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Apache Corporate Governance - Board of Directors

The Board of Directors sets overall policy for the Apache Software Foundation and delegates execution and specific policy areas to individual officers and Project Management Committees.

Contents

Organization

The board consists of nine directors, each serving as an individual. After each annual board election, the board chooses a Board Chair from its ranks. The selection of a new Board Chair and other executive officers typically takes place a couple of months after the board election, to give the new board a chance to get to know one another.

The board meets by conference call and IRC chat monthly. The agenda is published privately to the Membership. Each corporate officer makes a monthly written report to the board, and every Project Management Committee (PMC) makes a quarterly written report to the board. In this way, the PMCs report directly to the board, not to the President or other corporate officers. All ASF Members and invited guests are welcome at board meetings, except during very rare executive sessions of the board.

The normal monthly board agenda includes 10+ corporate officer reports, 60+ PMC reports, and often a handful of official resolutions. To ease the review process, reports are due well before the meeting begins, and many directors "preapprove" reports by initialing them in the agenda file before the meeting. Each PMC report is assigned a director to serve as "shepherd" for the month; the shepherd takes any questions raised before or during the meeting to the relevant officer or PMC for an answer or resolution. PMCs that report late or where serious questions are raised during the meeting may be asked to provide an additional report at the next monthly meeting. The board uses the Apache Whimsy tool to simplify many steps during the meeting process.

The President is responsible for managing day-to-day operations, and provides direction for the VP, Infrastructure who is responsible for ensuring the maintenance of the servers and services. The VP, Infrastructure directs
a team of system administrator contractors, and is assisted part time by a number of volunteer sysadmins. Some corporate officers report directly to the President and provide a monthly report; the President rolls up all reports for the board on a monthly basis. This way, the board provides oversight for all operations and project activities.

Article V. of the ASF bylaws specifies a Board of nine Directors, elected annually by the ASF Membership. The Apache Board is much like the board of directors of any other corporation, responsible for -- management of the corporate assets (funds, intellectual property, trademarks, and support equipment) and allocation of corporate resources to projects.

The board is responsible for appointing any officers of the ASF, including executive officers -- President, Secretary, Treasurer -- and other officers, both those with corporate functions (Legal, Publicity), and Vice Presidents of individual Apache projects. The board also sets overall policy for Apache projects, or in many cases, delegates the details of policy setting and implementation to specific corporate officers. The board uses official resolutions to appoint or change officer positions, create new Top Level Projects (TLPs) or retire unused projects, and in certain cases to make fundamental policy decisions. Most policy is simply agreed upon by the board and any relevant officer(s), and published on our website.

Communication

With the exception of monthly conference calls, board communication takes place over private email lists. The board@apache.org email list is the primary place for where official business. All directors, corporate officers and PMC chairs are expected to subscribe to this email list and to track issues relevant to their areas of responsibility. Many ASF Members also participate, comment, and help resolve issues where appropriate.

Directors regularly read and participate on various project email lists when a board-level issue or question has been raised. They may particiapte wearing their board hat: i.e. as a strategic voice, addressing broad ASF policies or important community health issues. Directors participate technically in Apache projects as individuals: directors are not automatically granted committerships, PMC memberships, or even binding votes on any project matters. Directors wishing to influence the technical work of a project must gain merit and be voted in as a committer to that specific project, as is any other contributor. When the board as a whole makes a formal request, the director conveying the request makes it clear it is an act of the board, not just of one director.

Meetings

The board exercises oversight of Apache Projects by reviewing project reports at the monthly board meeting, and by monitoring changes to PMC membership. When PMCs have voted in and nominated a new committer to serve on the PMC, they notify the board of the addition. The appointement is official once the canonical PMC membership roster is updated to reflect the change.

PMCs are expected to provide accurate and thorough reports to the board of their community health and technical and software release activities. Projects that do not report or have serious issues in their report will be contacted by that month's shepherd or another director to find a resolution. In extreme cases, where a PMC is dysfunctional or is not following required Apache policies, the board may unilaterally make changes to the PMC or may dissolve a project to correct the issue.

A detailed description of the board meeting process is published.

Merit

Board elections are held annually; currently, each board seat is for one year, so all nine directorships are voted on annually. ASF Members are eligible to nominate people for board seats and to vote in the board election. Director candidates run individually, and Member votes are currently cast by Single Transferable Vote (STV). All nominations, position statements, and voting are conducted electronically either over private mailing lists or using our own software for casting votes. Individual votes are kept anonymous, although the full STV calculations are published privately amongst the Membership.

In the past, only existing Members with some history within the ASF have been nominated. While the bylaws allow for any person to be nominated for the board, the amount of trust and expected experience with the Apache Way for directors is such that nominees outside of the existing Membership are unlikely for the time being.

For the first several years after incorporation the board was quite stable, with a majority continuing to serve repeatedly. As the ASF grew in membership around 2004, the board began to change somewhat, with a few new faces appearing each year. Jim Jagielski, one of the founders of the ASF, has remained on the board since its beginning.

Directors are expected to serve as individuals on the board, representing the Membership and acting in the best interests of the ASF as a whole. Directors are expected to disclose any conflicts of interest they may have due to their current employment, and recuse themselves when necessary from votes or potentially discussions on subjects they have a conflict with.

Community

While Directors participate in a variety of communities both within and outside of the ASF, the primary community home for directors is the Membership. Most directors follow the main private Members mailing list, where any ASF Member may start discussions about a wide variety of topics, from new technologies, policy ideas, questions about project communities, to personal announcements of weddings and births.

From time to time Directors participate in the communities of various Apache projects when a board-level issue or question is raised; however they do so wearing their individual Director hat. Many Directors are separately committers or PMC members on a variety of Apache projects, where they do technical and community work just like any other committer, wearing a committer hat.

Many Directors also serve in the public community as spokespeople for the Apache Way granting interviews about the ASF or our projects, or reviewing other open source or charitable foundation works.

Technical

The board does not provide technical direction for any of its projects or activities. The board does set broad policies -- for example, requiring that projects use source control systems that run on ASF hardware controlled by ASF Infrastructure. Technical direction, in terms of how to implement infrastructure or what code projects should work on, is all delegated to the PMCs or relevant officers.

While this may be a surprise to some, it is a key reflection of how the ASF is intentionally structured to provide maximum freedom to its projects. The board and the ASF are happy to provide a home to any software project communities that are willing to follow the Apache Way. The mission of the ASF is to provide software for the common good: we help like-minded communities provide that software, are confident that communities will form around software that is useful, and understand that there are many different ways to effectively and collaboratively build software.

References