I support the AC's recommendation as written.
While this policy will limit the organizations that are eligible to
receive a block, I believe it strikes the right balance. The smaller
block size (/22) is generally in line with the final block size
allocations of the other RIRs.
Furthermore, I would ask the the board consider adopting a fee to
receive any block from the wait-list. I believe this fee would be
beneficial for two purposes. One, it would help ARIN recover the costs
associated with managing the wait-list and two, the fee would slightly
close the gap between the the windfall from receiving a wait-list block
and the market price of receiving a block via transfer.
Andrew
On 6/6/2019 10:29 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:
Yes. I favor the AC’s revised recommendation. The changes address
certain staff concerns we hadn’t previously considered while
maintaining a structure which I believe is widely supported within the
community.
Even if this isn’t the perfect solution, I believe it is a good way
forward and additional modification should be done through the
standard policy process.
Owen
On Jun 6, 2019, at 10:20, John Curran <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Folks -
We’ve had excellent discussion of various options for the revised
“Advisory Council Recommendation Regarding NRPM 4.1.8. Unmet
Requests" proposed policy change – some of which is likely to have
to further informed folks initial views on the matter (as well as on
future policy proposals in this area), but at this time it is fairly
important that we receive focused feedback on the revised policy text
as written, with due consideration to the discussion that has
occurred online.
To that end, at this time it would be good to know from everyone:
1. Are you in favor of ARIN making the policy change specified in
the revised "Advisory Council Recommendation Regarding NRPM 4.1.8.
Unmet Requests” ?
(“Yes” obviously indicative that you’d like ARIN to proceed with its
adoption and resumption of wait list issuance under its revised
guidelines, and
“No” being indicative that you’d rather have the suspension of wait
list issuance continue unless/until some other policy change in this
area reaches consensus.)
2. If you are not supportive of ARIN making the change specified in
the revised "Advisory Council Recommendation Regarding NRPM 4.1.8.
Unmet Requests”,
is there any modification to the proposed policy change that would
enable you to support it?
I would ask that PPML participants take a moment to consider the
proposed policy change as written and please reply regarding the
questions above.
Thanks!
/John
John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers
Begin forwarded message:
*From: *ARIN <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
*Subject: **[arin-ppml] Revised - Advisory Council Recommendation
Regarding NRPM 4.1.8. Unmet Requests*
*Date: *24 May 2019 at 1:04:58 PM EDT
*To: *<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
At their 16 May meeting, the Advisory Council revised their
recommendation regarding NRPM 4.1.8. Unmet Requests.
The revised recommendation is hereby submitted to the Public Policy
Mailing List for a second community discussion period of 14 days, to
conclude on 7 June.
Once completed, the Board of Trustees will review the AC’s
recommendation and the PPML discussion.
The full text of the Advisory Council's revised recommendation is below.
Sean Hopkins
Policy Analyst
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
Advisory Council recommendation:
This is an updated version which incorporates feedback from the ARIN
staff and was approved for further community consultation at the
ARIN AC meeting on May 16, 2019.
In accordance with section 10.2 of the ARIN Policy Development
Process, the ARIN Advisory Council recommends the following actions
to the Board of Trustees in response to the Board’s suspension of
part of the operation of sections 4.1.8, 4.1.8.1 and 4.1.8.2 of the
Numbering Resource Policy Manual:
Replace section 4.1.8 et. seq. as follows, then reinstate the full
operation of sections 4.1.8, 4.1.8.1 and 4.1.8.2 immediately.
4.1.8 ARIN Waitlist
ARIN will only issue future IPv4 assignments/allocations (excluding
4.4 and 4.10 space) from the ARIN Waitlist. The maximum size
aggregate that an organization may qualify for at any one time is a
/22. Organizations will be able to elect a smaller block size than
they qualify for down to a /24. Only organizations holding a /20 or
less of IPv4 address space may apply and be approved. Address space
distributed from the waitlist will not be eligible for transfer for
a period of 60 months. This policy will be applied to all future
distributions from the waitlist to include those currently listed.
Repeated requests, in a manner that would circumvent 4.1.6, are not
allowed: an organization currently on the waitlist must wait 90 days
after receiving a distribution from the waitlist before applying for
additional space. ARIN, at its sole discretion, may waive this
requirement if the requester can document a change in circumstances
since their last request that could not have been reasonably
foreseen at the time of the original request, and which now
justifies additional space. Qualified requesters whose request will
also be advised of the availability of the transfer mechanism in
section 8.3 as an alternative mechanism to obtain IPv4 addresses.
4.1.8.1 Sequencing
The position of each qualified request on the waiting list will be
determined by the date it was approved. Each organization may have
one approved request on the waiting list at a time.
4.1.8.2 Fulfillment
ARIN will fulfill requests on a first-approved basis, subject to the
size of each available address block as address blocks become
available for distribution. A timely review of the original request
may be conducted by ARIN staff. Requests will not be partially
filled. Any requests met through a transfer will be considered
fulfilled and removed from the waiting list.
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Please contact [email protected] if you experience any issues.