[Chapter-delegates] Follow-up on Chapters Advisory Council Meeting of 17 September 2024

Christopher Locke locke at isocfoundation.org
Sun Oct 13 10:00:00 PDT 2024


Yep that’s great - would still love to meet and chat about what happened so I can learn from it.

Best, Chris


Chris Locke, EVP & MD of Internet Society Foundation

locke at isocfoundation.org | Time zone: UTC -0 | Pronouns: he/him/his



[signatureImage]



Donate today.<https://bit.ly/3nUsQmJ> Help protect the Internet for everyone.

________________________________
From: b1harlem nyc <smartnet.nyc at gmail.com>
Sent: Sunday, October 13, 2024 6:58:42 PM
To: Christopher Locke <locke at isocfoundation.org>
Cc: Winthrop Yu <w.yu at gmx.net>; ISOC Chapter Delegates <chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>
Subject: Re: [Chapter-delegates] Follow-up on Chapters Advisory Council Meeting of 17 September 2024

Full disclosure we received a beyond the net grant pre pandemic so we do know how to fill out a application it says here

Thank you

Doug Frazier

On Sun, Oct 13, 2024, 12:54 Christopher Locke <locke at isocfoundation.org<mailto:locke at isocfoundation.org>> wrote:
OK - I’ll be in NYC next month. Let me speak to you and I’ll share info and talk you through the application process and how we can improve the application and help everyone understand why it was originally denied - and also talk about the process of notification when an application is denied and see what we can do to improve this. I’m also happy to jump on a call earlier but very happy to meet the NYC chapter in person to discuss this.

Best, Chris


Chris Locke, EVP & MD of Internet Society Foundation

locke at isocfoundation.org<mailto:locke at isocfoundation.org> | Time zone: UTC -0 | Pronouns: he/him/his



[signatureImage]



Donate today.<https://bit.ly/3nUsQmJ> Help protect the Internet for everyone.

________________________________
From: Chapter-delegates <chapter-delegates-bounces at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates-bounces at elists.isoc.org>> on behalf of b1harlem nyc via Chapter-delegates <chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>>
Sent: Sunday, October 13, 2024 6:40:36 PM
To: Winthrop Yu <w.yu at gmx.net<mailto:w.yu at gmx.net>>
Cc: ISOC Chapter Delegates <chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>>
Subject: Re: [Chapter-delegates] Follow-up on Chapters Advisory Council Meeting of 17 September 2024

Just to set the record straight the nyc chapter received 2 beyond the net rejections over this year

The  rejection announcement  was exactly like the first  except one part read ...."we cannot tell you why we denied your application"  and the the rest is the same....

Our application to expand the live streaming service and  our proposal to also provide access to chapter members through our Resident Public Safety Teaching Network in partnership with the New York City Housing Authority residents set up by our chapter and operated by the residents themselves and funded by the residents ...not only were they the residents deemed unworthy of ISOC board of directors exclusive
Service  Foundations non volunteer controlled grant.(nothing new for our community)

We were treated to a (2nd)written letter were we were told specifically and I must admit incredulous WHY our application was DISQUALIFIED (this before getting our we cannot tell you why  letter)

The ISOC board of directors non volunteer Service Foundations (we tell you why) rejection letter explained they our group was being denied,

 because as board members of the nyc chapter of isoc  (we) have a conflict of interest  because we work (volunteer) with the 501c not for profit that runs the teaching network a not for profit operated by the residents themselves!

And which I and another nyc chapter board member serve on that  not for profits board! as volunteers (thesmartci.org<http://thesmartci.org>)  and therfore because of same, rejection of our beyond the net application resulted..But wait there's more

Our efforts was also rewarded with the dreaded double DISQUALIFICATION according to the Isoc board of directors service organization non volunteers rejection letters

The nyc chapter application for  (beyond the net funds)
Was further DISQUALIFIED for proposing to spend more than 20 per cent of the requested amount on the  residents of the New York City Housing Authority themselves you know the poorest among us !!

I can not guess why the ISOC board of directors would not want to see those community folks get anything out of the enormous sum allocated to volunteers by the largess of the Isoc board of directors through their exclusive Service provider and non volunteers at the Foundation.

Insert lyrics from famous rap song.."you though I was a donut you tried to glaze

Item last:

miss me with the fancy talking new guy   wow there is money to hire medical doctor ??

Can not make this it up


Doug Frazier

Proud member and volunteer of
the nyc chapter






On Sat, Oct 12, 2024, 06:04 Winthrop Yu via Chapter-delegates <chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>> wrote:

+1 Joel, Doug, Christian, Hank, Eduardo, and most especially to Olivier.

Others have already pointed-out that $64,000/year is a very reasonable outlay for the scope and quality of the work that Joly was doing. What would be the cost of an entire Comms team doing that work, or if this work were to be outsourced to yet another tech company (like SalesForce.com for a "product" like Fonteva)?

But we are told that we can still have the work done -- simply apply for a BTN grant. Well, now we know that ISOC-NY did apply for a one-time grant to archive and save about 800 livestream videos.  The result? ISOC Foundation rejected this tiny, minuscule Beyond the Net application, the reason given by ISOC Foundation was: "the total number of requests we receive exceed the amount of funding we have available and we must select projects most closely aligned to the goals of our Foundation". A paltry $1K -- not aligned with goals?

That, ladies and gents, says a lot about the state ISOC (HQ) is in nowadays.

WYn
PH


On 11/10/2024 7:56 PM, Joel Okomoli via Chapter-delegates wrote:
Thanks Frazier! and +1,

This attitude is spread across the various programs run by ISOC! We have seen fellows and travel fellowships being awarded to very strange fellows who do not even understand the Mission and Vision of ISOC!

The outcome is that the said fellows ride on such funds then quickly disappear without trace! Occasionally they pop up - as staff and then you begin to see the connection. This is a small world and it looks like our former CEO entrenched the culture. I believe any openings in this ecosystem should be given to the active volunteers! That is what will grow The Internet Society.

My observation, I could be wrong.

Joel Okomoli
ISOC Kenya Chapter.


On Fri, Oct 11, 2024 at 1:37 PM b1harlem nyc via Chapter-delegates <chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org> wrote:
That's exactly what I was thinking as well.. we have a situation where the non volunteers are dictating what is being done with allocation of resources. And just refusing to acknowledge they are wrong on this and maybe being a penny wise and a pound foolish.

First we are treated to fancy intelligent parsing and explaining (by non volunteers) as to why( volunteers) cannot have 64 000 dollars to document chapter efforts by volunteers!
Mostly because they (non volunteers) said so!

 When that was challenged we were treated to fancy legal explanations courtesy of the non volunteer legal attorney..when challenged by Oliver's well thought out logical response we got legal obsification...

 Most enlightening though of the we versus they attitude of the you guess it (non volunteers) was the revelation that 5 million dollars of internt society monies  was given to some private group (non volunteer of course)

 When Oliver and others asked about how the non volunteers transferred gifted..allocated ..awarded 5 .million dollars to another non volunteer group while  denying the volunteers request for 64000 dollars for documentation of chapter work
We were informed by (non  voluteer attorney)   you dont need to see any documents regarding that, nothing to see here!.. (again because the non volunteers lawyer said so) when that didnt work and she was challenged by non volunteers...we given More fancy legal word salad with
 obsification on the side  just for good measure...

Insert lyrics from well known song "you thought I was a donut you tried to glaze me"

We should see this as a teaching moment as a proud member of the nyc chapter we see this circular demeaning paternalistic logic all the time in our work with the residents of the nyc housing authority...  the largest in the country

The people who live there are ignored by and on every turn by the same set up as we have here ..thier concerns are meet by the same platitudes and responses that always deliver the same  message only we (non volunteers/non residents in both instances) and we only have the only good  ideas and how dare you question that..and think we are going to listen to you!..

We (non volunteers) will circle the wagons and protect the non volunteers and forget the fact that the
Volunteers are the heart and sole of any society including the internet...

This happens more the we all probably think .
Notice the resistance over something so obvious and they cannot solve it without trying not to loose face and protect previous decisions thereby appearing to have no regard or even realizing we are supposed to be and act like a team and we they are not!!

This is the seeds of devisiveness when you have no regard for your teammates ...point blank full stop

OK none can say we were not told!

Doug Frazier
Proud Board Member and Volunteer of the nyc Chapter


On Fri, Oct 11, 2024, 05:10 Christian de Larrinaga via Chapter-delegates <chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org> wrote:

That's not the issue if I've understood what people are asking. The
message appears to be ISOC is looking increasingly like a "black box" to
the community saying it is treated as consumers rather than as an
integral part of the decision and governance making process.


vinton cerf via Chapter-delegates <chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org> writes:

  The foundation is formally a supporting organization under nonprofit tax
  law.
  V


  On Thu, Oct 10, 2024, 12:35 Eduardo Diaz via Chapter-delegates <
  chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org> wrote:

  IIona:

  From your email, I understand there is no formal "contract for services"
  between ISOC and the ISOC Foundation. Is my interpretation correct?

  -ed
  ISOC Puerto Rico


  On Thu, Oct 10, 2024 at 12:04 PM Ilona Levine via Chapter-delegates <
  chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org> wrote:

  Hi Olivier,

  Thank you for your follow up email. I think the use of the term
  "outsourcing" in the email below might have caused some confusion.  You
  mentioned you are familiar with the “supporting organizations” and how they
  operate, but it might also be helpful for me to provide some additional
  background for others.

  As you know, the relationship between supporting and supported
  organizations is not a vendor or contractor relationship. Though
  the Foundation is a separate corporation, it is a controlled subsidiary of
  ISOC, not a third-party service provider or outside contractor.  So ISOC is
  not “outsourcing” to the Foundation but instead, the two entities cooperate
  to achieve the mission of the Internet Society.  In other words, as a
  supporting organization, the Foundation’s purpose is to operate for the
  benefit of, and to support, ISOC. In furtherance of that purpose, the
  Foundation conducts programs and activities that benefit ISOC and furthers
  ISOC’s mission. For example, the Foundation engages in communications
  activities at the direction of and to the benefit of ISOC.

  As you also know based on your extensive experience with nonprofits, the
  Internet Society Board develops the overall strategy for ISOC. Internet
  Society management then develops its action plan and in turn, works with
  the Foundation to ensure that it, as a supporting organization, provides
  the support necessary to achieve ISOC’s goals. The Foundation does that
  through its own action plan, which sets out objectives for all of its
  functions, including the communications function.  So the Board sets the
  strategy, Internet Society management creates the action plans, and the
  Foundation management allocates resources to support those plans as
  necessary.

  After the approval of the 2025 action plans, ISOC will share them with
  the community.  As discussed earlier, part of that will be Chris presenting
  to this community how the communications group will be tackling its work in
  the upcoming year.

  Best regards,

  Ilona


  *From: *Olivier MJ Crépin-Leblond <ocl at gih.com<mailto:ocl at gih.com>
  *Date: *Tuesday, October 8, 2024 at 8:47 AM
  *To: *Ilona Levine <levine at isoc.org<mailto:levine at isoc.org>, Ted IETF <ted.ietf at gmail.com<mailto:ted.ietf at gmail.com>
  *Cc: *Chapter Delegates <Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>, Sally
  Wentworth <wentworth at isoc.org<mailto:wentworth at isoc.org>
  *Subject: *Re: Follow-up on Chapters Advisory Council Meeting of 17
  September 2024

  Dear Ilona,

  Further to our discussion two weeks ago regarding the definition of the
  relationship between the Internet Society and the Internet Society
  Foundation, in the absence of your response, I wish to reiterate the need
  for a clear outsourcing agreement between these entities. It is recognised
  as good business practice internationally to establish such agreements to
  delineate respective liabilities in the execution of these contracts.

  Responding to your note: "*All necessary legal documents, including
  agreements, have been put in place to respect the separate nature of the
  two organizations.*"

  All I am asking is for them to be shared. If that is not possible, even
  in a redacted manner, for whatever reason, then please provide a list of
  the agreements to which you refer, including the date of the agreement, the
  name of the agreement, the signatory parties, and a brief description of
  each agreement.

  Looking forward to your prompt response.

  Kindest regards,

  Olivier Crépin-Leblond


  On 24/09/2024 17:22, Olivier MJ Crépin-Leblond wrote:

  Dear Ilona,

  Many thanks for your follow-up.

  The thread may not have come all through. During the Chapter Advisory
  Council call, Ted mentioned the transfer of some responsibilities in
  relation to Communications from the Internet Society to the Internet
  Society Foundation. My initial question to Ted was in regards to the
  outsourcing agreement as follows:

  *"I was previously unaware of this change. Although the Internet Society
  Foundation may have been designated by the Internet Society as a
  "supporting organisation" of the Internet Society, it remains a distinct
  and separate legal entity. Therefore, I assume that any "outsourcing" of
  responsibilities such as Marketing and/or Communications would be defined
  in a written "contract for services" between the Parties setting out
  (inter-alia) the terms, rights, and obligations of each Party. Could you
  please provide the terms for such an agreement and any limitations therein?
  My principal concern lies in distinguishing between executing the
  Communications Plan and drafting the Communications Plan. These are
  fundamentally different tasks and would undoubtedly be included in the
  "contract for services"".*

  The top level responsibility of the strategy of the Internet Society
  remains within the Internet Society. I find it surprising that an
  outsourcing entity would be able to dictate that strategy without it being
  agreed by the Internet Society itself.
  The Internet Society has the opportunity to outsource the execution of
  its Communications Plan to a supporting organisation on the basis of terms
  and conditions agreed between the parties. This requires outsourcing
  agreement(s) in order to know where the boundaries and responsibilities are
  between the two organisations, including their respective liabilities in
  the execution of these agreement(s).

  For example:

  Key Components of an Outsourcing Communications Agreement

    1. *Introduction and Definitions*:
       - Clearly define the parties involved.
       - Provide definitions for key terms used throughout the agreement.

    2. *Scope of Services*:
       - Detail the specific services to be outsourced.
       - Include service level agreements (SLAs) to set performance
       standards.

    3. *Term and Termination*:
       - Specify the duration of the agreement.
       - Outline conditions for termination by either party.

    4. *Pricing and Payment Terms*:
       - Define the pricing structure and payment schedule.
       - Include any penalties for late payments or performance failures.

    5. *Confidentiality and Data Protection*:
       - Ensure compliance with data protection laws.
       - Include confidentiality clauses to protect sensitive information.

    6. *Intellectual Property Rights*:
       - Clarify the ownership of any intellectual property created during
       the agreement.

    7. *Warranties and Liability*:
       - Outline the warranties provided by the service provider.
       - Define the liability limits for both parties.

    8. *Monitoring and Reporting*:
       - Establish how performance will be monitored and reported.
       - Include provisions for regular review meetings.

    9. *Dispute Resolution*:
       - Specify the process for resolving disputes.
       - Include mediation or arbitration clauses if applicable.

    10. *Exit Management*:
       - Plan for the transition of services back to the company or to
       another provider.
       - Include provisions for the transfer of data and assets.

  I trust that you mentioned: "All necessary legal documents, including
  agreements, have been put in place to respect the separate nature of the
  two organizations."

  Thus I would be interested in its details as explained in my email.

  Kindest regards,

  Olivier


  On 23/09/2024 18:36, Ilona Levine wrote:

  Dear Olivier,

  I understand that the nature of your request is to assist the Chapters
  Advisory Council and Chris Locke in preparation to his session on the
  communication plan. The agreement in place since 2018 between the
  Foundation and Internet Society focuses on the legal obligations in line
  with the Foundation's role as a 509(a)(3) and therefore, won’t be useful
  for that purpose.

  Best regards,

  Ilona


  *From: *Olivier MJ Crépin-Leblond <ocl at gih.com<mailto:ocl at gih.com> <ocl at gih.com<mailto:ocl at gih.com>
  *Date: *Sunday, September 22, 2024 at 8:52 AM
  *To: *Ilona Levine <levine at isoc.org<mailto:levine at isoc.org> <levine at isoc.org<mailto:levine at isoc.org>, Ted IETF
  <ted.ietf at gmail.com<mailto:ted.ietf at gmail.com> <ted.ietf at gmail.com<mailto:ted.ietf at gmail.com>
  *Cc: *Chapter Delegates <Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>
  <Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>, Sally Wentworth <wentworth at isoc.org<mailto:wentworth at isoc.org>
  <wentworth at isoc.org<mailto:wentworth at isoc.org>
  *Subject: *Re: Follow-up on Chapters Advisory Council Meeting of 17
  September 2024

  Dear Ilona,

  thank you for clarifying that all necessary legal documents, including
  agreements, have been duly executed to respect the separate nature of the
  two organisations.

  I am aware of the publication of the original IETF Administration LLC
  agreements with the Internet Society, specifically:
  IETF-ISOC Funding Agreement (2020)
  <https://www.ietf.org/media/documents/IETF_Funding_Agreement_-_Executed_-_20201123.pdf
  IETF-ISOC Funding Agreement Amendment (2020)
  <https://www.ietf.org/media/documents/IETF_ISOC_Funding_Amendment_Amendment_-_20201222.pdf
  IETF-ISOC Funding Agreement Amended and Restated (2024)
  <https://www.ietf.org/media/documents/ISOC-IETF_Amended_Funding_Agreement_-_20240103_-_Redacted_Executed.pdf

  These documents are accessible on the IETF Administration LLC’s website
  at https://www.ietf.org/administration/overview/.

  Could you kindly confirm whether the agreements between the Foundation
  and the Internet Society are also publicly available? I have been unable to
  locate them on either website.

  I would appreciate it if you could provide a list of the agreements to
  which you refer, including the date of the agreement, the name of the
  agreement, the signatory parties, and a brief description of each agreement.

  I look forward to your kind response.

  Kindest regards,

  Olivier


  On 20/09/2024 19:48, Ilona Levine wrote:

  Hi Olivier, thank you for your follow up email.  You noted that you are
  aware of the tax requirements that apply to supporting organizations.
  Mainly, those requirements relate to supporting the mission of its
  supported entities.  In this case, the Internet Society.

  As part of that support, the Foundation provides grants to other
  organizations that have missions consistent with the Internet Society’s in
  order to fund programs that further the Internet Society’s purposes. The
  Foundation also engages in activities that support Internet Society
  directly. For example, the Foundation engages in fundraising and
  communication activities for the benefit of the Internet Society.

  As you also pointed out, the Foundation is a separate legal entity.  It
  is a controlled subsidiary of Internet Society.  All necessary legal
  documents, including agreements, have been put in place to respect the
  separate nature of the two organizations.

  I trust this answers your question.

  Best regards,

  Ilona

  *Ilona Levine,* SVP, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary

  levine at isoc.org<mailto:levine at isoc.org>|
  internetsociety.org<http://internetsociety.org> | @internetsociety

  Donate today. <https://bit.ly/3nUsQmJ

  *Help protect the Internet for everyone.*

  [image:
  https://backchannel.internetsociety.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/image001.png]

  This communication is the property of the Internet Society and may
  contain confidential or privileged information.  Unauthorized use of this
  communication is strictly prohibited.  If you have received it in error,
  please notify the sender by reply e-mail and destroy all copies of the
  communication and any attachments.


  *From: *Olivier MJ Crépin-Leblond <ocl at gih.com<mailto:ocl at gih.com> <ocl at gih.com<mailto:ocl at gih.com>
  *Date: *Friday, September 20, 2024 at 11:38 AM
  *To: *Ted IETF <ted.ietf at gmail.com<mailto:ted.ietf at gmail.com> <ted.ietf at gmail.com<mailto:ted.ietf at gmail.com>, Ilona Levine
  <levine at isoc.org<mailto:levine at isoc.org> <levine at isoc.org<mailto:levine at isoc.org>
  *Cc: *Chapter Delegates <Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>
  <Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org<mailto:Chapter-delegates at elists.isoc.org>, Sally Wentworth <wentworth at isoc.org<mailto:wentworth at isoc.org>
  <wentworth at isoc.org<mailto:wentworth at isoc.org>
  *Subject: *Re: Follow-up on Chapters Advisory Council Meeting of 17
  September 2024

  Dear Ted,

  thank you for your follow-up on this matter. I am aware of the special
  tax terms in relation to "supporting organisations".

  That being said, the Internet Society Foundation is a distinct and
  separate legal entity to the Internet Society, irrespective of the
  relationship between them. As a result, any outsourcing task undertaken by
  one, for the other entity, would be defined in a contract, whether written,
  verbal or otherwise. If not, there is a lack of clarity and expectations
  about the relationship, which brings potential liability and risk that both
  entities are subjected to, in relation to the other's actions. Any lawyer
  would tell you that it is highly advisable to have a written contract, if
  only for legal protection.

  Thanks for letting me know that you are travelling. I am copying
  President and CEO Sally Wentworth in case you're unavailable for a length
  of time.

  Kindest regards,

  Olivier


  On 20/09/2024 13:12, Ted Hardie wrote:

  Hi Olivier,

  A supporting organization is a term of art in US tax law, please see:

  https://www.irs.gov/charities-non-profits/charitable-organizations/supporting-organizations-requirements-and-types

  and

  https://www.irs.gov/charities-non-profits/section-509a3-supporting-organizations

  Explaining how the two relate is complicated enough that there are legal
  briefs on it; I have cc'ed the Society's chief counsel in case you would
  like that level of detail.  The summary, however, is that a supporting
  organization is a charity because it supports the charitable purpose of the
  main organization.  As a result, it can provide services to the main
  organization under the special tax rules noted above.

  Note that I am traveling and will generally be slow to respond for a few
  days, but hopefully the links above will get you started and Ilona can
  provide more detailed legal information as needed.

  regards,

  Ted Hardie


  On Fri, Sep 20, 2024 at 6:24 AM Olivier MJ Crépin-Leblond <ocl at gih.com<mailto:ocl at gih.com>
  wrote:

  Dear Ted,

  During this week’s Chapters Advisory Council call, you mentioned that the
  Internet Society Foundation, as a "supporting organisation" of the Internet
  Society, is managing the communications department for the Internet
  Society.

  Upon seeking clarification, you explained that the Internet Society
  Foundation comprises two elements: one philanthropic (grant-making) and the
  other as a "supporting organisation" of the Internet Society. "This implies
  that many of the supporting functions for the Internet Society as a whole
  are now part of the Foundation, primarily because the Foundation can
  provide these services to the Internet Society at no cost".

  You further elaborated that this "arrangement" allows the Internet
  Society to allocate its budget more effectively.

  I was previously unaware of this change. Although the Internet Society
  Foundation may have been designated by the Internet Society as a
  "supporting organisation" of the Internet Society, it remains a distinct
  and separate legal entity. Therefore, I assume that any "outsourcing" of
  responsibilities such as Marketing and/or Communications would be defined
  in a written "contract for services" between the Parties setting out
  (inter-alia) the terms, rights, and obligations of each Party. Could you
  please provide the terms for such an agreement and any limitations therein?

  My principal concern lies in distinguishing between executing the
  Communications Plan and drafting the Communications Plan. These are
  fundamentally different tasks and would undoubtedly be included in the
  "contract for services".

  The "contract for services" (together with any relevant supporting
  information) will be helpful input for both the Chapters Advisory Council
  and also for Chris Locke and his Team (including for the current "branding"
  presentations) in preparation for the promised session from Chris Locke to
  the Chapters Advisory Council.

  I look forward to your response and to receiving a copy of the "contract
  for services" agreement, together with any relevant supporting information
  as requested above.

  Kindest regards,

  Olivier

  _______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
As an Internet Society Chapter Officer you are automatically subscribed
to this list, which is regularly synchronized with the Internet Society Chapter Portal (AMS): https://community.internetsociety.org.
-
View the Internet Society Code of Conduct: https://www.internetsociety.org/become-a-member/code-of-conduct/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://elists.isoc.org/mailman/private/chapter-delegates/attachments/20241013/241b8ea2/attachment-0001.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: Image.jpeg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 232540 bytes
Desc: Image.jpeg
URL: <https://elists.isoc.org/mailman/private/chapter-delegates/attachments/20241013/241b8ea2/attachment-0001.jpeg>


More information about the Chapter-delegates mailing list