This page is a summary of statements from the RfC which had significantly more support than opposition. Please do not comment on, or edit the statements, unless to Note where a statement is contradictory to another statement on this page. Create or edit a pre-existing suggested change to policy that would satisfy issues raised in the statement. Remove a statement that loses it's significant margin of support. Sort or separate out statements into different categories.
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Arbitration Committee Election

View by SirFozzie

I (LaraLove) am posting this on behalf of SirFozzie by e-mail request (sent via Wikipedia interface and confirmed on IRC). This is a straight copy/paste from e-mail, as he wishes to remain on a break.

Reducing Burnout of ArbCom Members:

Right now, an ArbCom term is 3 years.

I dare you to find ANYONE in this world, who can immerse themselves in every single high drama, night mare conflict for that long and NOT burn out.

And to properly do your job as an ArbCom member, you do have to be hip deep in crap, if you'll forgive the saying.

So, what tends to happen and has been happening, is, the newer folks on the ArbCom do all the public facing work and indepth analysis (Kirill is rather recent, NewYorkBrad before he resigned and now FT2) The rest are generally seen by the community as a rubber stamp. They may discuss in the background, but nothing really happens publicly untill one or two people (usually the same one or two people) write a proposed decision, and 95% of the time, the rest of them come in and sign off on the decision.

This also leads to issues like the Episodes and Characters ArbCom case aftermath, where ANY arbitrator speaking up and clarifying terms of a remedy would have avoided weeks of drama later. No Arbitrator spoke up, and the issue at hand devolved, weeks later.

Or the Cla68/SV/FM/JzG monster case, where there was an admission from a sitting arbitrator that no one had really taken a look at the case, weeks into the case, because everyone was doing their own thing with the end of the school year, vacations, etcetera. At any one time, a quarter to a half of the Arbitration Committee is "inactive", and not doing the job they were elected for.

Perhaps reducing ArbCom terms would allow Arbitrators to devote more "energy"/Research into each case, with less risk of burnout.

I would suggest keeping the three staggered arbitrator groups, but reducing an ArbCom term to 12 months (that means elections every 4 months, which is frequent, but not an everyday situation) or 18 months (elections twice a year)

Once you finish a term as an ArbCom member, you have to sit out one election. (To recharge the batteries, reduce chance of burnout)

Policy Change : No Arbitration Committee Member may serve two terms consecutively. No editor who is currently serving a term as an Arbitration Committee Member may stand for election to the Arbitration Committee, past members of the Committee may stand in any election not immediately following their own term.
Policy Change Option : The term of office for an Arbitration Committee Member is 18 months. Members are elected in three groups staggered over three elections six months apart. Contradicted by alternative option on term of office and times of elections
Policy Change Option : The term of office for an Arbitration Committee Member is 12 months. Members are elected in three groups staggered over three elections four months apart. Contradicted by alternative option on term of office and times of elections

Various suggestions by Neil (Part 1)

Moreschi, above, has identified one of the root problems. Arbcom has been unable to scale itself to the community, I believe due to the increase in size of the community, but also due to its maturation; it's not "the same as it was three years ago but twice as big". Things have changed, a lot, and Arbcom hasn't.

Arbcom is becoming increasingly more incompatible with the community it is supposed to serve. We need some form of higher dispute resolution beyond RFC, so let's operate on the assumption we need some form of Arbitration Committee, and there's plenty of evidence that the current one is not fit for purpose in the present day.

So, how can Arbcom change? I have borrowed an idea or two from above and fiddled with them, and added my own. I have split them into subheadings, as of course some ideas may be good, some may be bad. For clarity, and because some follow on from one another, I have put my suggestions together, rather than spatter them throughout this RFC.

I. Expansion

The three current Tranches are expanded from 5 members to 7. An additional Tranche Delta is created.

My thinking: The Arbcom is too small. More members are needed - presently we have just eleven active arbitrators. We need more. I suggest the simplest and most efficient way to address this is to expand the arbitrator Tranches, and add a further one.

I suggest an election be held as soon as is realistically possible, with each Tranche expanded from five Arbitrators to seven, and a further Tranche appointed (Tranche Delta). This would require 14 new arb appointeeships; 2 each for Tranches Gamma and Beta, 3 for Tranche Alpha (the extra one to replace Newyorkbrad) and 7 for the new Tranche Delta. The simplest way would be to appoint the 14 candidates with the highest percentage of votes.

This will give us a maximum of 28 Arbitrators rather than 15. This would still not be too unwieldy. If this still proves insufficient, we can always add a further Tranche.

I am aware the Arbcom has stated on numerous occasions that they do not need more Arbitrators; this ought not to be their decision to make, and the preponderance of evidence is that despite their protests, too many cases take too long to resolve, and receive insufficient Arbitrator scrutiny.

II. Timescales

Arbitration Committee terms are reduced from three years to two years. Elections will be held every six months on a rotating basis.

My thinking: Three years is too long. Shorter terms are needed. Why is three years too long? I believe there are two main reasons. Firstly, fatigue of Arbitrators - easily observed by noting that the newest arbitrators are usually the most active. This would be addressed by both reducing the time served, and by increasing the numbers as detailed above.

Secondly, Arbitrators must have the faith of the community. While it is necessary for Arbitrators to make on occasion unpopular decisions (as what the community wants is not necessarily the sole concern in making decisions), the faith of the community to make those decisions must be maintained.

I suggest an Arbcom term be brought down from three years to two years. This would dovetail neatly with the expansion from 3 Tranches to 4. We should not presume an Arbitrator is incapable of serving longer than this; however, they will have to convince the community they are capable of serving a further two years.

This will necessitate an Arbitration Committee election every 6 months, rather than every 12 months. This is a bearable burden on the community. It would also enable an Arbitrator to, if they wished, to take six months off (a reasonable break) and return to arbitration six months later.


Policy Change Option : Each election will appoint 7 members to the Arbitration Committee. Contradicted by SirFozzie's statement of keeping the status quo for the makeup of the committee.
Policy Change Option : The term of office for an Arbitration Committee Member is 24 months.Members are elected in four groups staggered over four elections six months apart. Contradicted by alternative option on term of office and times of elections.

Arbitration Case Handling

View by User:Barberio

No New Policy

The Arbitration Committee are not entitled to create binding rulings that institute new Wikipedia processes or policy, or substantial alter current Wikipedia processes or policy except by striking sections incompatible with Wikipedia Foundation requirements. They are not a legislature.

Policy Change : The Arbitration Committe will not create binding rulings that institute new Wikipedia processes or policy, or substantial alter current Wikipedia processes or policy except by striking sections incompatible with Wikipedia Foundation requirements.
No Secret Trials

The Arbitration Policy clearly outlines the form that an Arbitration Case takes. It does not allow for the Arbitration Commity to convene in secret to determine a case based on proceedings conducted entirely in private. While they may accept confidential evidence, proceedings must be as open as they can be.

Policy Change : While the Arbitration Committee may accept confidential evidence, proceedings must be as open as they can be. The Arbitration Committee may not convene in secret, or conduct proceedings entirely in private.
No Individual Or Plurality Acts To Be Labelled As 'Arbitration Committee Action'

No individual, or plurality of Arbitrators should make announcements or declarations on behalf of the entire committee, they are to only be made by the plurality or the individual making them. Dissenting Arbitrators should be given an opportunity to voice their dissents to this action in public if they wish.

Policy Change : Arbitrators will only make official statements on their own behalf, or joint statements as a plurality. No individual Arbitrator may make a statement on behalf of the entire committee. Dissenting Arbitrators should be given an opportunity to voice their dissents in public if they wish.

View by Nsk92

No secret votes

While it may be necessary for a portion of ArbCom discussions to occur in private (e.g. where privacy considerations and rela-life identities of some parties are concerned), the actual votes on all the ArbCom decisions by the ArbCom members must always be made in public, with the signatures of the arbitrators attached and available for verification through the history log. This way we will know exactly who voted and how, and there will be no room for speculation, error, rumor, misunderstanding, etc. I can see no plausible scenario under which an exception to this principle might concievably be warranted.

Policy Change : Votes on all Arbitration Committee decisions by the members must always be made on a public Wikipedia page, with the signatures of the arbitrators attached and available for verification through the history log.

View by Durova (2)

Arbitration is the final step in dispute resolution. Except for emergency situations such as wheel wars, or appeals of community sanctions and other circumstances where dispute resolution is impractical, there needs to be prior formal dispute resolution. These options are:

These parameters have not been observed consistently. Formal dispute resolution should remain open long enough to have a reasonable chance of success before a request for arbitration is attempted. WP:AN and WP:ANI are not formal dispute resolution; informal mediation is not formal dispute resolution; block warnings are not formal dispute resolution; an e-mail exchange with an arbitrator is not formal dispute resolution. All of these informal methods have been offered and accepted at various times during RFAR. They should not be acceptable and, if proposed, should be removed by the clerks.

The reasons for going by the book are twofold. The exploitation of non-formal dispute resolution as a pretext for arbitration drags unwilling bystanders into cases and fosters drama. Arbitration is slow, time-consuming, and stressful. Editors deserve to interact with each other with reasonable expectations about when an arbitration case may be in the offing and when it is not.

Policy Change : Arbitration is the final step in dispute resolution. Except for emergency situations such as wheel wars, or appeals of community sanctions and other circumstances where dispute resolution is impractical, no case will be accepted that has not already progressed through dispute resolution.

View by Celarnor (2)

I see the need for ArbCom as a binding form of dispute resolution, especially for problems involving admins that can't be handled by a community of editors without the tools to enforce their collective judgement. They have been useful in providing sanctions on editors and admins alike who have gone astray of the rules. However, I do not believe that ArbCom is within its powers to create "remedies" that aren't in the form of direct sanctions on editors and admins listed as being involved in a given case. What they have been doing of late goes well beyond that (The 'Sourcing Adjudication Board' and the 'BLP Special Enforcement' measures come to mind prominently); changing existing policy and creating new procedures is not part of the dispute resolution process; that is part of the governing process, and that is a responsibility that belongs with the community, decided by consensus. Not the consensus of a few elite editors, but the consensus of the project as a whole.

Policy Change : Remedies may only be voted on by the Arbitration Committee if they are in the form of direct sanctions on persons listed as parties to the case.

Various suggestions by Neil (part 2)

VII. Communication
Policy Change : Users are to be informed if the Arbitration Committee is discussing their behaviour via closed methods (such as the mailing list). Ideally, they will be informed via email. No Arbitration Committee decision - secret or otherwise - will be made without users directly named in the decision being given the chance to state their case.

My thinking: An obvious suggestion, based on recent events, Jimbo's commentary, and common sense. A committee that acts wholly in secret is, by definition, a cabal.

IX. Communication


Policy Change : Legalese, Latin terms (legal or otherwise), abbreviations, and other such unclear English are to be avoided wherever possible in future. Clear and concise communication that all can understand should be a priority of the Committee.

My thinking: Arbcom must recognise that not all Wikipedia editors are familiar or comfortable with jargon such as tu quoque, nem. con, sine qua non or ab initio, particularly when clear English alternatives exist. Arbcom decisions should not have to be read with a dictionary to hand. Recognise that many Wikipedians on en-Wiki may be younger editors, may have poor comprehension skills, or may have a first language other than English. Abbreviations should similarly not be used (and if they must be, wikilink them). Using jargon is unnecessary; it may save the writer a few seconds, but wastes the reader's time far more (and I would trust all writers hope more than one person reads what they have written).

Renamed from "No jargon" to "Communication". Neıl 12:23, 30 June 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitration Committee Member Conduct

Various suggestions by Neil (part 3)

IV. Redress
Policy Change : Should a significant portion of the community hold concerns over the activity, conduct or capability of a sitting Arbitrator, a Request for Comment may be opened. Their fellow Arbitrators are encouraged to participate. If the Arbitrator in discussion fails to engage in the process, the RFC continues, regardless. The arbitrator under discussion may simply be required to amend their behaviour, however, should the community conclude categorically that an Arbitrator is unsuitable to continue in the position, the Arbitrator is expected and encouraged to step down amicably.

My thinking: Based on recent events, it is clear that there is no current way for the community to redress the behaviour of an Arbitrator other than voting them out up to three years later. This is not sufficient.

Investigation into the conduct of the Arbitration Committee prior to this RfC.
(previously titled VI. Transparency)


Policy Change : An independent jury of volunteers in good standing within the community is to be appointed in an audit capacity. The purpose of this team is to review the recent events concerning FT2 and OrangeMarlin. This will be facilitated by temporary read-only access to the relevant Arbcom mailing list(s). It is unclear if this is actionable.

My thinking: Many users consider some form of investigation into the recent goings on vital in order to restore faith in the capability of Arbcom to act as the final level of dispute resolution on the English Wikipedia. This cannot be done by the current Arbitration Committee - doubts would always remain. Einstein said, "We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them".

Statements where firm proposals were not made

Third view by Shoemaker's Holiday (talk)

The arbitration committee has several times this year acted in ways that prevented or highly prejudiced a user who was not yet able to give evidence. The OrangeMarlin case came with a statement by FT2 that they did not feel like going through the effort to read the user's evidence: [1]. In the Durova and MatthewHoffman cases, highly prejudicial voting began against the accused before the accused - then administrators in good standing - were able to provide evidence.

Suggested Policy : Except in exceptional circumstances, at least one week will be given for evidence preparation before any voting takes place (excluding temporary injunctions).

Non-actionable statements

View by User:Filll on delays and early findings

Sometimes Arbcomm can act extremely precipitously, even violating their own rules, as they did in the Durova and MatthewHoffman cases when they started voting before there was any evidence. In other cases, Arbcomm is unreasonably dilatory and slow, and it creates mega cases that drag on for months. A lot of drama could be saved if Arbcomm made some clear announcements at the start of a case, like "We take the policy on coercion seriously", as a preliminary Finding of Fact (drawing an example from a current Arbcomm case that is languishing). The difficulty arises when there is clear evidence of policy violations, or that potential policy violations are involved, if Arbcomm does not signal to the participants that they consider policy X or Y important, they embolden editors to engage in improper behavior. Things can become worse during an Arbcomm proceeding because tensions are higher, and people want to "get even" with their perceived adversaries. And Arbcomm can act quickly if they want to, obviously. So why the long delays, even to produce some sort of innocuous general statements?

Unsorted statements