Those volunteers weren't allowed to attend the staff dinner or use the con suite, and weren't supposed to, they only snuck in and took advantage of the staff who did not want to confront them and tell them to leave, and who frankly have more important things to do at con than police entrance to con suite. We did have a body of law for it, we have said outright that "this is only for staff", and it was violated with impunity because normal people don't want to have to be confrontational, and those volunteers pushed those boundaries.
What year are you talking about Gus?
If you are talking about 04 and 05, you're dead wrong and I wonder what information you're basing this off of. I was a volunteer both of those years. I HAVE NEVER SNUCK INTO A STAFF FUNCTION. I was invited to every single dinner I ever went to. I can tell you specifically what happened with both dinners as well.
2004, at the Mariott, as Tom and I helped out during con and helped with close down. We were invited to the dinner afterwards, and were told to meet up at a specific time. We spent a bunch of time cleaning up and then went over to the stairs where we were suppossed to meet everyone, and no one was there. After waiting around for a few minutes, we decided to go to the restaurant. It was explained to us then that the meet up time had changed to be earlier, but no one told us. There was one table left, which was empty and far away from everyone else. Tom decided to leave without ordering. I stayed but felt very segregated. A couple people noticed and came over to talk to me... people I didn't even really know... and I don't even remember now who it was. But they came over and tried to apologize for us being left behind and spent time with me.
2005, at the Double tree, I worked extremely hard all weekend long. I showed up on Friday with setup and worked long into the evening, and then straight through the weekend. Brownie noticed and basically told me that I wasn't a volunteer, I was staff. And I was invited, INVITED, to go to the staff dinner at that Chinese restaurant a few blocks away. I didn't sneak in, I walked in with everyone else and I actually got to sit with people I knew that year and had a decent time.
2006, I was a grunt staff member, because everytime I tried to apply for something higher up in ranking I was either lost or ignored. I actually had to sign up to be staff three times because someone kept losing record of me. I didn't even have a badge Friday night of con. Brownie had to have mine reprinted again at the last minute because I was apparently lost in the system again. I worked hard at reg all day because they were desperate for ANYONE to work on reg and then ran panels at night til 2am. I wasn't told until the very last moment that they'd decided to limit the number of spaces available at the dinner afterwards. I found out that I was invited but Tom wasn't.
So I requested my ticket be given to someone else. I wanted to go. I'd really been looking forward to it, especially with the hell I went through that year. But if it's a choice between going to your special dinner and spending time with people I care about, I don't give a damn about a free meal.
At the very last moment, people realized that they had extra tickets and they offered one to Tom and a few other people that had originally been snubbed and gave me mine back. And I went, and I had a good time. But once again, no sneaking was done. Considering you had to have a freaking ticket, in order to be let in, sneaking couldn't have been done.
So, let's look at 2007 for a moment as a whole. There were staff only events through out the year. The volunteers requested I ask if they could participate, as they had interest, but I advised everyone that it was only for those who'd already signed up as staff and paid their dues. I made this clear.
There was only one incident where someone snuck in. It was the staff retreat. She was snuck in by members of Programming staff she was working with. And the only reason she wasn't staff at that particular time was because of her age. Once the age requirement was lowered, she upgraded on the spot. I didn't bring it up because according to other people in Programming staff, she was considered a staff member other than the fact that her age was an issue with policy.
So if you wanted to have a beef, someone above those people in programming should have done something about it. However their director wasn't there, and no one higher up than her did anything about it either.
And one way or another, why would it even matter? Did she hurt anyone there? No. Did she infect us with volunteer cooties? No. Other than the fact that it was completely unfair to other volunteers who were on par with her and were still loudly excluded, there wasn't really an issue.
Those volunteers are not making the extra effort, otherwise they would be staff, and we would not be having this discussion. By offering them rights you we would be permitting them to explicitly avoid making the extra effort to obtain the benefits of being staff. You are suggesting that we should extend staff rights to those who explicitly refuse to take the extra effort.
Were you at any point a volunteer? I'm asking this in all seriousness.
Let me educate you on the con totem pole as your climb wasn't so difficult. Not everyone walks into con and says "Hi I want to do this high level position" and has everyone fall at their feet. Most people start at the bottom of the totem pole, like most any other job, and then work their way up. A good percentage of people decide to volunteer because they're new, they know very few people on the inner circle, and want to get an idea of what working at a con is like before they jump in head first. And then there's those that wander into a con, get bored and say "Hi! Just put me to work."
I did a decent amount of work in 04, of course I was the latter person stumbling in and asking for something to do since all my friends were working as well. Maybe I wouldn't have made my goal of honorary staff, but people apparently noticed that I wanted to be helpful.
I signed up as a volunteer in 05 because I still felt like a relative outsider. I knew some people, but didn't think I had the kind of experience with the con to get a big position.
By 06, I thought I had enough experience to do some good, but that only goes so far if other people aren't willing to work with you, so I had to fall back on people I knew again.
This year, Brownie gave me a lot of responsibility, and I did the best I could, and worked as hard as I could year round.
But I don't forget where I started. And I don't forget that there's someone who's a volunteer who's trying to work their way up just as I did.
You see, your mistake is that you assume that just because a person doesn't sign up to be staff it's because they don't care. And unfortunately, your brain is stuck with that syntax, and it doesn't matter how many different ways I explain it to you if you don't ever reprogram.
And, as I've said before, this year we changed our policy in favor of the volunteers and explicitly provided them those benefits.
Well actually it goes more like changed policy right before 07 elections and decided take everything away from the volunteers period, and then decided to give them some benefits again... But not voting rights. Remember, we has topic!
I'd like to come back around to speculation here. When we extend all the staff rights to non-staffers, what is the incentive to remain staff?
I will answer your question, but with the following notation I have never said at any point "give all volunteers all benefits awarded to staff members". I never even said "give some volunteers all benefits awarded to staff members". I detailed out specifically what volunteers should get according to hours they put in, and the highest level in no way compares to what I will get as a staff member if I signed up in November.
But to answer your question directly, if everything was directly equal and the only thing seperating a staff member from a non staff member was a title and a job description, I can think of only one reason to sign up as staff... The strong desire to want to be in that position so that you can make a difference and help the con through that position.
Which must make me the most awesome staff member ever, because frankly, I don't care about the benefits. I don't care about titles, or the politics, or power trips, entitlements, the ladders we climb, or the view from the top. And I certainly don't care about free pizza.
I signed up for staff because I thought I could do something that would help the con. Didn't really work out in 06 because I was apparently the staff member that didn't exist.
But I tried again in 07, and I was able to at least try to change the two things that went the most wrong the previous year. Reg and Volunteers. The blood sweat and tears, thousands times over, were for the people who got royally screwed in 06. And hey, all of those people are non staff.
While benefits are nice, they're not why I do this job. And if you give similar benefits to someone else who cares about this convention just as much as I do, then maybe that person deserves it.
Sure, I know not everyone is half as awesome as me, and sure I know not every single person who signs up as a volunteer is going to be the hard working individual that I am and always have been for this con. And do staff deserve awesome benefits for everything they do, sure! And I don't mind accepting appreciation for the work I do. I also will turn down special benefits offered to me if it means snubbing people I care about.
This is why I didn't offer all benefits to volunteers that staff have and this is why I set a goal. You don't like my goal, once again, throw out some other figures. I'm interested in hearing your ideas that you have for next year. If you win the election, you'll be the Ops director and the Volunteers will be under your heading. And I want people to know, if you're in charge of the volunteer coordinator, exactly what you plan to do to work with that individual
Do you realize that it is the staff that carry all the critical roles and that makes this convention happen, not the volunteers, and that the special benefits we give staffers are the only things we offer them in return for their countless hours of labor?
All critical roles belong to staff. And there is a tree of how critical a job is and what benefits are associated with such.
For example, the board gets additional special benefits that not all staff members get. Considering the fact that, contrary to the belief of some directors, board positions are full year jobs, you deserve special benefits for being at the top of the totem pole.
Staff members such as managers and coordinators down to grunts all get the same benefits, but you get more out of it if you register as staff in November rather than waiting until August, such as the staff Christmas party and the staff retreat. And it's a good thing because the most important positions, especially managers and coordinators are, or at least should be, full year jobs as well. The hard part is making sure these jobs are adequately filled by people with a decent amount of experience, which again is the director's job.
And then you have the volunteers, which according to my plan would be given some sort of consideration depending on amount of time put into the work they're doing, but I've never said that volunteers should get all benefits that staff get. And if you even go by this year, it was not possible for a volunteer to get access to all of the parties and benefits that staff get because they didn't have opportunities to put in enough time much sooner than May. And if you up the hours, they probably wouldn't have the chance to get many more hours than that before con itself, further limiting the events they can be included in.
Voting is not the only "benefit" staff get that volunteers don't. You have plenty of other things that you've shut the volunteers out of. This is the only one we've been arguing for. But with you, it's all extremes. With you, it's all or nothing.
And I really don't get how you can say in one arguement that Voting shouldn't be used as a benefit, but then say that if we give it to "non staff" that it means you're giving away all of the benefits staff have. If you don't want me to think of it as a benefit, quit listing it as such.
In terms of importance to the convention the staff are absolutely critical, but the volunteers are gravy.
Maybe to you. Maybe your job doesn't really need a volunteer to help out. Reg needs volunteers. Info desk needs volunteers. Cat Ear creation apparently needs volunteers really badly. Video Rooms need volunteers. Cosplay contest needs volunteers as people to help out in the green room, and as stage hands. Even though Yojimbo is a staff only position, there was apparently a need for volunteers and I was begged for some exceptions. Gaming needs volunteers. Set up and Clean up always uses volunteers. Publicity needs volunteers year round, even this weekend. Plus the people who just do random odd jobs like running and getting me food because I can't leave the info desk because there's no one else to run it, or the people that I make sit at the info desk for 5 minutes while I go use the little girl's room for the first time in many many hours.
Looking at numbers, we had on a pretty steady basis 30 volunteers signed up. As soon as some upgraded, a few more signed up. Of that approximate 30, by the end of the con, not counting people who upgraded to staff, there were 8 that put in over the goal. If you decided to up my goal by double to say that 40 hours is what we're looking for, 5 people met/exceeded that. If you triple it to 60 hours, you have Jaz and Rachael alone at the top.
Of the people who I've talked to, almost everyone who has hit the 40 hour mark want to be staff next year. And those above 60 almost definitely want to be staff for us next year.
How many of these people *would* have been staff this year if situations were different? IE, hadn't already paid/could have been reimbursed, were told they were too young, etc. 4
And really, these four people are the ones I'd want to give voting rights too, especially if they're going to be staff in 08.
So no, I'm not talking 50 or 30 or even 8. Really, I'm most focused on 4 people. And I must be fricken insane to sit here for hours trying to stand up for 4 people. But I do it because I care, not because I'm getting anything out of it.
But anyway, with the demand we have for volunteers, you think you'd do something to attract more of them and to keep them feeling happy and appreciated. They're not just gravy. They're the glue holding us together at 8 am Monday morning.
And if you did away with volunteers all together and just said, nope staff only from now on, maybe you'd get 4 people out of it, but you lose 26.
Sure, we could pare down the staff ranks by removing some questionably non-critical positions, and we should be rewarding the volunteers, (which we already do in excess,) but what should the staff get?
Oh please, do share with all of us what positions you would want to do away with or make volunteer only and why in detail. I'm not even being facetious. I really want to know.
Should they get nothing special of their own? That is what you are asking for, isn't it? Why would anyone want to bother staffing if they get no special recognition above a volunteer? Where is the incentive to put in 200 or even a thousand hours for the convention above the 20 or 40 you are saying should be required for all the staff rights?
I was going to take these questions individually, but then I realized you just asked me the same question over and over again.
Once again, you take my words and take them to the farthest extreme you can.
I will state this one last time.
Staff sign up staff gets benefits.
Volunteers sign up, volunteers work, volunteers get some benefits depending on amount of hours they work.
Staff benefits still > volunteer benefits.
I've listed what staff get and I've listed what volunteers get. Scroll up. One is not equal to the other, and Volunteer benefits do not meet or exceed staff benefits. And they certainly don't get benefits without putting in time.
I know you don't like it, and that's why you continue over and over to completely not read what I'm telling you. I'm really done with explaining it.
Do you expect people to continue to be complete altruists for no special recognition?
Heh, this one I will answer.
No, I don't expect that of others, but apparently you do expect that of others. You expect for the volunteers to give up their time to the con, and no matter how many hours they put in, it's not enough for you to give them respect.
And do you realize we have a serious problem this year with staff morale and this only amplifies it?
You are half right. We have a very serious problem this year with staff morale. But let's put that blame where it belongs.
It's not the fault of volunteers having benefits.
I'll tell you what lowers my morale.
Being completely ignored by certain individuals on a regular basis.
Not having emails returned by people I need information from asap.
Not having access to the materials and equipment I need to adequately do my job.
Being promised one thing and being delivered something totally worse.
Being "rewarded" with something that causes me to be violently ill.
Having people I care about be upset because they're not getting the recognition they deserve.
Being talked down to by someone when all I did was ask him a simple question.
Hypocrisy
Asking for something by a certain deadline, and not getting what I request.
Especially when not getting it by the deadline makes it impossible to do my job.
Being given specific instruction of what to do and what not to do to find out later it doesn't matter.
Having someone commit to a job they'll be doing and have them back out
Especially if that means I have to take their place
Not being able to actually enjoy something that I've worked on.
Having important documentation thrown away.
Being asked the same damn thing over and over and over.
Being asked the same damn thing over and over by multiple people.
Not getting answers to questions I have
Getting yelled at for doing my job.
Being in physical pain or being physically ill due to exhaustion
Working overtime at a job for weeks before the con, killing myself over a weekend for a convention, and then going right back to doing over time for the next two weeks after.
Not having time to even talk to my Mother over the phone for the better part of a month because of how hard I'm working.
Not being able to see my fiance for more than five minutes at a time during an entire weekend
Having someone insist that basically I never deserved any of the benefits I received my first 2-3 years of working with this con.
Can the con fix all these problems by fixing policy? No. Is there any benefit in the world that would make my issues disappear, or even make up for them? No.
Does the fact that I want to give volunteers benefits make any of these worse? No
In fact, there's a few that probably would be fixed by that. But that's because I get personally involved with people and get to know these people. These people were my job for con, or at least they were half of it.
And if I told you that not a damn thing that you did mattered, I hope you can relate to what that feels like.