--On Wednesday, November 11, 2015 16:11 -0500 Kathleen Moriarty <kathleen.moriarty.ietf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> I think that if we want to reduce the load of Area Directors, >> getting to the point where working groups advance documents >> that doesn't generate discusses is an element of reducing >> the work load on area directors. > > This would be very helpful. I think most of us enjoy reading > drafts when they are well written and well reviewed for > technical problems. Two observations about this part of the discussion, leaving other parts aside: (1) The desire to have WGs produce good-quality drafts and its corollary that only those WGs should exist that will produce good-quality drafts is, at least in my observations, one of the factors that has produced the very long and drawn out process for getting WGs chartered. That process, in turn, produces some of the sense of entitlement to get anything the WG agrees on and recommends (even if by inattention) published. That, in turn, appears to me to be one of the causes of the IESG getting poor-quality documents, tuning them to eliminate the most obviously problematic text, and then letting the results be published. Lots of us object to both the very long creation times and to the IETF publishing poor quality standards track specs, but we need to understand that there are tradeoffs among undesirable options and cause and effect relationships involved. (2) I question where "few DISCUSSes" is a good measure of quality. One way to get a draft through with few DISCUSSes is to make it very long and about some very narrow and focused topic, especially when it is a topic about which few people care and they are all part of the development process. The first thing that happens, at least absent a very strong and independent WG Chair (difficult because there are few volunteers for the position in specialized WGs who aren't part of the core group, aka "cabal"), is that anyone in the WG who is not part of that core group tunes out. The second step is that the IESG gets a shepherd's report that says "good document, wide WG consensus (after all, no one spoke against it), no issues". A few diligent ADs look through the document, find nits to pick and go on record about them to prove that they are doing their jobs, but the approach almost assures that there is little substantive review of the document outside the group that created it (whether it is actually high quality or not) and hence few DISCUSSes, at least about anything critical to the proposal or spec. A variation on the same theme involves documents developed outside the IETF by some relatively closed and tight-knit group, deployed, and then brought to the IETF for approval with great resistance to changes because there is already deployed running code.. If the IESG allows such a proposal to be turned into a WG (or some ADs is willing to allow it to be pushed through as an individual submission), there is no practical chance in today's environment of getting though IETF LC and then saying "no" or "go back to first principles and redesign the thing". Whether we then see a significant number of DISCUSS positions depends more or whether some ADs feel a need to make a statement (even if about process rather than document specifics) or just prefer that the spec slide through and disappear from their radar. john