Keith, Let me offer a different perspective here as well and, in the process, explain why I keep coming back to the IESG. Going back almost to the dawn of IESG time, the IESG has had one constant and primary responsibility. That is to manage the WGs and the WG process. Under today's rules, they determine or ratify which WGs get created, who chairs them and how they are otherwise managed, what tasks and benchmarks go into charters, how many and which documents a WG can work on at a time (and whether they work on documents serially or in parallel), and when to shut them down. They have _huge_ latitude in how to manage WGs and the decisions they make about that management process, including a wide range of options about reporting, review of benchmarks, actions or the lack thereof when targets are not met, and so on. WGs, and WG leadership, have no independent existence: the IESG, and under some circumstances, individual ADs can dispose of them as needed. Personally, I think that is as it should be. While the community has periodically discussed constraints on WG behavior and management (including one or two that I have written), none have ever been approved: the IESG continues to be able to look at WGs and their work on a case-by-case basis and to make case-by-case decisions. My personal view is that they (the IESG) should have a little more guidance from the community to aid them in making tough decisions and to assure them of backing when such decisions are made, but that wouldn't change the essential nature of the situation very much. But, from that perspective, there is no "WG problem" or "problem WG". There is only an IESG management problem. Either the number and complexion of WGs is such that the IESG can manage them effectively, or it isn't. If it isn't, only the IESG can be responsible. Either WGs are sufficiently well chartered and managed so that the review processes we have work adequately well or they aren't. Either way, the IESG bears ultimate responsibility: they determine the charters, the management structure, the review requirements or lack thereof at various intermediate points, and so on. I think we agree at least partially on this, because I certainly endorse the position that we could use resources more effectively if [we] exercised more care about which working groups [were] chartered. But, again, the IESG makes those decisions: all the community can do, at least under the current structure, is to give them advice and feedback, both about individual proposed WGs and charters and about keeping the totals tolerable. But they are chartered to decide, and, if they don't get it right, the problem belongs to them, not to the participants in an ill-advised WG. That isn't an easy job by any means. I assume that, for every WG we have, there are at least a handful of members of the community who believe that WG contains the most important work the IETF is doing. But someone has to start making those hard decisions and, as responsibilities are now handed out and groups chartered, the IESG is the lucky group. Now, it is reasonable to say "the IESG doesn't have bandwidth to do that job well and still review documents for standardization". But that statement doesn't fix the WGs. It might be justification for moving document review to some other body --presumably not delegated by the IESG but selected by the Nomcom to fulfill that role. Or it might be justification for the IESG shrinking back the number of WGs to the point that they did have time and bandwidth to do both jobs well (and maybe even have lives and day jobs). Or we might think about a management structure that shifts the IESG's historical management function wrt WGs elsewhere. But it doesn't seem to me that saying "we have all of these out of control WGs and need to concentrate on fixing them and not on looking at the IESG" or even "focus our attention on WG operation" is productive: if the WGs are not under control, then, IMO, the IESG, as the body with the management responsibility, needs to acknowledge that fact and then either needs to fix it or make suggestions to the community as to how we can fix it together. If they are not convinced that "working group operations" is the problem, then there is either no problem or an IESG problem. john --On Thursday, 28 April, 2005 09:17 -0400 Keith Moore <moore@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I believe the IETF could perhaps take on more work if it > improved the process by which working groups operate. This > would lessen IESG's burden by giving them better documents to > work with; it might also reduce the average duration of a WG, > making more room for others. The industry wouldn't mind that > either. One of the problems that some WGs have is that they > take on too many drafts, which both hinders the ability of the > working group to finish its more important work and imposes > additional burdens on IESG. > > I also think that IETF could use its resources more > effectively if it exercised more care about which working > groups it chartered. For instance, IMHO we've wasted a lot of > effort trying to come up with short-term workarounds for NATs, > without any of them providing a migration path away from NATs. > >> If I understand some of Dave's and John K's comments, they >> are willing to entertain thoughts on how to do things better >> (& differently) in order to ensure that the IETF remains >> relevant. > > As am I. But I would like to see attention focused on working > group operation, which I believe is our biggest source of > problems. _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf