Hi Everyone, I'd like to submit my candidacy for another term on the OpenStack Technical Committee. In my candidacy platform last year I outlined that if elected to the TC I wanted to bring more technical oversight to the TC, and also to work on improving the messaging around OpenStack, to make it clearer. I think in the past year we've made lots of progress on both fronts, but there is still more work to do. Over the next year I'd like to see the TC continue to make progress on both fronts. The introduction of community wide goals was a good start in having the TC setting a more concrete technical direction for projects. I see a lot of potential with it and am eager to see it grow it over time. It was also just a start and long term I'd like to see the TC take on more difficult technical discussions and making decisions. For example, the recent discussion about being opinionated about our RDBMS is an example of the kind of discussions I'd like to see the TC have more of in the future. For making the messaging around OpenStack clearer I think we've also been making improvements. Over the last year, we've added and improved a few tags, added the OpenStack principles document, and more recently we've worked on a TC vision for the next 2 years. Over the past year we've also started taking a more aggressive stance towards removing projects. Moving into the future I'd like to see more progress on clearly documenting what OpenStack is and how it can be used. I'm optimistic some of the efforts we're working on will continue to make this better over time. For the next year in addition to continuing progress on the items I outlined before the other priority I see for the TC is working on improving the health of the contributor base in the community. It's no secret that there has been a recent contraction in the community and a lot of long time contributors and community leaders are no longer actively contributing. I think we need to take more proactive steps about this if we want OpenStack to continue to thrive. I think there are 2 key areas we'll need to address on this front. The first is I'd like to see the TC taking a more hands on approach for both building up the mentorship pipeline to enable growing the contributor base and leadership in the community. Most of of existing efforts in this area tend to be concentrated on on-boarding new contributors which is good, but there isn't anything to help bridge the gap into becoming a community leader. This is somewhere I can see the TC taking a more active role to help people work towards taking on leadership roles in the community. The other aspect is I think we need to working towards making our community more accessible for casual and/or part time contributors. Right now our community process for contribution is heavily weighted towards full time and corporate sponsored contribution. Over the next year I'd like to work towards easing this burden and growing the number of casual and/or independent contributors. I think this will take 2 forms, the first is decreasing the barrier to entry on our tooling. Things like the CLA and the multi-step process involving creating multiple account just to get access to pushing proposed changes is very off-putting, especially if you're not familiar with the systems. The other aspect I think is more social. To a certain degree a lot of processes around contribution or interaction assume that people are constant contributors and always active (or connected). For example, how often do people push a patch up for review and then bug a bunch of cores on IRC about it. That's not really an option if you only can contribute for an 1 hr or 2 on the weekends. This is an area where I'd like to see the TC start driving more active change to improve the situation so we can hopefully start to grow the number of casual contributors we have to the project. Thanks for reading, I hope this outlines where my focus and priorities would be if I'm lucky enough to be elected for another term. Thanks, Matthew Treinish IRC: mtreinish Review history: https://review.openstack.org/#/q/reviewer:mtreinish%2540kortar.org Commit history: https://review.openstack.org/#/q/owner:mtreinish%2540kortar.org Blog: http://blog.kortar.org/