For the current list of Team members, see the project README.md.
The openjs-foundation/cross-project-council GitHub repository is maintained by the Team and additional Members who are added on an ongoing basis.
Team Membership is not time-limited. There is no fixed size of the Team.
There is no specific set of requirements or qualifications for Team Membership beyond these rules.
The following groups automatically have membership and can request to be added to the github team:
- OpenJS Foundation Voting Members
- OpenJS Foundation Regular Members
- OpenJS Foundation Board of Directors
- OpenJS Foundation Project Maintainers
The Team meets weekly on Zoom.us. A designated moderator approved by the Team runs the meeting. Each meeting should be published to YouTube.
Items are added to the Team agenda that are considered contentious or are modifications of governance, contribution policy, Team membership, or release process.
The intention of the agenda is not to approve or review all patches; that should happen continuously on GitHub and be handled by the larger group of Collaborators.
Any community member or contributor can ask that something be added to the next meeting's agenda by logging a GitHub Issue. Any Collaborator, Team member or the moderator can add the item to the agenda by adding the cross-project-council-agenda label to the issue.
Prior to each Team meeting the moderator will share the agenda with members of the Team. Team members can add any items they like to the agenda at the beginning of each meeting. The moderator and the Team cannot veto or remove items.
The moderator is responsible for summarizing the discussion of each agenda item and sends it as a pull request after the meeting.
To improve organizational transparency and collaboration between the CPC and Board, it is desireable for CPC Directors to be able update the CPC on topics discussed during Board meetings. The goal of the below guidelines is to make this process lightweight and allow for information to be shared with the CPC as freely as possible. This is why the audience of those Board updates are somewhat restricted.
- CPC Directors should use their own judgement about what may be shared with the CPC. When in doubt they should abstain from sharing information and seek explicit permission to do so. In particular, information pertaining to a specific member, staff, or about legal matters should never be shared.
- Board updates are not streamed and they are limited to CPC members.
- CPC Directors wanting to report on a Board meeting should inform the CPC Chair at the beginning of the call so that sufficient time can be carved out at the end of the call for the update.
The team follows the decision-making and voting policies described in the charter.
Elections are organized by the OpenJSF Program Director, following the election calendar and the policies defined in the CPC charter.
Our goal in the OpenJS Foundation is to do most of our work in public. On occasion, there are matters and materials that must be kept private and shared only with Voting and Regular members. As a result we have requirements in place in order to ensure that Voting and Regular members are known and active in the projects they represent or known to the CPC and active in its work. Observers can participate in almost all aspects of the work of the CPC except those infrequent matters related to private information.
One must already be an Active OpenJS Collaborator, as described below, to be eligible to become a Regular Member of the CPC.
- Please submit the Regular Member Application Form
- The CPC will review requests as soon as possible, usually in the next CPC private session (every 2 weeks)
- Pending requests will be sent to the private CPC mailing list prior to the review meeting
- In the context of the lazy consensus process, the pending request list is a proposal to accept all of the requests. CPC members may raise any objections before the scheduled meeting, otherwise a final decision to approve a request can be confirmed in the meeting.
- If any requests are rejected, an email with the rejected requests will be sent to the private CPC mailing list and CPC members will have 2 days to object before the decision is confirmed.
- The CPC will create a pull request adding your name to the Regular member list in the README.md.
- The OpenJS Foundation Operations operations@openjsf.org team will:
- Add the member to the GitHub
cpc-regular-members
team - Add the member to the
cpc-private
email list
- Add the member to the GitHub
- The CPC Chair or Vice-Chair will introduce the new member at the next CPC meeting.
- If you are not approved you will be notified privately via email.
Note: Former Voting members whose terms have just ended will automatically become Regular members, unless they indicate otherwise.
- Activity within a project, community, or collaboration space.
- A demonstrated level of contribution to the CPC's work during the past 30 days.
Note: "Activity" is defined as recent, sustained contributions during the past 90 days. Contributions can include, but are not limited to, participation in meetings, issues or pull-requests, editing documentation, community management, marketing, organizing events, as well as similar activities as they relate to the OpenJS Foundation and its member projects.
Per the CPC charter section 5, the voting CPC members are responsible for approving project charters and changes to them.
Approval of the initial charter or changes to an existing charter will be requested by opening an issue requesting approval in the cross-project-council repository.
The request is approved when:
- There are no outstanding objections
- There are two or more approvals by voting CPC members
- The board has been consulted in the case of substantial changes
- The issue has been open for at least 14 days
Pull requests that do not change the charter or governance of the CPC can be merged into this repository provided the following conditions have been met:
- There are no outstanding objections
- There are two approvals by CPC members
- The PR has been open for at least 72 hours
The Cross Project Council (CPC) may formally delegate authority to a Collaboration Space
, so that the Collaboration Space
can make autonomous decisions with respect to the delegated scope.
Pull requests that change CPC governance (including changes to authority delegation to Collaboration Spaces) must meet the following conditions in addition to the ones listed for regular PRs:
- The PR has been open for at least 14 days OR consensus is reached in a meeting with quorum of voting members.
Pull requests that change the charter of the CPC must meet the following conditions in addition to the ones listed for changing CPC governance:
- The text of the PR must be approved by a simple majority of the voting members.
- The text of the PR must be approved by the board.
If consensus cannot be reached, a pull request may still be landed after a vote by the Voting CPC members to override outstanding objections.
Special exception is made for pull requests seeking to make any of the following changes to this repository:
- Errata fixes.
- Editorial changes.
- Meeting minutes.
- Updates to the team lists.
- Doc Fixes.
Charter changes cannot be fast-tracked.
To propose fast-tracking a pull request, apply the fast-track label. Then add a comment that CPC members may upvote.
If someone disagrees with the fast-tracking request, remove the label. Do not fast-track the pull request in that case.
The pull request may be fast-tracked if two CPC members approve the fast-tracking request. To land, the pull request itself still needs two CPC member approvals.
CPC members may request fast-tracking of pull requests they did not author. In that case only, the request itself is also one fast-track approval. Upvote the comment anyway to avoid any doubt.
The CPC aims to keep this repository up-to-date and devoid of obsolete information. The default is therefore to remove obsolete information. It is always possible to open a pull request to restore deleted information. Please explain the rationale for doing so in that case, and ensure such information is clearly labeled as obsolete.
To facilitate locating deleted information, please pay close attention to commit messages when deleting content. In particular, note what content is being removed and why.