> On Aug 14, 2015, at 05:19, Mike Hammett <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> If the smallest IPv6 allocation an ISP can get is a /36 (X-small or up to /20 
> in IPv4), but we have a fee established for XX-small (up to /40 IPv6 and /22 
> IPv4), why don't we permit an ISP to get a /40? Small providers may not want 
> to increase their ARIN fees to simply be able to get their own IPv6 
> allocation. Seems counter-intuitive in getting everyone on the IPv6 train. It 
> also falls on a clean boundary, so there shouldn't be any concerns with 
> issued subnets.
> 
> If there's no good reason why we're not doing this, how to we start the 
> process to allow this?

A little more than two years ago we considered a policy to do just that;

Draft Policy ARIN-2013-3: Tiny IPv6 Allocations for ISPs
https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2013_3.html

The consensus at the time was that a /40 was too small for an ISP and that we 
should reconsider the fee structure instead.  That has been in process with the 
fee committee that was discussed previously.  However, if there is a new 
consensus in support of allowing ISPs to receive a /40, I'd recommend the text 
of ARIN-2013-3 as a starting point.

-- 
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David Farmer                          Email: [email protected]
Office of Information Technology
University of Minnesota    
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