzent) bietet, um
zusätzliche Bedeutungsebenen zu transportieren, die das wörtlich Gesagte
relativieren, in ein anderes Licht setzen und im Extremfall sogar umkehren
können. Auch können manche Sprachen gar nicht schriftlich wiedergegeben
werden. Sollten wir diese Regelung einführen, so würde ich dafür plädieren,
zusätzlich auch Ton und Bildaufnahmen zuzulassen. Allerdings ist
prinzipiell die Erfordernis einer englischen Version bereits ein Hindernis,
welches viele Menschen von der Teilnahme am Prozess ausschließt, daher
könnte das ggf. optional werden.


cheers,
Martin
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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-22 Thread David Cuenca
On the Wikimedia Foundation web site there is a page with all financial
reports:
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Financial_reports

Where can I find the financial reports of the OpenStreetMap Foundation?

Thanks,
Micru

On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 10:53 AM, Martin Koppenhoefer 
dieterdre...@gmail.com wrote:


 2014-10-22 8:53 GMT+02:00 Oleksiy Muzalyev oleksiy.muzal...@bluewin.ch:

 What if we introduce a rule that one can write a message in English and
 then, for clarity, the version of the same message in another human
 language? If there is an original idea, it does not matter much in what
 language it was formulated.



 I somehow like this idea, but the written language always has some
 problems compared to spoken language, as the latter allows for variations
 to transport additional meaning, relativize or even invert what the literal
 meaning of the said words is. Also some languages cannot be written. If we
 were to introduce this rule, I'd suggest to allow audio and video
 recordings as well. Obviously requiring an English version will still
 prevent a lot of people from contributing to the process so maybe this
 should be optional.


 Im Prinzip eine gute Idee, allerdings ergeben sich aus der Niederschrift
 von Sprache grundsätzliche Probleme, da die gesprochene Sprache
 Variationsmöglichkeiten (Intonation, Prosodie, Akzent) bietet, um
 zusätzliche Bedeutungsebenen zu transportieren, die das wörtlich Gesagte
 relativieren, in ein anderes Licht setzen und im Extremfall sogar umkehren
 können. Auch können manche Sprachen gar nicht schriftlich wiedergegeben
 werden. Sollten wir diese Regelung einführen, so würde ich dafür plädieren,
 zusätzlich auch Ton und Bildaufnahmen zuzulassen. Allerdings ist
 prinzipiell die Erfordernis einer englischen Version bereits ein Hindernis,
 welches viele Menschen von der Teilnahme am Prozess ausschließt, daher
 könnte das ggf. optional werden.


 cheers,
 Martin


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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-22 Thread Martin Koppenhoefer
2014-10-22 11:40 GMT+02:00 David Cuenca dacu...@gmail.com:

 Where can I find the financial reports of the OpenStreetMap Foundation?




you can go to the homepage, click on main page:
http://www.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Main_Page
then on Finances and you will get some information:
http://www.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Finances

cheers,
Martin
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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-22 Thread David Cuenca
Hi Martin,

thanks for the link. What about annual plans and community reviews? Where
can I see them?

Sorry for my ignorance about how to find this information...

On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 11:45 AM, Martin Koppenhoefer 
dieterdre...@gmail.com wrote:


 2014-10-22 11:40 GMT+02:00 David Cuenca dacu...@gmail.com:

 Where can I find the financial reports of the OpenStreetMap Foundation?




 you can go to the homepage, click on main page:
 http://www.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Main_Page
 then on Finances and you will get some information:
 http://www.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Finances

 cheers,
 Martin




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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-22 Thread Simon Poole


Am 22.10.2014 11:48, schrieb David Cuenca:
 Hi Martin,
 
 thanks for the link. What about annual plans and community reviews?
 Where can I see them?


David,

The WMF has a considerable amount of resources available both in funds
and in people. It is a very Apples and Oranges comparison, which extends
beyond just the relative size or the organisation. You will find
essentially none of the WMFs sugar coating in the OSMF.

In some of these discussions there seems to be an assumption that we
could simply just emulate the WMF and everything would be fine and
dandy, however the basic business model and competitive environment is
very different and we have some very different trade off's to make.

Simon



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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-22 Thread Harry Wood


 btw, there should be a all values in GBP or similar on this page: 
 http://www.osmfoundation.org/wiki/Finances/Balance_Sheet_2012


Well I can fix that at least (done)

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-22 Thread David Cuenca
Simon,

I was not asking to emulate the WMF, I was asking because I am not familiar
with the internal procedures of the OSMF.
But yes, after checking the numbers both organizations are not comparable,
at all.

From this thread it seemed that there were serious issues, but seeing all
what has been accomplished with such a tight budget, it is quite a feat.

Thanks,

On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 12:38 PM, Simon Poole si...@poole.ch wrote:



 Am 22.10.2014 11:48, schrieb David Cuenca:
  Hi Martin,
 
  thanks for the link. What about annual plans and community reviews?
  Where can I see them?


 David,

 The WMF has a considerable amount of resources available both in funds
 and in people. It is a very Apples and Oranges comparison, which extends
 beyond just the relative size or the organisation. You will find
 essentially none of the WMFs sugar coating in the OSMF.

 In some of these discussions there seems to be an assumption that we
 could simply just emulate the WMF and everything would be fine and
 dandy, however the basic business model and competitive environment is
 very different and we have some very different trade off's to make.

 Simon


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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Richard Fairhurst
[this was originally posted to osmf-talk; I'm not a member of OSMF so 
can't reply to it there. I'm also breaking my self-imposed discipline of 
not posting to the talk@ list for this, but I figure it's important]


Sarah Hoffman wrote:

while checking the candidate list for the upcoming board elections, I came
across Frederik's maifesto here:

https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/User:Frederik_Ramm/2014_OSMF_Board_Elections_Manifesto

This sheds some rather bad light on how the board operates, indicating that
some of the practises border on the illigal. I understand that this is the
individual opinion of a single board member but I believe it is important
that such accusations are discussed because I don't see how the board can
operate efficiently otherwise. It is even more important in the light of
the upcoming elections. Reading this manifesto indicates that there is
little point in standing for election as there is nothing but frustration
to achieve in the board.


As a former board member, I would concur with Frederik's posting which 
tallies with my unhappy experience on the board.


It is clear, I'm afraid, that the OSMF board is broken. Plenty of people 
know this privately but it hasn't been admitted publicly. We should stop 
pretending.


There are some really smart people in this project and it's sad that 
most have chosen to involve themselves in their local organisations 
rather than OSMF (I'm thinking particularly the US and France here). I 
have no personal animus against the current board - quite the opposite, 
they're lovely people - but it's clear it isn't working. (And I take my 
share of responsibility as a one-time board member for failing to fix it.)


I would like to see:

- the whole board stand down in advance of this election;
- now and in the future, those who have already served two 
standard-length terms (i.e. six years) should refrain from re-election 
and further involvement; this is good practice in any organisation (e.g. 
the US presidency!) but especially so in a fast-moving technology project.


Richard

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Kathleen Danielson
Hi Richard,

I think you're right to post this here. While it is a matter of how the
foundation board functions and pertains specifically to the election, I
think that it would be preferable to have this discussion in a more open
forum. I replied to the post in the osmf-talk list, but I'm reposting my
reply in its entirety here, and I'll ask that people move conversation
here.

Hi Sarah,

Thanks for highlighting Frederik's manifesto. I have to agree that it sheds
some pretty bad light on how the board operates.

I'll shy away from making any allegations of illegality because I know how
difficult it can be to keep up with the paperwork in a tiny volunteer-run
organization. Personally, I'm inclined to give the board the benefit of the
doubt in terms of membership or financial information. I suspect that had
to do with bandwidth, rather than secretive intent. As well, I can
understand the aversion to having meeting minutes taken verbatim. The
OSM-US board had several heated discussions over the last year while I was
a member and I was glad to have a place for private discussion before we
published our minutes/blog posts/etc.

Still, you raise a very important point:

Reading this manifesto indicates that there is little point in standing for
 election as there is nothing but frustration to achieve in the board.


The OSMF board sounds like an emotionally exhausting and draining body. I
can wholly empathize, but it's still a problem. Personally, I'm a bit less
interested in all of the current board members answering for Frederik's
take on the group, and more interested in what we (as members) can do to
make it a more functional place. It seems to me that we (generally
speaking) enjoy complaining that the board doesn't do anything, to which we
generally hear the response that the board's mandate is intentionally
narrow, and yet this little glimpse into what's going on in there gives a
fairly stark view of the climate each of our board members are working
within. In a situation such as that, how can you be expected to take on
much else? Who has the energy to deal with diversity initiatives, for
example, when everything is seen as so political?

Perhaps instead of the purpose of the board being too small, it's in fact
too large-- maybe they need more support in the administrative workings.
I'm reluctant to suggest more working groups, but finding some other
mechanism for support that would free up the board to be more creative
might be helpful. Maybe it's a matter of finding ways to test out new ideas
in a less risky environment, meaning we as a membership need to encourage
more experimentation and be more forgiving of failure.

None of these are cure-alls (and some of them are probably horrific ideas),
but it seems to me that yes, we want to elect passionate, excited people to
our board, but just doing that isn't enough. We need to elect these people
*and* make the structural changes that will help them be successful.
Without that, we're going to keep burning out our board members, and I
can't see us getting much done that way.

Best,
Kathleen

On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 11:38 AM, Richard Fairhurst rich...@systemed.net
wrote:

 [this was originally posted to osmf-talk; I'm not a member of OSMF so
 can't reply to it there. I'm also breaking my self-imposed discipline of
 not posting to the talk@ list for this, but I figure it's important]

 Sarah Hoffman wrote:

 while checking the candidate list for the upcoming board elections, I came
 across Frederik's maifesto here:

 https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/User:Frederik_Ramm/
 2014_OSMF_Board_Elections_Manifesto

 This sheds some rather bad light on how the board operates, indicating
 that
 some of the practises border on the illigal. I understand that this is the
 individual opinion of a single board member but I believe it is important
 that such accusations are discussed because I don't see how the board can
 operate efficiently otherwise. It is even more important in the light of
 the upcoming elections. Reading this manifesto indicates that there is
 little point in standing for election as there is nothing but frustration
 to achieve in the board.


 As a former board member, I would concur with Frederik's posting which
 tallies with my unhappy experience on the board.

 It is clear, I'm afraid, that the OSMF board is broken. Plenty of people
 know this privately but it hasn't been admitted publicly. We should stop
 pretending.

 There are some really smart people in this project and it's sad that most
 have chosen to involve themselves in their local organisations rather than
 OSMF (I'm thinking particularly the US and France here). I have no personal
 animus against the current board - quite the opposite, they're lovely
 people - but it's clear it isn't working. (And I take my share of
 responsibility as a one-time board member for failing to fix it.)

 I would like to see:

 - the whole board stand down in advance of this election;
 - now and in the 

Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Frederik Ramm
Hi,

On 10/21/14 13:42, Kathleen Danielson wrote:
 more interested in what we (as
 members) can do to make it a more functional place. 

Even when I was not a board member, I tended to be a little bit
frustrated by how little the OSMF membership in general were interested
in what their board (or theur foundation) does.

There is no history in OSMF for the members trying to hold their board
to account. The OSMF board can neglect to put important stuff on their
agenda, neglect to hold board meetings, individual board members can
skip board meetings many times in a row without explaining themselves,
or we can postpone stuff indefinitely, and nobody will even so much as
raise an eyebrow in public.

In theory, the OSMF members are the boss and board is just a group of
people asked by the members to run business for them until they convene
next time. In similar organisations I know in Germany, it is absolutely
not uncommmon for members to discuss and submit proposals to the AGM
that would be binding for the board; and for people to actually discuss
and argue and vote at an AGM.

OSMF has no culture of democracy really; and this is most likely due to
the founding story: This is not a political body, it's mainly a
safeguard for things like our trademarks and a legal entity to operate
our servers.

And who would, as a member, get in the way of that? Why engage,
emotionally, with another area of politics when all of us have enough of
that in their lives already? OSMF itself says it doesn't want to be
important, so maybe it shouldn't be important to me either.

So we're all happy as long as things work somehow, and we vote for
whichever name we've heard before, and don't bother asking questions, or
reading minutes, or whatever.

For me as a board member, it would have been very helpful to have an
active membership actually watching what I do (or don't do), and asking
the questions that may arise from in between the lines of some meeting
minutes. I would have considered it normal to be held accountable; but
that *may* be a cultural difference - there seems to be a certain school
of thought whereby the democratic participation of members is reduced to
voting for board once a year and asking questions would mean you don't
trust your board, and even while I was not yet on the board I was
occasional chided by other members for asking critical questions.

In short, what I'd like to see is (a) more people joining OSMF, and (b)
at least some these people actually following and commenting on what the
board does, or doesn't do, in their name.

Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Simon Poole


Am 21.10.2014 15:33, schrieb moltonel 3x Combo:
 On 21/10/2014, Richard Fairhurst rich...@systemed.net wrote:
 Sarah Hoffman wrote:
 https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/User:Frederik_Ramm/2014_OSMF_Board_Elections_Manifesto
 
 That was a disheartening read.
 
 The transparency issue is the one that shocks me (a basic
 contributor) most, in a project that has open data as its founding
 purpose and that is firmly rooted in the open source community. I
 expect to be able to look into the inner workings of any important OSM
 body.

Note that Frederiks and my complaint has been about the inner workings
of the OSMF not being transparent to board members, that is a  different
kettle of fish than transparency to the members and the general public
(the later obviously wont work without the former though). To our
members and the general public, IMHO the largest annoyance is having
financials available in a reasonable time frame after the close of the
financial year. This is mainly a cumulative effect of

- choice of the financial year
- UK tax return filing date
- timing of SOTM/GM

which results in the financials typically being presented more than one
year after the end of the financial year they are from. As I've pointed
out they are available a -lot- before that, but we have up to now failed
at actually making them available.

To use the example of expenses that Frederik raised, yes I would
normally expect the board to have a good grip on the numbers and who has
spent what, but I wouldn't expect a breakdown per person to be published
(it likely wouldn't even be legal).

The other financials related issue is that we don't publish a budget for
our financial year (for the first time that I'm aware of we did try to
bring together the numbers for an internal budget this year, still this
is not really a replacement). We further have not really had a good
handle on the risks associated with the largest line item, SOTM.

   I know that discussions can be heated, that opinions and
 wordings can change, that mistakes can be made, etc. It's par for the
 course, don't hide it, we don't mind and neither should you.
 
 The other issues are bad as well, but in a sense, they're not my
 problem. They make life hard for board members and should be fixed,
 but they don't cast a shadow over OSM as a whole. It's surprising to
 see such contrast between OSM's general doocracy and the OSMF's more
 bureaucratic approach, but it's not necessarily a bad thing. Just fix
 it for your own sakes, OSMF members.

I don't think that even by a wide margin the OSMF could be described as
bureaucratic, yes, procedure tends to be invoked, as Frederik pointed
out, as a political ploy, but that is about it.

Simon



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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Jason Remillard
Hi,

This is an unhappy read. I am stunned that the board members don't
have access to the bank registers. How can any decisions be made about
the servers, STOM, fundraising effectiveness, etc without having a
handle on the cash? The foundation handles so little money, it should
be very simple keeping the bank registers up to date. Could our
treasure, Oliver Kühn , please justify this policy on the talk list. I
am going to be very reluctant to give more money to the foundation
until this policy is changed.

Jason


 https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/User:Frederik_Ramm/2014_OSMF_Board_Elections_Manifesto

 This sheds some rather bad light on how the board operates, indicating
 that
 some of the practises border on the illigal. I understand that this is the
 individual opinion of a single board member but I believe it is important
 that such accusations are discussed because I don't see how the board can
 operate efficiently otherwise. It is even more important in the light of
 the upcoming elections. Reading this manifesto indicates that there is
 little point in standing for election as there is nothing but frustration
 to achieve in the board.


 As a former board member, I would concur with Frederik's posting which
 tallies with my unhappy experience on the board.

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Richard Weait
Oliver is seldom seen on the mailing lists, you might want to cc his
board email oli...@osmfoundation.org

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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Simon Poole

Jason,

I suspect you are slightly over interpreting what has been said up to
now. Our accountant and the treasurer have control of the back accounts
and I wouldn't expect to have direct access (nor likely other board
members). The board has relied on the treasurer for cash management and
I have no reason to believe that there are any issues with that other
than it is not very transparent. Other points wrt financial planning and
SOTM  have already been raised.

Historically there seems to have been very little financial reporting,
the board did however three years back or so, as a principle, ask for
quarterly reports, which IMHO is enough given the size of the
organisation and number of transactions. This has been a long time in
the making, but our accountant does produce them now, there is simply
some fail in bringing them to the boards attention (and a further step
would actually be publishing them). Or to put it differently: the OSMF
likely has never had as good control of its financials as right now,
there is simply still more to do.

There is an interesting point in that there is no external/internal
audit of any kind. Not unusual for small companies, but is a bit unusual
for a membership organisation. Very small SOSM for example has two
(elected)  members review the accounts in lieu of a proper audit and
report their findings at the AGM. I could imagine doing something
similar in the OSMF (no idea if this causes any legal issues, but that
can be investigated) given that we currently probably don't want to
spend the money for a formal audit.

Note that Oliver has announced (a couple of weeks back) that he will
resign as treasurer and I expect that the board will elect a replacement
or put an other solution in place at the first meeting after the elections.

Simon

Am 21.10.2014 22:37, schrieb Jason Remillard:
 Hi,

 This is an unhappy read. I am stunned that the board members don't
 have access to the bank registers. How can any decisions be made about
 the servers, STOM, fundraising effectiveness, etc without having a
 handle on the cash? The foundation handles so little money, it should
 be very simple keeping the bank registers up to date. Could our
 treasure, Oliver Kühn , please justify this policy on the talk list. I
 am going to be very reluctant to give more money to the foundation
 until this policy is changed.

 Jason

 https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/User:Frederik_Ramm/2014_OSMF_Board_Elections_Manifesto

 This sheds some rather bad light on how the board operates, indicating
 that
 some of the practises border on the illigal. I understand that this is the
 individual opinion of a single board member but I believe it is important
 that such accusations are discussed because I don't see how the board can
 operate efficiently otherwise. It is even more important in the light of
 the upcoming elections. Reading this manifesto indicates that there is
 little point in standing for election as there is nothing but frustration
 to achieve in the board.

 As a former board member, I would concur with Frederik's posting which
 tallies with my unhappy experience on the board.
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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Stefan Keller
Hi,

I wonder why we're discussing here everything else but what Frederik
mentioned in his manifesto and in this reply above.

Richard voted that the board should stand down.
I can't oversea the situation but I tend to give our colleages a
second chance to fix things.
I do that also knowing that OSMF is young with few members, many of
them being also members in WGs.

On 2014-10-21 15:47 GMT+02:00, Frederik Ramm wrote:
 ...
 In short, what I'd like to see is (a) more people joining OSMF, and (b)
 at least some these people actually following and commenting on what the
 board does, or doesn't do, in their name.

To me, actions speak louder than words.
So, I decided to join OSMF these days.
And I propose to add the following to the board meeting agenda:
* Setting up a clearer modus operandi of the board and working groups
* Making the board meeting agenda publicly available
* Advancing trademark policy
* Setting up a plan to get more corporate members
(actually, these points are just taken from Frederik's plea).

Yours, S.

2014-10-22 0:05 GMT+02:00 Simon Poole si...@poole.ch:

 Jason,

 I suspect you are slightly over interpreting what has been said up to
 now. Our accountant and the treasurer have control of the back accounts
 and I wouldn't expect to have direct access (nor likely other board
 members). The board has relied on the treasurer for cash management and
 I have no reason to believe that there are any issues with that other
 than it is not very transparent. Other points wrt financial planning and
 SOTM  have already been raised.

 Historically there seems to have been very little financial reporting,
 the board did however three years back or so, as a principle, ask for
 quarterly reports, which IMHO is enough given the size of the
 organisation and number of transactions. This has been a long time in
 the making, but our accountant does produce them now, there is simply
 some fail in bringing them to the boards attention (and a further step
 would actually be publishing them). Or to put it differently: the OSMF
 likely has never had as good control of its financials as right now,
 there is simply still more to do.

 There is an interesting point in that there is no external/internal
 audit of any kind. Not unusual for small companies, but is a bit unusual
 for a membership organisation. Very small SOSM for example has two
 (elected)  members review the accounts in lieu of a proper audit and
 report their findings at the AGM. I could imagine doing something
 similar in the OSMF (no idea if this causes any legal issues, but that
 can be investigated) given that we currently probably don't want to
 spend the money for a formal audit.

 Note that Oliver has announced (a couple of weeks back) that he will
 resign as treasurer and I expect that the board will elect a replacement
 or put an other solution in place at the first meeting after the elections.

 Simon

 Am 21.10.2014 22:37, schrieb Jason Remillard:
 Hi,

 This is an unhappy read. I am stunned that the board members don't
 have access to the bank registers. How can any decisions be made about
 the servers, STOM, fundraising effectiveness, etc without having a
 handle on the cash? The foundation handles so little money, it should
 be very simple keeping the bank registers up to date. Could our
 treasure, Oliver Kühn , please justify this policy on the talk list. I
 am going to be very reluctant to give more money to the foundation
 until this policy is changed.

 Jason

 https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/User:Frederik_Ramm/2014_OSMF_Board_Elections_Manifesto

 This sheds some rather bad light on how the board operates, indicating
 that
 some of the practises border on the illigal. I understand that this is the
 individual opinion of a single board member but I believe it is important
 that such accusations are discussed because I don't see how the board can
 operate efficiently otherwise. It is even more important in the light of
 the upcoming elections. Reading this manifesto indicates that there is
 little point in standing for election as there is nothing but frustration
 to achieve in the board.

 As a former board member, I would concur with Frederik's posting which
 tallies with my unhappy experience on the board.
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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Kate Chapman
Hi All,

I felt I should speak up as the newest board member. I certainly think
there are things that OSMF could do to function better as well as the OSMF
Board. I think it can be difficult to move forward when everyone has very
strong feelings about the project, but they sometimes seem at odds with
each other. Often it can feel like the person with the most time at their
email box can simply wear everyone else down. I don't think OSM and the
OSMF are an exception to this though.

One issue is we really have no idea what the OSMF membership wants. We know
what some vocal people who write English well want. What a lot of
communities do to determine this is have a yearly community survey. Simply
voting for board members itself doesn't give any idea what people generally
want. For example last year I received the most votes in the board
election. Does that mean I have brand recognition, people liked my
manifesto or simply there were people that thought only men shouldn't be on
the OSMF board? We have no idea. A community survey is one way we could
start to get a better grip on the desires for the OSMF. Of course we still
would be bound to the opinions of only those that like to answer surveys.

Another difficulty is there is no board primer. When you join the OSMF
board you mostly just jump in. One of the Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team
(HOT) board members began a board primer for HOT after they joined HOT's
board. This was to help with this very issue. Part of it is just helping
people to understand what it means to be on a board. How many people that
join the OSMF board have never served on any board at all?

Frederik's manifesto isn't really anything I can specifically disagree with
though I suspect if Frederik and I were to debate the items we will have
very different approaches to them. To me that is the major sticking point
generally within the OSMF. We don't have a great way to find common ground.
I hope this year we will have an in person meeting, not everyone is even in
agreement that meeting in person helps with cohesion. So you can see that
much work is to be done. It is difficult for me to read some statements
about problems in the board without feeling that they are jabs at other
board members without naming names. This is a sign of what we really need
is trust, not necessarily agreement, but trust.

While I haven't really done much in the past year, I hope that we can find
ways to be more effective. I think simply publicly saying there is a
problem is a good start.

Best,

-Kate

On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 3:49 PM, Stefan Keller sfkel...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi,

 I wonder why we're discussing here everything else but what Frederik
 mentioned in his manifesto and in this reply above.

 Richard voted that the board should stand down.
 I can't oversea the situation but I tend to give our colleages a
 second chance to fix things.
 I do that also knowing that OSMF is young with few members, many of
 them being also members in WGs.

 On 2014-10-21 15:47 GMT+02:00, Frederik Ramm wrote:
  ...
  In short, what I'd like to see is (a) more people joining OSMF, and (b)
  at least some these people actually following and commenting on what the
  board does, or doesn't do, in their name.

 To me, actions speak louder than words.
 So, I decided to join OSMF these days.
 And I propose to add the following to the board meeting agenda:
 * Setting up a clearer modus operandi of the board and working groups
 * Making the board meeting agenda publicly available
 * Advancing trademark policy
 * Setting up a plan to get more corporate members
 (actually, these points are just taken from Frederik's plea).

 Yours, S.

 2014-10-22 0:05 GMT+02:00 Simon Poole si...@poole.ch:
 

 
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Re: [OSM-talk] [Osmf-talk] Modus operandi of the board

2014-10-21 Thread Clifford Snow
On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 9:04 PM, Kate Chapman k...@maploser.com wrote:

 One issue is we really have no idea what the OSMF membership wants. We
 know what some vocal people who write English well want. What a lot of
 communities do to determine this is have a yearly community survey. Simply
 voting for board members itself doesn't give any idea what people generally
 want. For example last year I received the most votes in the board
 election. Does that mean I have brand recognition, people liked my
 manifesto or simply there were people that thought only men shouldn't be on
 the OSMF board? We have no idea. A community survey is one way we could
 start to get a better grip on the desires for the OSMF. Of course we still
 would be bound to the opinions of only those that like to answer surveys.


While it's true that we operate somewhat in the blind, just surveying OSMF
members will only give a peek into the community, not just people who
respond to surveys but the small handful of OSMF membership,  We need is to
think of the bigger community. Ideally we conduct an annual survey of all
mappers and OSM stakeholders. Getting a high response rate would be very
desirable so we hear from the many that are not vocal on mailing lists and
IRC channels. I suspect that its a small handful of people that influence
the Board.

I'd like to see a substantial increase in the OSMF membership. Not sure
what it will take. Certainly cost is an issue, but it must be more that
cost since membership isn't that expensive. I think the US Chapter has done
a good job of offering discounts to SOTM-US for it's members. I'd recommend
the Board at least adopt a similar strategy. That alone isn't sufficient,
but it is a start.

I was part of a group that felt the Board should survey the community. We
got started, but failed to complete a survey because of the difficulty of
creating one in multiple languages. I'm happy to see Kate suggest an annual
survey. If there is anything I can do, please let me know. We still have
the unfinished survey available.

Clifford

-- 
@osm_seattle
osm_seattle.snowandsnow.us
OpenStreetMap: Maps with a human touch
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