Austin's Yellow Bike Project is going through a governance transition. We used to be a fairly horizontally organized consensus-run collective of volunteers who did the day-to-day of what happens at the shop, and our size wasn't limited. We are becoming an exclusive board of probably 6-9 people. Some of us are still running shops, but about half are not.

We're currently trying to work out (among many other things) how board members are (s)elected and to whom the board is accountable. Or more concretely, how the board is held accountable. We don't have "members," so the questions of "who gets to vote" is among the ones we're trying to answer.

If you have thoughts or if your org went through something like this I'm interested to hear about it. In particular what best practices and pitfalls you encountered.

The board also has appetite forĀ  working through this with a professional. Some of us are less psyched about people who don't have experience with groups that have our consensus- / volunteer-run d.i.y. culture, horizontal organizing history, etc. Many of them have experience only with the more traditional non-profit board model and struggle to wrap their heads around how we used to operate and why. Suggestions are welcome.

Feel free to email me privately if you like at thomas.unavailable@gmail.com
Or you can reply here.

Thanks
Thomas Butler
he | him | his
Austin's Yellow Bike Project
austinyellowbike.org