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- Newsgroups: comp.org.decus
- Subject: Re: EXECUTION of DECUS Standards
- Message-ID: <1992Dec15.174907@mccall.com>
- From: tp@mccall.com (Terry Poot)
- Date: Tue, 15 Dec 1992 17:49:07 CST
- Reply-To: tp@mccall.com (Terry Poot)
- References: <1992Dec2.143046.1@mscf.med.upenn.edu> <lhupaoINN978@lisboa.cs.utexas.edu> <1992Dec15.192557.13119@cpu.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: The McCall Pattern Co., Manhattan, KS, USA
- Nntp-Posting-Host: mis1
- Nntp-Posting-User: tp
- Lines: 141
-
-
- In article <1992Dec15.192557.13119@cpu.com>, gwlester@cpu.com (Gerald W. Lester)
- writes:
- >In article <1992Dec14.151045@mccall.com>, tp@mccall.com (Terry Poot) writes:
- >>
- >>It should perhaps be made clear to the membership that they only get to vote
- >>>on the membership of the BOD. Other representative units of DECUS are
- >elected
- >>solely by the leadership. It should be made clear up front that members who
- >>>are not leaders have no voice in how things are done other than by their BOD
- >>>votes. This might avoid some of the confusion.
- >
- > It might avoid some confusion, but the statement is **WRONG**!!
- >At least the L&T and 3P SIG chairs are elected by the general membership at
- >their respective Open SIG Steering Committe meetings members (not restricted
- >to leaders) present. I believe that L&T does put a restriction that DEC
- >employees can not vote, but I'm not sure.
-
- I was unaware of this, and I applaud them. They are at least making an effort.
- However, if memory serves on the numbers, symposium attendance is 10% or less of
- the membership. Furthermore, those meetings are scheduled against technical
- sessions that an attendee may be loath to skip, or even against each other,
- making it impossible to participate in several. I'm glad, however, to see that
- some effort has been made. Hopefully things will improve as other avenues become
- available, and hopefully DECUS will work towards making them available.
-
- >>DCS is a closed system. It is only available to the leadership. (I could also
- >>argue that DECUServe is a closed system, but I know I'm a minority in that
- >>opinion.) However, DCS membership isn't open even to people willing to pay,
- >>>only to the leadership.
- >
- > Several (most?) of the groups have shared conferences with DECUServe.
- >Some of the leaders actually read this newsgroup.
-
- Not being a DECUServe user, I don't completely follow this. If i read it
- correctly, that means there are parallel conferences. This would mean that
- members are still not given access to the DCS discussions. It's good that a
- vehicle for communication exists, but I'm not sure I agree that leadership
- needs, as a matter of course, to carry on discussions away from the prying eyes
- of the membership.
-
- >>Reactive representation is even slower than full democracy. I don't get a
- >>>chance to vote on an issue by voting out a member of the BOD very often.
- >>>Besides, I've yet to see anyone disclose the voting records of the BOD. I
- >>>asked once, and as expected, no answer.
- >
- > I have, occasionally, seen BOD votes published in DECUScope.
-
- Now that you mention it, I might have as well, but they are few and far
- between.
-
- > You are very much a minority. The news letter subscription was about
- >2% of the membership and a good number of subscribers had/have either or both
- >DECUServe or DCS accounts.
-
- Do you know the percentage, by any chance? That's something I've been curious
- about from time to time. BTW, as far as the newsletters, I'm glad Joel Snyder is
- exploring alternate delivery mechanisms. I wish that had been done before they
- newsletters were killed.
-
- > For some, (I will admit not all) things this has been done. But it has
- >lately been done with focus groups to reduce cost. The poller's that have
- >done
- >the groups state that they are statistically representative of the members.
-
- Via random sampling, or just by polling people they know? If the latter, it does
- little to address the problem of DECUS being perceived as closed. Even if the
- opinions were properly representative, this does nothing to increase involvement
- from the membership.
-
- >>I'm a volunteer, and my only representatives are the BOD. ...
- >
- > This would then be a problem with how the VMS SIG is organized. Please
- >flame them on this issue.
-
- Why do you identify me with the VMS SIG? :-) VMSnet is there because the first
- working group chair put it there. I probably identify more firmly with L&T
- overall, being an application programmer who is very interested in tools.
- However, my project deadlines correspond with annoying regularity with the
- symposia schedule, so I can't make more than 1 out of 3-4 symposia. I didn't
- know I could vote on things at symposia. Again, lack of communication down to
- the membership.
-
- The newsletters could have been an effective vehicle to disseminate such
- information. For instance, the ballots for SIG representatives could have
- appeared in the newsletters, allowing for mail in ballots for those who couldn't
- attend symposia. Given that the newsletters are gone, such things could happen
- electronically. I note that you don't mention any such activity, even on
- DECUServe. And what about the net? I get more info on what DECUS is up to in
- this newsgroup than through any official channel (like the standards, issue, for
- instance). Yet there has so far been indifference or downright resistance to
- such activities.
-
- >>So if Charles and I vote to make Loren our representative, will he get to
- >vote
- >>on the MC? I didn't think so.
- >
- > No, you need three other DECUS members to form a SIG. Then you can
- >elect represetatives who can vote, at least at the SIG council level.
-
- I'm sure it isn't quite that easy. :-)
-
- >>In a representative democracy, every decision is open to public debate. ...
- >
- > Not quite true, but close enough (try getting in on some of the debates
- >held by the National Security Council or some Senate sub-committes dealing with
- >>"security").
-
- I hope there are no analogs to this in DECUS. What decisions are made that it
- would be considered dangerous to allow the membership to be aware of? :-)
-
- >>My, wouldn't that be gracious of our mythical sig chair? But the implication
- >>>is that most of them wouldn't bother, right? That's the impression I'm
- >getting >>from all this, anyway.
- >
- > Most of them DID NOT bother.
-
- That's what I thought. Again, lack of communication fostered by the many layers
- separating decision makers from those affected.
-
- > I tend to agree, but unlike the U.S. goverment, DECUS can not (to
- >please the vocal voters) spend money that it does not have.
-
- Granted, but it often comes down to priorities. I'm not sufficiently familiar
- with the DECUS budget to say where cuts should otherwise have been made, but I'd
- be surprised to see that these were the least important activities DECUS
- undertakes. Someone mentioned those woods meetings. I'd consider them a real
- strong candidate for cutbacks. Another idea would be to dump DCS and put the
- leadership onto DECUServe with the rabble. That would do some good, in addition
- to maybe saving some money, though I don't know enough about that setup to know
- if there would be any real savings to that.
-
- > << Much was cut, there were several layers of quotes>>
-
- Thanks for your responses, and for clarifying some of my misconceptions. I'll
- defend my misconceptions only to the point that I doubt I'm alone, and so they
- in themselves make my point about the need for better communications.
- --
- Terry Poot <tp@mccall.com> The McCall Pattern Company
- (uucp: ...!rutgers!depot!mccall!tp) 615 McCall Road
- (800)255-2762, in KS (913)776-4041 Manhattan, KS 66502, USA
-