The only place I see ID numbers for Proposals at all, in the current ruleset,
is in R107, it's used as an example of a way to refer to the matter to be 
decided in a Decision.   Today's Ruleset only mentions/defines ID numbers for 
Rules and Regulations, not at all for Proposals or CFJs (unless I'm missing
something!)

On Wed, 1 Nov 2017, Alexis Hunt wrote:
>
> Hmm, but then doesn't that mean that Aris has to assign ID numbers to all the 
> old 
> proposals that didn't have them, assuming they were distributed?
> 
> On Wed, 1 Nov 2017 at 14:39 Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>       On Wed, 1 Nov 2017, Alexis Hunt wrote:
>       > On Wed, 1 Nov 2017 at 14:19 Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> 
> wrote:
>       >       There's quite a few entries that "correctly" depart from the 
> proposal
>       >       pattern from the elder days (e.g. apparently "rule 750" was 
> responsible
>       >       for a lot of modifications, and back then also rule numbers 
> changed
>       >       with amendments).
>       >
>       >       It seems that a special entry is appropriate, hopefully a 
> descriptive
>       >       term of where/when it happened.
>       >
>       >       As a recent example:  there are some rule changes that you know 
> well
>       >       Alexis were done "by Decree".  I think it's far better to be 
> descriptive -
>       >       it's better to say something happened "by Decree" than make up a
>       >       proposal number, and there's nothing dishonest in saying 
> "changed by
>       >       an unnumbered proposal on (date)" and the (date) would lead us 
> to the
>       >       right point in the archives.
>       >
>       >       -G.
>       >
>       >
>       > I agree that, in general, we shouldn't assume all rule changes have 
> to act by proposal
>       > since that's very much not true, but in these cases these were very 
> much by proposal.
>       > I know that the one without a number was adopted without objection, 
> so it was never
>       > distributed (if it had been, I'd ask the Promotor to simply assign it 
> an ID number,
>       > since that is eir duty), but I haven't had the time to look at how 
> proposal 01-003 came
>       > about.
>       >
>       > Though, if it was distributed, one could argue that 01-003 is not an 
> ID number and
>       > therefore Aris should assign it one. 
> 
>       ID numbers weren't a defined thing back then, and forcing things into 
> that scheme
>       is destructive of history IMO.
> 
>       In 2002, before ID numbers were ever explicitly defined, I judged CFJ 
> 1358 for
>       which identifying the "name" of a proposal was important.  The "name" 
> was found to
>       be different than the "title", and I found that the "name" of the 
> proposal was the
>       same as what we now call ID number - whatever identifier we primarily 
> use for
>       identifying the proposal (e.g. when voting or entering into the FLR).  
> I don't
>       think the rules in 1999 were different in that respect.
> 
>       https://faculty.washington.edu/kerim/nomic/cases/?1358
> 
>       Therefore I think it's consistent whatever was used as the "name" from 
> that time
>       (e.g. 01-003) as the official proposal identifier, without forcing the 
> "name" to
>       fit a particular scheme (except maybe for length choosing a shortened 
> "nickname").
>       It is *not* consistent to assume that ID numbers then worked as now, 
> and forcing
>       these things to be integers would definitely lose my support.
> 
>       (I had to deal with special coding for CFJ appeals/moots so appreciate 
> the
>       difficulty with exceptions from numerical sequences...)
> 
>       -G.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>

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