Greetings all:

I am seeking community discussion on ARIN-prop-348, the SPARK proposal. SPARK 
is intended to create a clear and straightforward entry point for new 
organizations needing core Internet number resources. At present, a new 
operator must make separate requests for an ASN, IPv4 under section 4.10, and 
an IPv6 allocation. Each request has its own requirements, paperwork, and fees. 
This complexity has real-world consequences: many small networks end up turning 
to consultants who, in practice, often steer them into leasing IPv4 space 
instead of working directly with ARIN. That approach not only increases costs 
for these new operators but also delays IPv6 deployment.

SPARK grew out of conversations with and feedback from small network operators 
in the community. They want to do things “the right way” but face too many 
barriers when first approaching ARIN. By creating a single, bundled policy 
path, SPARK would make it far easier for them to start off on solid footing, 
with an ASN, a /24 of IPv4 from the transition pool, and an IPv6 allocation 
that is sized for growth.

The benefit of defining SPARK explicitly in the NRPM is that it would give ARIN 
staff a clear framework for implementation and provide new operators with 
transparency and predictability. It would remove ambiguity, lower entry costs, 
and encourage IPv6 adoption from day one. Without a policy like this, the 
market incentives push new operators toward leasing arrangements that solve 
their immediate IPv4 needs but do nothing to build long-term IPv6 readiness.

I may have confused the historic ASN issuance fee with the current transfer fee 
when thinking through the costs, which highlights that ARIN’s fee schedule 
could be presented more clearly on the website. That is probably best addressed 
through the Consultation and Suggestion Process. The policy question here, 
however, is whether we should formally establish SPARK as a new allocation 
category in the NRPM, how it should be structured, and what costs should be 
attached.

I would greatly appreciate community input on three fronts: where in the NRPM 
this category should live, what fee model would be appropriate and fair, and 
whether the proposed language around eligibility and resource sizes needs 
adjustment.

Thank you in advance for your thoughts and feedback.

All the best,
Preston Louis Ursini
_______________________________________________
ARIN-PPML
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