It is time to speak up. My name is Bill Coombes, and I have served on the General Staff from 2004, and as Chief of Staff in 08 and 09. Thus I have been at the hub of this entire affair, and bear responsibility for many of the things that have been brought up here. I am loathe to become part of this thread, not because I am reluctant to share information but because I find it damaging to the CAF, and it is not what most who look on WIX expect to find. I would much prefer to read posts about airplanes than about the internal politics of the CAF. Also, I spent more than two YEARS emmersed in this, and can not adequately explain every part of it in some resonable space on WIX. What follows is an abbreviated version of a more thorough accounting which I will be working on over the summer.
On one level, this is a personality issue. Steve Brown has rubbed some people the wrong way, he has made decisions they don't like, they've lost influence within the CAF, they might even seriously believe he is a threat to the very future of the organization. However, as a member of the General Staff, let me point out that Steve Brown was hired to be the leader of the entire CAF, and that since November o 2007, he has stabilized the membership, taken the yearly deficiet from $600,000 when he came on board to essentially a zero deficiet in 2010, he has created a program to fund the restoration of many of the CAF's "hangar queens," he has increased the visibility of the organization on a national level, he has increased the profitability of Airsho, he has increased the efficiency of HQ, and he has turned the leadership of the CAF from being "reactive" to being "proactive." He has visited more than 40 units, he has made himself available to all members, and he has committed himself to the CAF, just as thousands of others have done. In short, evaluating Steve as the leader of a business finds him successful by anyone's measure. Do I like all the decisions he has made? No, but "like" Steve and his decisions on a personal level is not an appropriate way to evaluate, as a board member, Steve's performance as CEO.
On the level of issues, rocks should be tossed at me, since, as Chief of Staff, I introduced into the conversation the subject "What is, exactly, the CAF, and who governs it?" I posed that question to the rest of the GS as a way to begin a dialogue which ultimately led us to adopting "Policy Governance" as the management philosophy through which we allowed Steve Brown, as CEO, to run the CAF. I did not realize that others had a much different view of the exact nature of the role of the General Staff, vis a vis, it being the ultimate governing authority of the entire organization. I spent long hours talking to many members, including Raybourne Thompson, the man who created the four corporations that people refer to as the CAF. I know all the why's and where for's about this organization, liability protection, etc, but I could not get a clear answer as to "who is ultimately in charge?" It was clear to me that, with the requirement that the current General Staff be the majority on each of the four corporate boards, that the GS was "it" and Steve Brown, as hired by the GS, was the leader. (FYI, when the IRS approved of this corporate restructuring, it was with the understanding that the GS be the ultimate governing authority: our tax exempt status required that). In any event, the "issues" problem began when members of the Museum board attempted to eliminate that requirement from their bylaws. This would have effectively removed control of the Museum from the General Staff and made the Museum a stand alone corporation (which was the goal of this board: I have a letter signed by three of those members, including two General Staff members, stating this very succinctly). This is the issue that led, sadly, to the lawsuit. Two judges agreed with the GS position that the bylaws change was illegal and that the GS is, indeed, the ultimate governing body. We are now implementing a new restructuring document that will MAINTAIN THE FOUR CORPORATIONS AND THEIR BOARDS, but will make clear the chain of authority.
More could be written about the issues involved. For me this has always been an issues thing. I've known all of the personalities involved for years and considered them friends....Hal Fenner since the 1970's, Gordon Stevenson a good friend since the 1980's (I've watched Taylor grow up in the CAF) and it pains me to think of the strains this has placed on those relationships. But this is not about accreditation fears, state funding, selling museum assets, or risking the public trust...those are "straw men" and future events will, I'm sure, bear that view out. Instead this has been about personalities. Steve Brown is the CEO of the CAF, serving at the pleasure of the General Staff. It is time to move on from here.
Bill Coombes
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