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Re: [council] Advice from the General Counsels office on the use of proxy votes
- Subject: Re: [council] Advice from the General Counsels office on the use of proxy votes
- From: Ross Rader <ross@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 20 Feb 2006 10:48:12 -0500
- Cc: council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- In-reply-to: <010d01c635fb$8af17060$d301a8c0@PSEVO>
- Organization: Tucows Inc.
- References: <010d01c635fb$8af17060$d301a8c0@PSEVO>
- Reply-to: ross@xxxxxxxxxx
- Sender: owner-council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- User-agent: Thunderbird 1.5 (Windows/20051201)
Philip Sheppard wrote:
The current bylaws give the GNSO the flexibility to apply our own procedures.
My recollection is that at its inception the GNSO agreed to proceed under the
substantive
part of the guidelines of the Names Council until such time as we adopted our
own
procedures.
That includes a system of proxy votes endorsed by the then ICANN general
counsel.
I believe we are covered retrospectively.
For future clarity, all we need to do is to ask Glen to submit a set of GNSO
procedures for
formal adoption.
I believe she already has such a draft.
This is not quite correct.
From the bylaws -
"4. The GNSO Council is responsible for managing the policy development
process of the GNSO. It shall adopt such procedures as it sees fit to
carry out that responsibility, provided that such procedures are
approved by the Board..."
The GNSO may only adopt those procedures approved by ICANN's Board of
Directors.
In contrast, under most circumstances, the ccNSO is not required to seek
similar "permission"
"11. The ccNSO Council, subject to direction by the ccNSO members, shall
adopt such rules and procedures for the ccNSO as it deems necessary,
provided they are consistent with these Bylaws."
I believe that the GNSO should seek a greater degree of autonomy and
seek to minimize the degree to which its processes are locked into
ICANN's Corporate Bylaws. There are few compelling reasons that the
ICANN Board should not delegate stronger governance powers over the GNSO
to the GNSO itself. This would be best accomplished by incorporating
the GNSO Rules of Procedure into the bylaws by reference and spelling
out, in the Bylaws, the conditions under which the GNSO may revise its
own governance structure and operating processes.
This is a very common practice, and in fact, is very similar to the
governance structure implemented by the registrar constituency. We have
separate bylaws and rules of procedure, each with different requirements
that must be met in order to change them. This allows us a great degree
of flexibility while avoiding issues like capture etc.
-ross
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