+1

Steven Ryerse
President 

[email protected] | C: 770.656.1460
100 Ashford Center North | Suite 110 | Atlanta, Georgia 30338

      




-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Woodcock <[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, September 9, 2021 3:08 AM
To: Steven Ryerse <[email protected]>; Elvis Daniel Velea 
<[email protected]>; Chris Woodfield <[email protected]>; arin-ppml 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] ARIN & Governance



> On Sep 9, 2021, at 3:32 AM, Steven Ryerse <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> Since the day I first joined this forum there have been numerous comments in 
> this forum about John Curran’s continued assertions that the ARIN Community 
> Governs the Regions policy’s. John’s comments in this forum the last couple 
> of days are the first significant comments I remember from John - about the 
> reality that there is another side to that Governance assertion.  I thought 
> they were refreshing because they are the truth.
> This really is about how Corporations (ARIN is non-profit Corporation) really 
> work.  There is a fiduciary responsibility from the members of the Board of 
> Directors and from the Senior Management Team including the President & CEO.

As someone who’s spent nearly twenty-five years as an ARIN constituent, and 
fifteen of those years on ARIN’s board, I concur with Steven.

ARIN’s great strength as an organization and a community is the fact that its 
membership do work hard to create policy that is, in itself, responsible.

It’s true that it’s the board’s unavoidable legal obligation to provide 
fiduciary responsibility, and that that obligation overrides the membership’s 
policy-making function.  It’s also true that that’s a legal requirement under 
US law, and the law of every other country I’m familiar with.

What makes ARIN so successful is the fact that, while feeling that I was 
exercising the full extent of my responsibility and due-diligence, I can count 
on the fingers of one hand the number of times that, in fifteen years, we as a 
board needed to second-guess or question the community’s policy-making.  During 
that time, the community developed literally hundreds of policies.

ARIN’s success is that its community-driven policymaking process and its 
legally-imposed fiduciary responsibilities are in alignment, rather than in 
conflict.

                                -Bill

_______________________________________________
ARIN-PPML
You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to
the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List ([email protected]).
Unsubscribe or manage your mailing list subscription at:
https://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/arin-ppml
Please contact [email protected] if you experience any issues.

Reply via email to