This report is provided in advance of IETF98 for the purpose of giving IETF 
participants more detail of the current work of the IAOC. Please feel free to 
bring any questions about its contents to the IETF Plenary in Chicago, or share 
them directly with the IAOC (i...@ietf.org).

Key areas of this update are:

This meeting:
IETF 98 Chicago

Forward-looking:
Locations and Global Travel Challenges
Community Members on IAOC Committees
Sponsorship and Funding Challenges
Update on Ongoing Topics

2016 Review:
2016 Financial Summary

IETF 98 Chicago

We look forward to a successful meeting in Chicago and thank our Global Host, 
Ericsson for hosting this meeting. Their willingness to step up to hosting this 
meeting is particularly noteworthy as we meet in this backup location. We 
shifted to Chicago when our Montreal venue notified us about 18 months ago that 
they would be unavailable to house IETF 98 due to renovations. Unfortunately, 
we can't adjust to all shorter-notice changes that impact venues -- as most are 
aware has occurred for this meeting. The community has responded to this well, 
and we appreciate the organizations that are helping in different ways.

Locations and Global Travel Challenges

More generally, as the realities of global travel continue to change, the IAOC 
is endeavouring to monitor the situations that will impact all of our 
participants. We meet this week in the United States, a country that has 
changed its visa and visitor requirements significantly in recent weeks. Prior 
to the meeting, we received input from people who would be unable to attend the 
meeting in Chicago. We are interested in hearing whether or what unusual or 
additional challenges people faced as they crossed the border to come to the 
Chicago meeting.  Stay tuned for a message in the near future outlining what 
we're looking for in particular, and where to share the information.  Thanks, 
in advance, for your thoughtful input.

We have more meetings booked in the US in the upcoming years, and are 
reassessing these. We continue to monitor the situation for people traveling to 
this country (as we do for travel to other IETF meeting host countries), and 
will make updates as and when necessary. We are also conscious, however, that 
travel requirements may make it difficult for US residents to travel to a 
non-US IETF meeting with a reasonable expectation of a smooth return home. They 
may be only able to attend US meetings. Accordingly, we will have to weigh the 
relative impacts on the community when making a decision.

Community Members on IAOC Committees

Last July we asked the community for volunteers to help on the IAOC’s various 
committees (https://iaoc.ietf.org/committees.html). We remain appreciative of 
peoples’ willingness to volunteer, and have benefited from the participation of 
the community members on the committees. As the IAOC constitutes its committees 
annually — i.e., the nature of the committees and their composition may change 
— we will be putting out another call for community volunteers in the coming 
days.

Sponsorship and Funding — Appreciation and Challenges

Looking forward in 2017, we have set higher fundraising goals for a broader set 
of sponsorship and funding targets that are part of our planned budget. With 
attendance at IETF 98 coming in lower than expected by about 150, the 
sponsorship support is increasingly important. Unfortunately, early reports on 
progress in 2017 are not as promising as we would like, down by about $150,000.

One of the biggest challenges with finding sponsorship is often identifying 
interested sponsors and getting them in touch with the appropriate IETF 
representative to bring the sponsorship to fruition. If you are interested in 
any of the sponsorship opportunities outlined here 
https://iaoc.ietf.org/host-and-sponsorship.html, please get in touch with Howie 
Baggott bagg...@isoc.org.

Additionally, the IAOC is considering establishing a Sponsorship Support 
Committee, and will be looking for additional volunteers. To be clear, the role 
of committee members would be to help the professional sponsorship staff 
identify possible opportunities, not to do fund-raising themselves!

Update on Ongoing Topics

Several people have asked about the Privacy Policy, for which we have asked for 
comments as drafts have progressed. The current version is on the agenda for 
discussion (and, hopefully, adoption) during the IAOC meeting at IETF 98.

The IANA supplementary agreement has been approved by the IAB, and we expect it 
will be adopted by the IAOC at this meeting.

2016 Financial Report

The December Financial Statement has been published and includes the year end 
IETF 2016 totals. The final numbers are in line with the shortfall the IAOC had 
been discussing and describing since the March meeting in 2016. There will be a 
more detailed year end commentary, with “lessons learned” to be published 
within 60 days.

Key items to note now are:

The good:
. operating expenses were as budgeted
. meeting expenses were below budget

The bad:
. attendance and sponsorship were both below expectations, meaning less income

With final 2016 numbers, the IETF’s total 2016 income of $3,925,501 was 
$410,499 below the Budget (-9.5%), while expenditures (excluding Tools 
Development) totaled $6,354,822, or $147,464 less than budgeted. Including the 
funding of Tools Development, ISOC provided funding of $2,574,164, $208,878 
above the 2016 Budget. The overall outcome was better than we feared in March 
and were greatly helped by lower costs of meeting space and food and beverage 
as a result of changes to currency valuations.


Leslie Daigle,
IAOC Chair, for the IAOC.

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