I've been a little busy for the past 36 hours, so I fell behind with replies. My apologies.
I've read your responses, and I agree that one passage needed to be removed. I've decided to strike the special clause for the Vice Chair from the proposal. It was complicating the matter, and omitting it eliminates a number of problems. After hearing the discussion, I propose that we elect the Vice Chair in the same way as every other position. Since it's a previously-board-elected position, the election for Vice Chair would occur during the meeting following the Chair's election.
Since this was introduced so late in the year, this is going to need active and organized effort to get to a vote.
I find this rather irrelevant, as I expect the proposal to go to vote regardless. "Because no one will vote for it" is not a valid reason for anyone to reject a proposal. If I thought the same, I could rescind the proposal, but I've quietly watched how con staff functions since '02, and I strongly believe that this format will benefit the con.
it needs revision and support.
Well, that's what this thread is for: two weeks of solid discussion, more than we'll ever get done at a general meeting. Responding to that discussion is my responsibility. If I don't do my job of creating a proposal that will be accepted by the majority of eligible voters, it doesn't pass, and it's water under the bridge, until the issue resurfaces of course.
One possible way to show support for this to the Board would be a poll or petition. We are not going to hold a meeting without people saying 'I will vote for this as-is'.
How I would go about it? Make two proposals, each with it's own poll. One would be to make all 4 positions staff elected. The other would be a comprised version where Vice, and possibly one other director, would become staff elected. In both, axe the whole '2nd place Chair becomes Vice' thing.
If someone else wants to make an alternative proposal, they are quite welcome, and have my blessing and possibly support.
However, I do not want to leave any major decisions left up to a forum poll. Forum threads are great for discussion, but a forum poll has no visible paper trail, and it's far too susceptible to ballot-stuffing from any old joe who comes across this thread. Trust me on this one; I've been frequenting internet forums for years, and admin'ed on two of them.
I would suggest that it be divided and voted on for each argument separately.
Thus, 5 amendments:
<etc.>
Personally, I believe that the essence of my proposal is the belief that board-elected positions do not produce a more reliable gauge of merit than a more general election, due to the current small size of the board and the frequency with which its members change. We may find a better determinant at a later date, but right now I believe we *need* a general staff election for every role. Fragmenting it would only confuse the issue.
The proposal also takes into account that the board does not lose their vote. It simply provides the rest of the staff the option to take part in the vote. Now, if the entire board shares similar opinions about a candidate, they may very well tip the scales.
Also, in considering the two voting bodies at the convention, remember that "no man is an island." Yes, we all make individual decisions, but the criteria on which we base our decisions are subject to a limited amount of information. This is why the general staff AND the board both turn towards our senior staffers (and sometimes ex-staff) for advice.
You see, the average convention voter only has time for a certain amount of research, so in most elections they listen
very closely to the endorsements of past officers. We only get a short time to learn about new faces, but past officers have had months or even years on the job to assert their reliability. In this respect, the board holds a significant amount of sway, assuming the endorser already has the staff's vote of confidence.
That is why I think a general staff election will fly. After all, the board themselves owe their positions to our vote. So in a sense, their reliability is derived from the staff's reliability. The current system does more to complicate the issue than it does to provide protection.