[Foundation-l] Revised Bylaws posted
Erik Moeller
erik at wikimedia.org
Mon Dec 11 17:58:26 UTC 2006
The revised Bylaws of the Wikimedia Foundation can now be found at:
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Foundation_bylaws
Differences to the previous version:
http://wikimediafoundation.org/w/index.php?title=Wikimedia_Foundation_bylaws&diff=16676&oldid=14947
These changes were approved at the Board meeting in St. Petersburg. A few notes.
1) Statement of purpose now reflects the current mission statement. It
will be updated if needed when the mission statement is finalized.
2) Membership does not legally exist. Membership was previously
described in the bylaws but not actually implemented. We've discussed
this issue at some length and decided that the risk of membership do
not outweigh the potential benefits. The risks include:
- Disclosure of identity to others. We do not want to limit
participation in WMF
activities to those who are willing to disclose their identity to
other members.
- Hostile takeover. Given the power of members to elect or recall the
Board, the
risk then arises of large numbers of people being affiliated with
some entity
(economic, political or religious) to attempt to restructure the
organization to
their liking.
- Unnecessary hierarchy. It is possible that legal membership would negatively
impact the social dynamics of the project when members and non-members
are treated differently.
- Administrative overhead. WMF is simply not presently in an organizational
position to effectively manage thousands of membership registration.
- Questionable benefits. We can have most of the benefits of a membership system
without legally encoding it in our bylaws.
It was argued that this kind of organizational representation could
find a home in chapter organizations, some of which already have legal
members.
3) Terms defined. Both appointed and elected Board members now have
clearly defined terms (1 and 2 years, respectively). That is, even
Jimmy and Michael are now not "members for life," but will have to be
re-appointed in the future (unless they want to stand for election
instead). No Board members are named in the bylaws.
4) The notion of community elections is described in the bylaws, as is
a commitment that a majority of the Board will come from the community
through appointment or election (the scope of "community" is to be
defined by the Board).
5) The Executive Secretary and Treasurer do not need to be Board
members anymore. The roles of the Board positions were simplified and
clarified.
6) Annual financial audits and quarterly reviews.
7) Some further legal adjustments and clarifications to reflect the
reality of organizational operations.
Again, see the diff above for the full list of changes. Comments &
questions welcome.
--
Erik Möller, Executive Secretary, Wikimedia Foundation
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