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Table of Contents

Overview

The ESCo Voting process (as per resolution of 2016-01-29 - ESCo - Meeting agenda / minutes) follows the following rules:

  • The Quorum required to deliberate is 2/3 of the ESCo Project Leads. This applies both to offline and online meetings.
  • The Majority required to deliberate is absolute majority (50% + 1). This means that in case of tie the motion is not passed as the majority needs to be absolute (50% + 1).
  • Can votes be approved by silent consensus? No
  • Does the ESCo adopt resolutions by super-majority? No

In person or online votes

The ESCo meets on a weekly basis (see ESCo Meeting notes) and during that meeting resolutions are passed with quorum and majority rules stated above.

Offline / mailing list votes

Votes can also be initiated by any member of the ESCo on the esco-private@symphony.foundation mailing list. 

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  • -1 votes must include a justification for the negative vote
  • 0 votes should include a justification for the abstention

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typically follows the general decision making process that all bodies in the Foundation are required to use i.e. voting.  You should familiarize yourself with those mechanisms before continuing.

There are, however, some unique aspects of ESCo voting mandated by the bylaws that overrule this general mechanism; this page describes what those exceptions are.

ESCo Composition

The ESCo is a "fixed body", with pre-defined classes of participant, and maximum numbers in each class.  Specifically, there are 13 ESCo members, comprised of:

  1. ESCo Project Leads, of which there may be up to 5
  2. ESCo Advisors, of which there may be up to 7
  3. ESCo Secretary, of which there may be 0 or 1

Quorum

Unlike other Foundation bodies, the ESCo has a quorum, defined as ⅔ of the occupied ESCo Project Lead seats, rounded up.  So when all 5 of the ESCo Project Lead seats are occupied (the typical case), quorum is 4.

Email votes are not valid unless the number of valid responses from ESCo Project Leads meets or exceeds quorum, and in-person votes (see below) cannot be initiated unless a quorum is present.

Voting Eligibility

Only ESCo members can initiate a vote, though any class of ESCo member may do so.  Votes that are requested by other bodies (e.g. an incubating working group that is requesting ratification) are initiated by the ESCo Secretary on behalf of that body.

Any ESCo member may respond to a vote, however only responses from the ESCo Project Leads initially count, unless there is a tied vote (as per bylaws §6.2c).  In the event of a tie, and assuming there are at least 10 seated ESCo members across all classes (as per bylaws §6.2c), a re-vote occurs where ESCo Advisor votes are also counted.  Re-votes always take place via email.

Voting Mechanisms

Email Voting

Votes are, by default, conducted via email, using the mechanic described here.  Email votes are conducted on the ESCo-private mailing list.

In-person Voting

Provided quorum is satisfied and the ESCo Secretary is present, the ESCo may choose to vote in-person, in which case the following rules apply:

  • All present ESCo Project Leads must agree to conduct an in-person vote (i.e. any ESCo Project Lead may veto).
  • The ESCo Secretary calls upon each present ESCo Project Lead individually to provide a verbal reply of “aye”, “nay” or “abstain”.
    • “Nay” and “abstain” votes must be accompanied with a justification.
  • The ESCo Secretary records the individual results of the vote, including justifications, in the minutes of the meeting where the vote took place.
  • In the event of a tie, the re-vote mechanism described above is used.



Tip
titleRatification Notice

This voting process was instituted by resolution during the 2016-01-29 ESCo Meeting.

It was subsequently refined, based on the ESCo's ratification of a package of governance refinements, on 2016-12-01.