Hi Rob,
I've a bunch of comments to make specifically which I'll get to, but
first some thoughts on perspective.
I've heard that it's very easy to judge others by their actions, but
yourself by intentions. Separately, I personally find that it's very
easy to accidentally convey a message which is rather different
from, that which was originally intended to be conveyed. I suspect
that some of both is at play here.
I've (somewhat deliberately) not read other replies yet, so apologies
for any crossover.
Rob wrote:
> I'm quite surprised by some people's response to this charity
> registration. I feel that we've been as open as possible throughout
> this process.
I expect that many people will be frankly amazed by this statement.
Are you really saying that some regulation prevented more information
from being made public during the process?
For example, it has been separately noted that the constitution could
not have been released due to restrictions from the solicitor. However
the presence of those restrictions was not made clear until _after_
the constitution documents were leaked published by Alistair.
In this instance, it would have been good to know that there was a
restriction preventing its publication. Without this the community was
left speculating both as to what was in it as well as the reason for
it not having been published.
Given the somewhat surprising move of excluding two members of the
committee (notably those who it appears dissented most often from the
opinion of the rest), a number of unpleasant motives for the
withholding of the documents came to mind. Frankly (to me at least) it
felt rather like a coup d'état.
Moving on to more specific complaints I would like to examine first
the timing of the charity registration submission and then the choice
of initial trustees.
## Timing of the charity registration submission
> 3. As per plan, I worked with some solicitors to sort out the
> registration paperwork.
> 4. As per plan, we seeded the trustees/members with the steering
> committee, then submitted the application, as approved by the
> trustees.
> 5. We notified volunteers [3].
I think the ordering of these three is the main point at issue. The
community was promised both a consultation and vote on the
constitution _before_ the registration took place.
There are a number of places where this is confirmed, but I'll just
quote one of them, from your own post [A]:
> Harry Cutts wrote:
>> Is there a plan to review this constitution (e.g. on this list) before we
>> register, and if so what is it?
>
> Sure, once the constitution has emerged from the solicitor, I'll send it
> out on the list before sending it's sent off the to charity commission.
Even with the garbled grammar on the last line, I think it's clear
that everyone should have expected the community to see the
constitution before the Charity Commission. This did not happen, and
is one of the key things being objected to.
I therefore think the community deserves a public response to the question:
* Why was the constitution not published to the community before the
charity application was made?
If this was as a result of the noted lack of rights from the solicitors,
why were the community not informed of this issue? Was there something
which meant that the application could not have been held until either
the community was satisfied with the available information about
the constitution, or the rights became available?
## Choice of initial trustees
This point is a little more subtle, though the confusion it causes is
great. Hopefully you'll bear with me.
Rob wrote:
> 4. As per plan, we seeded the trustees/members with the steering
> committee, then submitted the application, as approved by the
> trustees.
I find it rather interesting that you choose to call the would-be
initial members of the charity "trustees" here, and suggest that they
already have the approval powers for things which the charity
constitution would grant them. My confusion stems from the fact that
you state this was taking place before the charity itself could
possibly have existed, meaning that such designation and powers could
not exist.
I hope that this is a simple case of badly chosen phrasing, but the
end result does seem to have been these people acting with powers they
did not yet have. Specifically I refer to the Committee2 trac page
[B], which is the closest thing which the non-charity SR has to a
constitution as far as the SC goes.
Quoting from Committee2's "Steering committee rules" section:
> 2. Changes to the steering committee rules, or the structure of the
> steering committee itself require a general vote of Student Robotics
> members. This vote must be open for at least one week.
I would certainly consider the creation of a Student Robotics charity
lead by trustees to be a change to the structure of the SC.
To further expand on this, it had not been previously made clear that
the initial members would also be the initial trustees. In the past,
the wording used had always been that the members would choose the
trustees (which to me implied a community vote, though that is
admittedly an assumption which I didn't verify), however it was clear
that the initial trustees had not yet been chosen.
To quote again from the "Charity Registration Plan" thread [C]:
> Since the trustees will be selected by the members, it is of course not
> possible right now to determine who the trustees will be. I imagine
> that the initial set of trustees will likely be the current members of
> the steering committee.
I think it is only fair to read the second sentence as being merely a
possible suggestion, and not something which would be acted upon
without consultation or at least notification.
I therefore think the community deserves a public response to the question:
* Why was the community not consulted (nor even notified) of the
changes to the planned trustees/SC until after they had been made?
Thanks,
Peter
[A]
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.science.robotics.srobo.general/4834/focus=4844
[B]
https://www.studentrobotics.org/trac/wiki/Committee2#Steeringcommitteerules
[C]
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.science.robotics.srobo.general/4834/focus=4853