--On Wednesday, April 06, 2016 19:19 -0700 Dave Crocker <dhc@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 4/6/2016 4:34 PM, Adrian Farrel wrote: >> How do we move on so: > ... >> - this problem does not recur > > > What you probably do not mean is 'we do not go to Singapore > again. > > What you probably /do/ mean is that further venue selections > avoid places that effectively serve to exclude participation > by various constituencies. Or at least, that is what I hope > you mean, because it has broader utility. > > So I'll repeat what I said at the virtual microphone: > > If the community wishes meeting venue selection to refrain > from choosing specific places, the community needs to develop > that list. > > Anything less specific leaves too much to interpretation, > which guarantees that similar errors will recur. Dave, Thanks for clarifying. I agreed with what I thought you said at the virtual microphone. I disagree with the above. If the issue is "come up with firm criteria, including what issues are showstoppers", then I think that is a nearly-reasonable expectation. I would still expect the IAOC to do some diligent investigation and propose a list for community discussion, just as we have similar expectations for WGs, but I think some list could be developed. FWIW, I think the "showstopper" idea borrows heavily from what Pete had to say last night. If the community decides that some conditions (or lack thereof, make a particular venue, city, or country unacceptable, I don't think the community should hear about how the 1-1-1 rule, or whatever replaces it, required making tradeoffs or balancing issues. Put differently, I see that "rule" as more of a guideline: if we cannot find acceptable venues in a particular region without compromising important principles, then we go to that region less often (or even not at all), not drop those principles in the interest of balance. And, as others have said, this is precisely why some of us have been very concerned about the lack of openness, transparency, and meaningful consultation by the Meetings Committee and IAOC. On the other hand, if you meant, as the quoted text above seems to indicate, that the community needs to come up with a list of banned "specific places", with the Meetings Committee treating everywhere else as OK, I think that is an unreasonable expectation. Not only do I think the community expects the Meetings Committee and IAOC to do the research and be consultative (see Adrian's notes) but, if the only firm rule is "specific excluded places" and everything else is "a balance", with balancing factors sorted out in secrecy, then it seems to me that our history suggests that "1-1-1" or "nice vacation spot for spouses and families" is likely to outweigh what I hope most of us would agree are important principles. best, john p.s. I think the question about Singapore is not "do we go back a second time" but "do we go at all". However long and painful the contract negotiation process was, the costs of renegotiating or extricating ourselves _are_ a matter of tradeoffs or "balance". Of course, it is probably impossible to predict what the state of their laws, and enforcement of those laws, might be a year and a half out, but that is at least as much an argument against suggestions that we should be working even more than three years out than it is that going to a place with odious laws and a history of brutal enforcement of what they choose to enforce is a matter of "balancing" assorted factors.