This report is provided in advance of IETF99 for the purpose of giving IETF 
participants more detail of the current work of the IAOC. Please feel free to 
bring any questions about its contents to the IETF Plenary in Prague, or share 
them directly with the IAOC ([email protected]).

As noted on June 13, 2017, Ray Pelletier has decided to retire from his 
position as the first IETF Administrative Director (IAD), effective October 31, 
2017. We appreciate Ray’s 12 years of hard work in setting up the IETF’s 
administrative activities and leading it through so many years of evolution. We 
have invited Ray to join us for IETF 100 in Singapore, and we look forward to 
formally thanking him at that time!

As set out in BCP 101, the IAOC has formed a hiring committee in response to 
the upcoming vacancy. Recognizing that the IASA 2.0 work is fully underway and 
may yield a different structure for the IETF’s administration, the current 
search is for an interim IETF Administrative director, who will help ensure 
that the IETF’s administration continues to function smoothly over the next 12 
to 18 months until any new plans are finalized and implemented as a result of 
IASA 2.0. The committee has opened a position and put out a call for applicants 
(see 
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf-announce/U3rvMfiYpEtWGHTJ3kX-SwQrm7o 
).

The IAOC would like to thank everyone who replied to our call for volunteers 
for IAOC Committee work. We have added Charles Eckel to the Finance Committee, 
as well as Joseph Lorenzo Hall and Wendy Seltzer to the Legal Committee. Avri 
Doria has been appointed as co-Chair of the Meetings Committee. The Sponsorship 
Committee has been constituted, with Joel Bion, Gonzalo Camarillo, Glenn Deen, 
Lars Eggert and John Kristoff as community member appointees. The IAOC would 
also like to thank all departing community member appointees; the current 
membership can be seen here: http://iaoc.ietf.org/committees .

Since the beginning of the year the IAOC has been working with the Internet 
Society to increase the IETF’s administrative support by extending our 
relationship with AMS. Going forward, AMS will provide administrative support 
for the IAOC to ensure regular publication of minutes, documents, and other 
materials related to IASA work. Please look for Liz Flynn, who will take on the 
new work, in Prague, and join us in welcoming her to the team.

Additionally, AMS will be taking on some of the finance and accounting work for 
the overall IETF that was previously handled within ISOC, with a transition 
phase through July and August of this year. ISOC will remain responsible for 
audits and general oversight. We expect this move will be transparent to the 
general IETF participant, just as ISOC's previous efforts were.

Following up on concerns discussed at the beginning of 2017, the IAOC has 
effected a change of venue for the IETF 102 meeting in July of 2018. Instead of 
San Francisco, the meeting will now be held in Montreal. Securing the venue for 
Montreal required changing the dates from the week later to July 15-20, 2018. 
See 
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf/aaGWFpxPyLptVsKxvgSRNI9Kgvc/?qid=64f779732f5bd1cc36b14177aec9cb66
 for the IETF Chair’s call for feedback on moving the meeting dates on May 2, 
2017. See 
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf-announce/WS9N8eeO35tbe876-_6GmrgnSvY 
for much more detail on the IAOC deliberations and our expectation of the 
impact.

Work continues to finalize the venue for the IETF 103 meeting scheduled for 
November 2018 and we plan to have an update for the community when contract 
negotiations conclude.

Before IETF 98, we felt we were on the verge of releasing the long-awaited and 
much-reviewed. IETF Privacy Policy. Final details have finally been resolved, 
and expect an update very soon.

Last, but certainly not least, the IAOC is watching the IETF meeting 
registration level trend. Over the course of the last 6 meetings, it seems 
registration levels have been dropping below (usually accurately predictable) 
budgeted levels. Each meeting can be explained on its own, but the IAOC is 
exploring whether there is a trend to note. The numbers are important for at 
least two reasons: the first is that attendance is a metric of the perceived 
value of the IETF. The second, which is in the purview of the IAOC, is the 
inevitable impact on our budget as income levels drop. Expect to see this theme 
in more detail as we develop and deliver the 2018 IETF budget.

Leslie Daigle,
IAOC Chair, for the IAOC.

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