Quoting Steveo from 19:24, 3rd Jan 2008
My personal preference is to shrink the SRC back closer to the size it used to be, with less pointless positions.
I certainly suspect we could cut the SRC by at least a third without noticing much of a difference, and would be very much in favour of doing so if someone would be so kind as to navigate the Association around the relevant bureaucratic hurdles.
I don't mean for this to sound like some sort of ruthless cull, but year reps, faculty reps, and one of each of the private & University accommodation rep positions could be done away with for a start - and that's 10 positions gone already. Here's a question for you though - which of the following consequences would this have?
1. The intended consequence - elections get more competitive due to the smaller number of positions, meaning that people who manage to win a position make damn sure they do a good job. More work gets done despite the smaller membership because everybody is motivated and has had to think up a convincing plan of action in order to win. SRC's reputation is improved - it now does more things for more students and makes a better job of both doing and publicising them. More students make use of its representational facilities and run for positions in subsequent years. The whole thing is a riproaring success.
2. The slightly less bad of the two potential unintended consequences - the same amount of work gets done as before because the positions that were eliminated were pointless positions anyway. However, the smaller membership means word-of-mouth encouragement to run for SRC positions declines to a new low. Elections become less competitive, attracting candidates from a smaller and less representative pool of people. Winning candidates are less inclined to do work because (a) they didn't have to put much effort in to win the positions and consequently (b) there was no need for them to think through a convincing plan of action in order to win. SRC becomes less effective over a period of several years.
3. The rather more bad of the two potential unintended consequences - much, much less work gets done. This is because (a) the allegedly pointless positions are not pointless after all (certainly, not all of those in these positions do a great deal, but each year a few bright sparks pop up as year reps, faculty reps or whatever else and make a good contribution or go on to make much larger contributions in more senior positions) and (b) everything that was mentioned in point 2 ensues.
Contributions welcome from Union types of Christmas past, present and future, and everyone else of course.