You have to be an enterprise admin to authorize a DHCP server or link a
GPO to a site (or have those permissions delegated to you).

-----Original Message-----
From: Kern, Tom [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 12, 2004 1:37 PM
To: ActiveDir (E-mail)
Subject: [ActiveDir] A root dc question

My apologies if this seems basic and/or silly.


Aside from creating new domains or modifying the schema, why would an
admin need access to the root dc of a forest(the schema, domain namming
master)?
furthermore, why would an admin in a child domain need enterprise admin
privilges?

I only ask because we had issues with our test DR run wherein we didn't
have access to the root domain and/or a test root domain vmware'd on a
laptop and it ended miserably.
i am in the process of convincing the higher ups in my corp of letting
our IT dept have enterpise admin access. 
i'd like to make a case for us as to why we would need this accont with
concrete examples(aside from the DR one). ones that a semi tech aware
CIO could relate to. 
What other compelling reasons would one need these rights for in day to
day(or not so day to day) AD administration? 

we are a multi-domain(14) win2k forest in mixed mode with exchange2k in
native mode.

Thank you in advance for any assitance.
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