On Sun, Dec 14, 2008 at 5:49 AM, effe iets anders <[email protected]>wrote:
> From Sue's report, I understood that the current practice is to have board > minutes approved only on the next board meeting. In practice that means a > delay of several months. In a quickly changing world as ours, that is quite > a long time span. > That's a fairly standard practice. How would you approve the minutes without holding a meeting? (Sure, you could do it using a unanimous consent resolution, but that's certainly not typical.) Would it be possible to decrease this time span somehow, and approve the > minutes on an earlier moment? In that way, the volunteers can be kept more > up to date, the board would work more transparently and better ways to > interact and react on decisions made. Because if minutes are published > months afterwards, the motivation to read them and react on it is obviously > much lower then when they actually still have a direct meaning and are more > or less recent. Besides that, if the community has imput on the decisions > made, they could give it, and it could be discussed in that next board > meeting, and not only the one after that (delay 6 months). > > I sincerely hope the board will find a way to publish the minutes within, > say, two weeks to a month :) Publishing a draft of the minutes (or an informal summary of the meeting) would be one thing. Approving the official minutes is quite another. Are the meetings considered confidential? If not, there's nothing stopping any board member from providing a summary at any time. If so, well, then why publish the minutes in the first place? _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
