On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 5:23 PM, Denny Vrandecic dvrandecic@wikimedia.org wrote:
I disagree very much with Dariusz on this topic (as he knows).
I must say I also disagree with you ;).
That is not to say that a community council or membership structure of some sort might not be good (I think there are some logistical challenges that are so difficult that it may not be possible... I'd rather us try to deal with things like global dispute resolution first before we try to think about some governance council... but the idea is certainly intriguing) but I think the idea that that body is 100% independent or that the board itself should not/is not speaking for the movement too is missing some of the point and being far too simplistic for the good of the org and the movement. I know you don't really mean it this way but it can easily come across as a bit of "don't look at me if this was bad for the movement I had to ignore that".
I think that a body that is able to speak for the movement as a whole would be extremely beneficial in order to relieve the current Board of Trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation from that role. It simply cannot - and indeed, legally must not - fulfill this role.
To make a few things about the Board of Trustees clear - things that will be true now matter how much you reorganize it:
- the Board members have duties of care and loyalty to the Foundation - not
to the movement. If there is a decision to be made where there is a conflict between the Movement or one of the Communities with the Foundation, the Board members have to decide in favor of the Foundation. They are not only trained to so, they have actually pledged to do so.
- the Board members have fiduciary responsibilities. No, we cannot just
talk about what we are doing. As said, the loyalty of a Board member is towards the organization, not the movement.
Whether the board wants it or not it DOES end up serving a leadership role in the Movement and arguably the top leadership role. Yes it has a fiduciary responsibility to the org but part of that is it also has a "duty of obedience". That duty of obedience includes, ensuring the board members "have a responsibility to be faithful to the organization’s stated mission and not to act or use its resources in incompatible ways or purposes" in addition to ensuring the org follows applicable laws. [1] So if we don't think that the Foundation has to do what's best for the movement as well then perhaps we should be reevaluating the wording of that mission.
I would say a non-profit has an obligation to wind itself down if its mission (and remaining money) is better served elsewhere (as an extreme example, but one I've certainly seen) or to transfer the copyrights out of country if that was the right move etc. A duty to the organization does not meant that you do not have a duty to the movement and so I think it is wrong to try and side step that under the umbrella of fiduciary responsibility which is much more then just money and personnel.
[Could say a lot more but probably not useful here and now :) I feel like I either need to do that over drinks or have a bit more distance between the current crisis & time to write it all down in a more coherent fashion ]
[1] http://www.trusteemag.com/display/TRU-news-article.dhtml?dcrPath=/templateda... (among many other sites)