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Description
I thought this had been discussed before, but I don't see any applicable issue.
Right now, the Process says:
Any individual (regardless of whether they are associated with a Member) may appeal any decision made in connection with this Process (except those having a different appeal process) by registering a Formal Objection with the Team.
and further down:
When a W3C decision is made following an Advisory Committee review, Advisory Committee representatives may initiate an Advisory Committee Appeal.
These are our two appeal mechanisms. However, they do not address the failure to make a decision -- in particular, inaction by the Team in making a Team Decision or a W3C Decision.
For example, someone proposing a new charter could appeal a Team decision not to advance that charter for review, but if the Team were to just 'hold on' to that charter and refuse to make a decision, there is no recourse in the Process.
One could argue that this is a problem for Chair Decisions and Group Decisions too. However, they are visible -- everyone in that context knows that a decision is expected for a given issue, and if the chair fails to make a decision, they're under a fair amount of pressure to explain why.
That suggests one possible solution: making Team and W3C Decisions-to-be more transparent. This is discussed in eg #649 and #651. We'd need to go through the Process and consider how that would affect each instance of a Team or W3C Decision.
Another way of addressing this would be to go through each instance and add requirements for processing times, etc. However, that would likely be onerous, so I don't think it's viable.
Yet another approach would be to just allow appeal when a Team Decision or W3C Decision is not made. Because the appeal mechanisms require a certain amount of machinery, this would likely be self-limiting; it wouldn't be worth it to appeal three days after asking for a decision, for example, but if you're still waiting six months later and don't have a satisfying reason as to why, you might think of appealing.