As set out in our recent email [1], we have developed an assessment framework 
and decision making process for the decision on whether or not the in-person 
IETF 108 Madrid can go ahead.  The proposed framework and process is detailed 
below and we welcome community feedback.

Given the current conditions in Spain and around the world, the framework is 
based on the assumption that these conditions would have to significantly 
improve for the in-person meeting to be held.  The assessment will consider 
some of the venue selection criteria specified in RFC 8718, adapted to the 
situation we are in.


== Assessment Framework ==

As a matter of principle, we want an assessment framework that, as much as 
possible, uses independent, trusted data to enable an objective assessment.  
However, as this is an entirely novel situation, high quality data sources are 
not yet available and so there will be, by necessity, a significant degree of 
subjective judgement in our assessment.

The assessment criteria we have chosen are based on the venue selection 
criteria specified in RFC 8718 [2], both the mandatory criteria of section 3.1 
and the important criteria of section 3.2.1 “Venue City Criteria”, which we 
believe make up the most relevant and recent advice from the community that can 
be applied in these circumstances.  If any of the mandatory venue selection 
criteria from section 3.1 of RFC 8178 cannot be met then the in-person meeting 
will not go ahead. Those criteria relate to the physical facility (space, 
access, network).

The important venue selection criteria from section 3.2.1 of RFC 8718, listed 
below in a different order from the RFC, are more complex to assess as 
explained below:

1. “Economic, safety, and health risks associated with this Venue are 
acceptable.”

When considering our data sources we want to use both local sources and 
independent sources to ensure any possible bias is minimised. Our primary local 
sources will be the official Madrid Tourism COVID-19 site [3] and our local 
contacts and if either indicates that any form of local emergency conditions 
still prevail then the in-person meeting will not go ahead.

The selection of independent sources is more problematic and we have chosen to 
use the US CDC and their travel advisory for Spain [4], which must be below 
Warning Level 3 (avoid nonessential travel) or the in-person meeting will not 
go ahead.  While recognising that the choice of a single US source may be 
contentious, we believe this is the best choice because all of our contracts 
have a force majeure clause that specifically lists the US CDC.

2. “Travel barriers to entry, including visa requirements, are likely to be 
such that an overwhelming majority of participants who wish to do so can 
attend.  The term "travel barriers" is to be read broadly by the IASA in the 
context of whether a successful meeting can be had.”

Assessment of this criteria has two parts to it.  The first is a definition of 
what are unacceptable travel barriers and the second is deciding how to apply 
the “overwhelming majority” test.  Unacceptable travel barriers come in two 
forms, those that would preclude an in-person meeting entirely and those that 
will be counted on a per-country basis for an “overwhelming majority” test (as 
explained below):

Unacceptable travel barriers that would preclude an in-person meeting are:

* Spanish borders closed to visitors
* Any form of quarantine on arrival in Spain
* Any form of self-isolation requirement on arrival of more than 24 hours
* Any new form of health-related travel restriction imposed by Spain or the EU 
that is inherently discriminatory in nature (e.g. not based on science).

Unacceptable travel barriers that will be counted on a per-country basis are:

* Any form of quarantine on return.
* Any form of self-isolation requirement on return of more than 24 hours unless 
consistent with general self-isolation requirements
* Government travel bans

A requirement to prove COVID-19 immunity, vaccination or similar will be 
acceptable provided it is not inherently discriminatory, though calculating the 
impact of that is likely to be problematic.

In order to assess this criteria, in particular the “overwhelming majority” 
requirement, and the criteria below, we will use a similar methodology.  Using 
our records of attendance at recent European IETF meetings we will develop an 
expected distribution of participants by country (i.e. how many participants we 
would typically expect from each country).  If we judge that more than 20% of 
expected participants cannot attend, based on this country distribution, then 
the in-person meeting will not go ahead.

Using the definitions above of unacceptable travel barriers, we will sum the 
percentages derived above from each country that is judged as having 
unacceptable barriers and if that figure is greater than 20% then the in-person 
meeting will not go ahead.

3. “Travel to the Venue is acceptable based on cost, time, and burden for 
participants traveling from multiple regions.  It is anticipated that the 
burden borne will generally be shared over the course of multiple years.”

Using the same basic methodology as the criteria above, for this criteria we 
will aim to assess flight availability for each country to get to Madrid and if 
less than 50% of normal flights/routes between the two countries are available 
or the fares are significantly above normal then we will work on the assumption 
that the burden of travel for people from that country is not acceptable.

We will then sum the expected percentages of participants from each country 
that is judged as having unacceptable travel burdens and if that figure is 
greater than 20% then the in-person meeting will not go ahead.


Finally, we note that there is the possibility that the result of this 
assessment is that an in-person meeting can go ahead but corporate travel bans 
remain in place and/or many people are unwilling to travel, in which case we 
will engage in a subsequent process after May 15 to establish the viability of 
an in-person meeting, as we did for IETF 107.


== Process ==

This process has been designed to respect the various delegated roles with the 
IETF leadership and ensure there are appropriate checks and balances in place.

a. On or about 11 May 2020 the IETF Executive Director will produce a draft 
report using the assessment framework set out above with a recommendation on 
whether or not an in-person meeting can be held.  This draft report will be 
confidential and distribution restricted to the IESG, IRTF Chair, IAB Chair, 
LLC, Secretariat and meeting host primary contact.  
b. On 12 May 2020 the IESG, IRTF Chair, IAB Chair, LLC and Secretariat will 
meet to discuss the draft report and any changes that need to be made. The 
objective will be to get consensus on the report’s recommendation among the 
IESG, the IRTF Chair, the IAB Chair, the LLC Board, and the IETF Executive 
Director.
c. By 14 May the IETF Executive Director will produce a final report.  At this 
stage the final report will be confidential and distribution restricted to the 
IESG, IRTF Chair, IAB Chair, LLC, Secretariat and meeting host primary contact.
d. On 14 May 2020 the LLC Board will meet and officially sign off the 
recommendation.  The LLC will then officially inform the IESG of its 
recommendation.
e. On 15 May 2020 the decision will be announced and the final report made 
public.


We now welcome your feedback about the assessment framework. Please send your 
feedback to [email protected] (which will reach the IESG, IRTF Chair, 
and IETF Executive Director) by April 27. As you will have seen, this is a very 
complex situation requiring complex analysis and so please make any feedback as 
practical and implementable as possible within the published time frame.


[1]  https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf/Si153ZcOZzl83UgPfhD7zVgOkjg/
[2]  https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8718 
[3]  https://www.esmadrid.com/en/information-coronavirus
[4]  
https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/destinations/traveler/none/spain?s_cid=ncezid-dgmq-travel-single-001
 


Jay Daley, IETF Executive Director
Alissa Cooper, IETF Chair
Colin Perkins, IRTF Chair

_______________________________________________
IETF-Announce mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf-announce

Reply via email to