gracias. the more we know about who let it get so fucked up, the better.
gracias. the more we know about who let it get so fucked up, the better.
That would be a riot as long as someone didn't get killed in the process.Someone say iceboats? NOW we're talkin'! Just make sure to pick the right time of year....
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How? You have not explained this. You said he swooned them to vote for his proposal to remove their vote.
Reducing a board from 50 to whatever is not a bad idea. Making it virtually impossible for the general members to change things is usually a really bad idea, especially if you depend on those members for your funding.It all started when the USOC had some financial finagling (Britishly understated) by its Executive Director. They decided that their organization was too unwieldy with a 50+ person board of directors.
Now, we were all "told" that the USOC had told US Sailing that they needed to downsize their Board of Directors. Did I ever see this letter? Nope, sure would like to see it.
It started the ball rolling thru Baxter and Muldoon.
The "cover story" everyone was given was this MUST happen, the USOC said so.
Reducing a board from 50 to whatever is not a bad idea. Making it virtually impossible for the general members to change things is usually a really bad idea, especially if you depend on those members for your funding.
Does it? Please show me where in his resume he successfully ran an organization larger than a Volvo 60. Artemis was one of the most noteworthy failures in AC history. Pirates squandered a huge budget to barely hold on to second place with 2x the budget of anyone else. Feel free to list the rest of his major organizational successes since EF Language - Star regattas and RC44 titles do not count.Cayard's career and record of fundraising speaks for itself
If the head of the org only spends 20% of his time making sure the org operates successfully, that's a problem.That's 80% of the job right there.
Hiring Cayard as the head of the team was bad management by the Board. His resignation exposed how bad that management is.FFS, if this was a Paul Cayard problem, his resignation would have solved things
That sort of ploy is often used at the individual club level: when members are informed that some new restriction is required, or some existing service must be eliminated, because the club’s insurer has demanded it. 99.99% of the time, that rationale is complete and utter bullshit (underwriters very seldom demand changes in how individual insureds run their respective businesses).Now, we were all "told" that the USOC had told US Sailing that they needed to downsize their Board of Directors. Did I ever see this letter? Nope, sure would like to see it.... The "cover story" everyone was given was this MUST happen, the USOC said so.
Yes, that is terrible governance.A quick review of the latest amended bylaws indicates that this is one fucked up org.
General members havGeneral members need 250 signatures to add a nomination for directorships. That's a hell of a high bar.
You slamming the Paul for being truthful?What was the status of the US Olympic Sailing Program when you took over two years ago?
There was a $2.8M financial deficit, four coaches, an experienced staff, and no medal contenders.
No medal contenders. Is that not a remarkably crass comment for the ex-Olympic Team Director to say in public, even if true? Presumably these no-hopers are still pursuing their 2024 dream and hoping to raise some $$. Why the necessity to actively shit upon them?