Hi Sumon, Satoru-San, all,

 

Let me also provide my point of view on this:
If you look at the videos of the previous presentations, there were some people 
in support of those policies. In fact, I used the videos and all the inputs (as 
in the list, unfortunatelly, basically there were only inputs from yourself). 
In fact, for the sub-assigment clarification, the proposal advanced from the 2 
previous APNIC meetings thanks to the inputs from our colleagues from India. 
And again, from the inputs from Aftab, it advanced once more to the actual 
version, highly simplified.
I’ve said this before. The PDP doesn’t state anything about if the chairs can 
“abandon” a policy proposal. In fact, this may be not the right term. I read 
abandon as “I abandon”, not somebody “abandon for me”, which will be “force 
abandon” or something-like. I understand that the chairs are following 
guidelines, that were developed by the existing chairs but not the community, 2 
decades ago, in the scope of many SIGs. The PDP and all related to the PDP is 
developed by the community as a whole, not a subset of. Furthermore, the PDP 
doesn’t have *ANY* link, decided by  the community, to the guidelines. We 
should update this. Just consider how negative/surprising is for anyone 
(specially newcommers), to read the PDP and then see that “something else is 
behind the PDP”.
We have seen this lots of times. A proposal doesn’t reach consensus the 1st 
time. Because there are no inputs in the list, in can’t get improved with the 
community inputs. It doesn’t passes the 2nd time, but it reach consensus the 
3rd time. Another proposal takes 5 rounds. Another proposal reach consensus on 
the 1st round. Another proposal fails during 2 rounds, but then after 1 year of 
pause, it comes back and reach consensus. This is *normal* and it should be 
like that. Different proposals need more or less discussion, more or less 
inputs, if the inputs don’t come in the list, then it takes more cyles. How you 
put the limit in the number of times it can come back before it gets “abandon” 
? You can’t. If the authors are getting the inputs, you should allow them to 
continue. It is a different case, if the authors ignore the inputs from the 
community. If you have 3 inputs *only* (just an example) 2 against – 1 in 
favour, this is not sufficient to say “abandon”. PDP is a slow process because 
it looks for consensus. This is completely normal. If authors don’t follow the 
community inputs and there are newer proposals or more important ones, the 
chairs have the way to de-prioritize them to the last part of the agenda, in 
case there is no sufficient time. Why “abandon” after 3 times, and not 2, or 5? 
It is impossible to decide upfront, each proposal has different complexity and 
may take more or less time. I’ve seen proposals that take 3 years to reach 
consensus (and they reached it), it is just fine! Other proposals didn’t reach 
consensus the first time and it was obvious, even for the authors that there is 
no point to continue. But even if there is a small fraction of the community 
that was supporting a proposal, I don’t see the point to abandon it after “n” 
times.
 

Besides those specific proposals, I think this discussion is very important and 
interesting to have.

 

Regards,

Jordi

@jordipalet

 

 

 

El 18/2/20 11:44, "Sumon Ahmed Sabir" <[email protected] en 
nombre de [email protected]> escribió:

 

Dear Satoru-San and all,

 

Thank you very much for sharing your feedbacks  and raising your concerns.

 

I do agree that the concern is valid and it may repeat similar discussions and 
we will be discussing similar issues.

 

>From SIG Chair Point of view, we have abandoned the earlier proposals as it 
>didn't reached consensus in three consecutive meetings and there were merely 
>any support for the proposal.

 

You are correct that if a proposal is abandoned then there will be no further 
discussions about the proposals.

 

But if proposer feels that it is important for community and needed to be 
discussed again and comes with a new proposal, as Policy Chair, it is our duty 
to accommodate that as long as it falls under PDP guidelines. 

 

And lastly it does not happen very often. So let us see how APNIC Community 
think about the proposal in next three days.

 

best regards,

 

Sumon Ahmed Sabir

Chair, Policy SIG

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On Mon, Feb 17, 2020 at 3:13 PM Tsurumaki, Satoru <[email protected]> wrote:

Dear SIG Chair and all,

I am Satoru Tsurumaki from Japan Open Policy Forum.

I would like to share key feedback in our community for criteria for
adopting the proposal based on a meeting we organised on 4th Feb.

First of all, it should be pointed out that there is no intention to
limit the proposals where the problem statement or proposal has
changed.

Japanese community concerned that it might repeated similar
discussions if the resubmission of a proposal that was previously
abandoned.

My understanding is that "abandon" is a proposal that chair has
decided that no further discussions will be made in the community, is
this correct?
If it is, I believe chair should indicate to the community why it was
allowed to resubmit.
And It might also need to define the criteria of resubmission.

Regards,
Satoru Tsurumaki / JPOPF Steering Team
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