Industry & Standards Council | GRF Councils | Private Sector Risk Governance
GRF Council Network

Industry & Standards
Council

The consultative forum for corporate leaders, industry associations, standards bodies, and private sector executives coordinating enterprise risk governance, supply chain resilience, and voluntary standards development.

Industry & Standards Council
Operational
6
Councils
12
Sessions/Yr
4
Board/Yr
156
Members
+8%
48
Active Items
+12%
127
Shipped
+18%
94%
Attendance
9
Regions
Councils
  • State & Government
  • Academia & Universities
  • Media & Civil Society
  • Industry & Standards
  • Community & Indigenous
  • Leadership Council
Governance Pipeline
24
INTAKE
12
REVIEW
8
WORKING
4
BOARD
127
SHIPPED
Input
Council
Synthesis
Routing
Board
Action
Monthly Activity
Recent Activity
  • Industry lane convenedToday
  • Q1 synthesis published2d
  • 14 proposals reviewed1w
  • 3 items approved1w
Upcoming
  • House Briefing2nd Tue
  • Board Session Q2EoM
Regional
AFRAPACEURMENAAMER
The Enterprise Risk Landscape

Global enterprises face polycrisis exposure—climate transition risks, supply chain fragmentation, cyber threats, regulatory divergence, and ESG reporting complexity. The 2024 WEF Global Risks Report identifies supply chain vulnerability and cybersecurity failure among the top 10 risks. Standards fragmentation creates compliance complexity across 140+ jurisdictions.

Pre-Competitive Coordination

The Industry & Standards Council provides antitrust-compliant coordination infrastructure—convening corporate risk officers, standards bodies, and sector associations to develop voluntary standards, harmonize best practices, and coordinate resilience frameworks while maintaining strict competition law compliance.

Enterprise Risk Domains
Supply Chain Cybersecurity Climate Transition ESG Reporting Operational Resilience Business Continuity AI Governance Third-Party Risk
Pre-Competitive

Governance-only coordination—no pricing, market allocation, or competitive intelligence sharing

Standards Harmonization

ISO, NIST, TCFD, GRI alignment—voluntary standards development for cross-sector resilience

Supply Chain Mapping

Cross-sector vulnerability identification and resilience coordination without vendor disclosure

Antitrust Compliant

Safe harbor structure with legal counsel oversight ensuring competition law adherence

# Mandate Function Status
1 Convene multi-stakeholder forums (government, private sector, civil society, academia) Active
2 Facilitate disciplined intake of priorities, proposals, and constraints Active
3 Produce public-safe syntheses, recaps, and routing determinations Active
4 Route governance-grade matters to GRF Board for determination Active
5 Maintain standing committees and time-bound working dockets Active
6 Uphold corrections discipline and issuance integrity standards Active
NON-ENDORSEMENT

Participation ≠ endorsement. GRF does not endorse products, services, vendors, organizations, or individuals.

CONSULTATIVE NEUTRALITY

Councils do not execute, procure, underwrite, price, or operationally dispatch. Governance-only posture.

Council
Consultative

Convenes, synthesizes, produces public-safe outputs, routes

Board
Decision

Receives pre-docketed items, deliberates, issues determinations

Committees
Standing

Recurring governance domains—guidance, coordination, standards

Dockets
Time-Bound

Specific routed issues with defined outputs and end dates

12×
House/Year
Board/Year
2nd Tue
Briefing
2h
Duration
CORE RULE: Consultative & governance-routing only. No execution, procurement, pricing, underwriting, dispatch, endorsements, or roster disclosure.
P=Propose R=Recommend A=Approve I=Implement V=Veto
Decision Area CB Chair RRO COI Board
Agenda Items Intake R P
Proposal Shortlisting A R
Sensitive Routing P R A
COI Recusal A V
Issuance (Public-Safe) I A
Governance Decisions R R A
Constitution Changes P A
IN SCOPE
  • Convene multi-stakeholder dialogue
  • Receive priorities & blockers
  • Produce public-safe syntheses
  • Route items to Board lane
  • Maintain correction records
  • Coordinate standards guidance
OUT OF SCOPE
  • Execute, procure, dispatch
  • Price, underwrite, trade
  • Endorse products/services
  • Disclose rosters/attendance
  • Issue enforcement orders
  • Make legally-binding rulings
127
Total Shipped
48
Syntheses
32
Routings
24
Board Items
15
Standards
8
Corrections
Output Type Classification Format Status
Priority Synthesis Public-Safe Record ID + Summary + Routing + Actions Published
House Recap Public-Safe Session summary + Next steps Published
Routing Summary Controlled Decision matrix + Owner assignment Circulated
Action Register Controlled Owner + Due window + Completion Tracked
Standards Guidance Public-Safe Recommendation + Rationale Published
Board Minutes Public-Safe Decisions + Rationale + Distribution Published
Issuance Standard: Dated Record ID • Classification • Neutral Summary • Routing • Action Register • Corrections Path Rule: No silent edits
Important: Council Subscription vs. Organization Membership

Council participation is a professional subscription service administered by the Nexus Council Bureau (GCRI Canada). This is not organizational membership with equity, voting rights, or legal entitlements in GCRI or GRF entities. Council subscribers gain access to governance forums, working lanes, and professional coordination—they do not become members, shareholders, or directors of any corporate entity through subscription alone.

Nexus Council Bureau
GCRI Canada
Service Description

The Nexus Council Bureau provides professional coordination services for GRF Council operations, including session facilitation, docket management, synthesis production, and subscriber administration. All council subscriptions are processed and serviced through this bureau.

Session Facilitation Docket Management Synthesis Production Records Issuance
Legal Clarity
  • Subscription = Service access
  • No equity or ownership stake
  • No voting rights in entities
  • No fiduciary obligations
  • Renewable annually
Council Subscription Tiers
Accepting Applications
National
Affiliate

Leaders operating at country/national level bringing local priorities, regulatory context, and ground-truth intelligence into global governance discourse.

ACCESS INCLUDES:
  • National council sessions
  • National Chair convenings
  • Priority slate submissions
  • Working lane participation
Regional
Fellow

Leaders synthesizing cross-border issues, aligning regional constraints, and building coherence across national boundaries for systemic risk coordination.

ACCESS INCLUDES:
  • Regional council sessions
  • Regional Chair convenings
  • Cross-border synthesis
  • Docket sponsorship rights
Global
Patron

Senior leaders shaping global themes, stewarding integrity discipline, and supporting governance shipping at the highest cross-regional level.

ACCESS INCLUDES:
  • Global council sessions
  • Cross-council coordination
  • Theme framing influence
  • Board pathway eligibility
Good Standing Requirements (All Tiers): On-time submissions • Integrity compliance • Action follow-through • Communication discipline
Capability Affiliate Fellow Patron
Council Session Access National Regional Global
Priority Slate Submission
Working Lane Participation Assigned
Docket Sponsorship Regional Cross-Council
Theme Framing Input Limited
Cross-Border Synthesis
Board Pathway Eligibility After 24mo After 12mo
Governance Shipping Readiness
Pathway to Board Governance Roles

Council subscription is not a prerequisite for board consideration, but sustained participation in good standing demonstrates governance competence and organizational fit. After minimum tenure, qualified subscribers may be invited to explore formal governance positions.

1
Subscribe

Select tier aligned to your operational scope

2
Participate

Maintain good standing for minimum tenure

3
Demonstrate

Evidence governance competence & contribution

4
Progress

Receive invitation to governance consideration

Minimum Tenure Requirements
Patron → Board Consideration 12 months
Fellow → Board Consideration 24 months
Affiliate → Fellow Upgrade 12 months
Competence Evidence
  • Consistent session participation (>80%)
  • Quality contributions to working lanes
  • Demonstrated professional expertise
  • Integrity and boundary compliance
  • Constructive synthesis contributions
Strong Fit Profile
  • Senior decision-maker or strategic advisor
  • Authoritative voice on sector/regional priorities
  • Seeks structured governance engagement
  • Committed to regular participation
  • Values confidentiality and discipline
  • Interested in governance career pathway
Not the Right Fit
  • Seeking sales or vendor pitch venue
  • Cannot commit to monthly schedule
  • Expects binding decision authority
  • Seeking networking events only
  • Cannot maintain communication discipline
  • Seeking immediate board placement
~2h
Monthly Session
~1h
Slate Prep
~2h
Quarterly Board
Var.
Working Lanes
3-5h
Total/Month
Session Schedule

House Briefings: 2nd Tuesday monthly (2h)

Board Sessions

Quarterly governance shipping reviews (2h)

Flexibility

Working lane participation scales with availability

How It Works

Governance Framework

Decision lanes, workflow, outputs, and structures that make council work disciplined and credible.

1

Public Consultative Lane

House Briefing

Purpose: Hear priorities, proposals, blockers, community spotlights; publish a public-safe recap; route follow-up.

Outputs: Public recap, routing summary, action list.

Not a decision venue for execution, procurement, or commercial terms.

2

Controlled Follow-Up Lanes

Working Lanes / Committees

Purpose: Refine routed items into governance-grade drafts, issue briefs, standards needs, or decision-ready language.

Outputs: Controlled dockets, draft recommendations, action registers.

3

Board Lane

Quarterly Governance Shipping

Purpose: Decide governance items that are pre-docketed and decision-ready (constitution, elections, formal approvals).

Outputs: Minutes, decisions (if any), action register with distribution completion.

Routing Rule: If it needs an institutional decision, it belongs in Lane 3. If it needs shaping, Lane 2. If it needs to be heard and captured, Lane 1.

1

Local Consultation

Continuous

Members consult within their sector/jurisdiction on what is materially changing and blocked.

2

Forms-First Submission

Monthly by 10th

Official intake: Top 3 priorities, proposals, blockers, community spotlight, suggested routing.

3

Compilation

CB Backend

CB compiles submissions, checks for public-safe wording and boundary compliance.

4

Chair Approval

Front-of-House

Chairs approve final shortlist, speaking order, and what routes to controlled follow-up.

5

House Briefing

2nd Tuesday

Public gateway: strategic briefing, spotlights, community proposals, synthesis.

6

Issuance

Defined Window

Outputs: public-safe recap, routing summary, action list with owners and timing.

7

Follow-Up Lanes

Controlled

Routed items move into drafting, coordination, or standards shaping lanes.

8

Quarterly Governance

Board Lane

Decision-grade matters shipped to closed board meetings with pre-docketed agenda.

Forms-First Rule

All submissions must go through the official intake form. No email lane. This ensures every item is captured, screened, and routable.

Records That Count

A Council output is considered issued only when it meets these standards:

Dated Record

Record ID and title with date

Classification

Public-safe or controlled

Summary

Neutral account of what was heard

Routing Decisions

What moved where and why

Action Register

Owner + due window

Corrections Path

No silent edits

This makes participation credible: leaders can see what happened, what moved, and what is expected next.

Issuance Window

Public-safe outputs are issued within 5 business days of the session. Controlled outputs follow committee approval timelines. All corrections are logged with timestamps.

Decision Type Council Committee Board
Shortlist & spotlight selection Chair approves
Routing to follow-up lane Chair approves Can recommend
Create new docket Can propose Chair approves Oversight
Issue public-safe outputs Chair approves Chair approves
Issue controlled outputs Chair approves Oversight
Governance/constitution changes Can propose Can draft Board decides
Elections & appointments Board decides
Integrity & COI rulings Integrity reviews Board decides

Member Role Types

  • Attend — Participate in sessions, submit slates
  • Host — Chair-designated facilitation role
  • Sponsor — Champion a docket or proposal
  • Reviewer — Assigned to review draft outputs

Escalation Triggers to Board

  • Constitutional or governance changes
  • Elections and formal appointments
  • Integrity rulings requiring institutional decision
  • Cross-council coordination requiring mandate
Safety & Accountability

Trust & Integrity

Boundaries, protections, and hygiene standards that preserve neutrality and enable candid participation.

No Execution

GRF never executes, procures, underwrites, or prices on behalf of members.

No Endorsements

GRF never endorses products, vendors, or organizations.

No Roster Disclosure

Never confirm who attended or didn't attend sessions.

No Deal Terms

No pricing, commercial terms, or underwriting in outputs.

No Operational Dispatch

Governance posture only—no execution instructions.

No Silent Edits

Corrections must be explicit and documented in the record.

Correction Script

"I need to correct a previous statement. [Correction]. The record should reflect this update."

What to Say When Boundaries Are Tested

Use these scripts when discussion moves into restricted territory.

Execution Request

"GRF does not execute or procure. We can route this to [appropriate lane] for governance consideration, but operational dispatch is outside our scope."

Endorsement Request

"GRF does not endorse products, vendors, or organizations. We can capture this as a proposal for the record, but without institutional endorsement."

Roster Disclosure

"We do not confirm attendance or participation. Roster information is not disclosed."

Commercial Terms

"Discussion of pricing, terms, or commercial arrangements is outside our scope. Let's reframe this as a governance or standards issue."

Competition Concern

"This discussion is trending into potentially competition-sensitive territory. Let's pause and reframe, or route to an appropriate governed process."

Public-Safe

Can be published without restriction. Neutral summaries, routing decisions, action lists, and public recaps. No sensitive personal data or competitive information.

Controlled

Restricted to authorized participants. May contain draft positions, pre-decisional material, or sensitive coordination details. Not for public distribution.

Restricted

Limited access on need-to-know basis. Integrity matters, personnel issues, or legally privileged content. Handled through dedicated secure channels.

Attribution & Quotes

Direct quotes from council sessions require explicit consent. Outputs attribute synthesis to the Council, not to individual participants. "Chatham House" style applies unless otherwise specified.

No Public Roster Disclosure

Participant lists are not published by default. Attendance is never confirmed or denied publicly.

Controlled Lane Routing

Sensitive issues can be routed to controlled lanes with appropriate access restrictions.

Protected Channels

Concerns about integrity, coercion, or misrepresentation can be raised through protected channels.

Anti-Retaliation

Retaliation against participants for good-faith contributions is prohibited and treated as an integrity incident.

Report Concerns

Report misrepresentation, coercion, boundary violations, or integrity issues through protected channels. Contact: [email protected]

Safe Participation Statement

GRF is committed to enabling candid, good-faith participation. No participant shall face retaliation for raising concerns, requesting corrections, or reporting integrity issues through proper channels.

What Must Be Disclosed

Conflicts affecting:

  • Agenda inclusion decisions
  • Spotlight selection
  • Routing outcomes
  • Committee/docket recommendations

How Recusal Works

Recusal means:

  • No role in approving impacted items
  • No role in drafting impacted items
  • No role in routing impacted items
  • All recusals recorded in the record
Safe Meeting Statement

Meetings are governance-only. Do not share or coordinate: pricing, commercial terms, underwriting parameters, market allocation, or competitor-sensitive strategies. If discussion trends into restricted territory, the Chair will stop and reroute the item to an appropriate governed lane or exclude it.

Prohibited Topics

Pricing and fee structures
Commercial terms and conditions
Underwriting parameters
Market allocation or division
Competitor-sensitive strategies
Customer or supplier relationships
Schedule

Monthly Member Habits

What to do each month to be a contributing member in good standing.

1

Submit Priority Slate

By 10th of Month

Top 3 priorities, proposals, and blockers via the official submission form.

2

Review Compiled Slate

Week 2

Review the compiled shortlist and flag items needing clarification.

3

Attend House Briefing

2nd Tuesday

Join the public monthly session. Prepare your time-boxed contribution.

4

Consult Locally

Continuous

Stay connected with your sector. Value comes from genuine local truth.

5

Follow Up on Actions

As Assigned

Complete action items within specified windows and report back.

6

Maintain Boundaries

Always

Never execute, procure, price, or endorse on behalf of GRF.

Annual Schedule

Council Calendar

House Briefings on the second Tuesday of each month. Board sessions quarterly.

JanuaryQ1
Slate DueBy 10th
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
FebruaryQ1
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
MarchQ1
Q1 Board SessionMid-month
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
AprilQ2
Slate DueBy 10th
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
MayQ2
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
JuneQ2
Q2 Board SessionMid-month
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
JulyQ3
Slate DueBy 10th
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
AugustQ3
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
SeptemberQ3
Q3 Board SessionMid-month
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
OctoberQ4
Slate DueBy 10th
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
NovemberQ4
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
DecemberQ4
Q4 Board SessionMid-month
House Briefing2nd Tuesday
Next Session

Monthly House Briefing

Second Tuesday of the Month • 2 Hours

Public consultative session: strategic briefing, priority spotlights, community proposals, routing decisions, and synthesis.

FormatVirtual
Duration2 Hours
Slate DueBy 10th
Quarterly

Board Governance Session

Mid-Quarter • 2 Hours

Closed decision session: pre-docketed governance items, constitutional matters, elections, and formal approvals only.

FormatClosed
Duration2 Hours
Pre-docketedRequired
Member Resources

Downloads & Templates

Standard templates and guidance documents for effective participation.

Priority Slate Template

Monthly submission template with fields for priorities, proposals, blockers, and routing requests.

Access Template

Speaking Script Guide

Time-boxed speaking format for House presentations: Problem → Proposal → Blocker → Ask.

View Guide

Boundary Reference Card

Quick reference for red lines, stop-line scripts, and handling classes.

View Reference
Getting Started

New Here? Start in 90 Seconds

1

Choose Your Tier

Affiliate (National), Fellow (Regional), or Patron (Global)

2

Submit Priority Slate

Top 3 priorities, proposals, blockers, one community spotlight

3

Attend House Briefing

Second Tuesday, time-boxed contribution

4

Watch for Recap

See what moved and routing summary

5

Join Committee/Docket

If assigned or invited

Explore

Council Directory

Multi-stakeholder councils organized by domain. Each council convenes distinct stakeholder groups with shared governance interests.

State & Government Council

For public sector leaders, policymakers, and government officials coordinating on cross-border governance challenges.

Academia & Universities Council

For researchers, academics, and university leaders contributing evidence-based insights to risk governance.

Media & Civil Society Council

For journalists, NGO leaders, and civil society representatives ensuring transparency and public accountability.

Industry & Standards Council

For industry leaders and standards bodies coordinating on technical standards and market conduct.

Community & Indigenous Council

For community leaders and indigenous representatives ensuring local voices shape global governance.

Leadership Council

Cross-council coordination body for senior leaders driving strategic alignment and governance shipping.

Public Participation

Community Proposals

The public doorway for ground truth—structured submissions that ensure the House hears directly from communities, practitioners, and local leaders.

What is a Community Proposal?

A Community Proposal is a structured, public-facing submission enabling the public, expert communities, practitioners, and local leaders to bring priorities, problems, and solution initiatives into the monthly House Briefing. Community Proposals are not petitions, announcements, sponsorship slots, or deal pitches—they are a disciplined way to make proposals auditable, comparable, and routable.

What Proposals Are For

  • Surface urgent priorities invisible to institutional channels
  • Present solution-forward initiatives for improvement and replication
  • Identify blockers (policy, coordination, standards, data, capacity)
  • Provide real-world proposals that can be captured and routed
  • Create a credibility loop: issues heard, recorded, and tracked

What Proposals Are NOT For

  • Vendor selection, partner appointment, procurement steering
  • Pricing, underwriting, deal terms, fundraising, solicitation
  • Operational dispatch, emergency instructions, claims/settlement
  • Naming individuals as "approved," "endorsed," or "non-compliant"
  • Political campaigning, reputational attacks, roster disclosure

The Core Promise

Public Doorway

Reliable access for ground truth

Safe Format

Disciplined, structured presentation

Routable Follow-Up

Clear lanes for action

Issuance Loop

Community voices become tracked governance work

From Submission to House

Community Proposals follow a disciplined six-step flow ensuring the public session remains safe and credible.

1

Submit

Always open. Proposals collected continuously.

2

Screen

Check boundary compliance & public-safe wording.

3

Shortlist

Select based on urgency, diversity, solution quality.

4

Chair Approval

Approve selection, set speaking order.

5

Present

Time-boxed presentation to the House.

6

Route & Issue

Recap, routing summary, action list.

Possible Outcomes

Outcome 1

Public Acknowledgement

Recorded in synthesis; no follow-up lane assigned. Tracked for future reference.

Outcome 2

Controlled Follow-Up Lane

Working lane formed or committee picks it up for drafting, coordination, or standards.

Outcome 3 (Rare)

Board-Lane Escalation

Only for institutional governance decisions in decision-ready form.

Who Can Submit

Communities & Coalitions

Local organizations, coalitions, grassroots groups representing frontline priorities.

Practitioners & Researchers

Professional bodies, individual experts with evidence and implementation experience.

Civil Society & NGOs

Public institutions, community-facing agencies (public-safe contributions only).

Submissions encouraged from underrepresented communities and frontline contexts. Industry experts may submit non-commercial, non-competitive content only.

House-Ready Criteria

Public-Safe

Discussed openly without sensitive details

Solution-Forward

Realistic next step, not just a complaint

Bounded & Specific

Clear scope; not a universal manifesto

Routable

Obvious what follow-up lane it enters

Non-Executing

Governance action, not operational dispatch

Presentation Format (Time-Boxed)

A) Priority

What changed, why now

20–30s
B) Proposal

What should be done

60–90s
C) Blocker

What's stuck

30–45s
D) Ask

Support needed

20–30s
E) Routing

Lane request

10s

Common Decline Reasons

Vendor pitch or funding solicitation
Contains pricing/terms/underwriting requests
Asks for operational dispatch or executive action
Contains personal data or sensitive allegations
Political campaigning or targeted reputational attack
Too vague to be routable

Transparency & Anti-Capture Principles

To prevent the public session from becoming centralized or sponsor-driven:

Rotating Spotlights

Spotlights rotate across regions and communities for diverse representation.

Equal Time-Boxing

All proposals time-boxed equally. No "announcement slots" or premium placement.

No Bypass

No one bypasses intake with email or influence. Standard process for all.

Full Recording

Even if not spotlighted, proposals are recorded and may be routed quietly.

What Submitters Can Expect

Upon Submission

  • Confirmation that submission is received
  • Clear status: accepted, acknowledged, reframing requested, or declined
  • If spotlighted: preparation note on time-boxing and boundaries

After the Session

  • Visibility in the public-safe recap
  • Routing summary showing where proposal goes
  • Action list with owner and next update window

Submit by Region

Select your region to submit a Community Proposal for the next monthly House Briefing.

Southern Africa

SADC member states

Submit

West Africa

ECOWAS member states

Submit

East Africa

EAC member states

Submit

Asia-Pacific

APAC nations & islands

Submit

MENA

Middle East & North Africa

Submit

Switzerland

GRF headquarters jurisdiction

Submit

European Union

EU member states

Submit

South America

South America & Caribbean

Submit

North America

USA, Canada, Mexico

Submit

Submission Template

Community Proposal Template

[Clear, specific title]
[Country/region; public-safe]
[What's changing; why it matters now]
[Specific, solution-forward next step]
[Policy, coordination, standards, data, or capacity barrier]
[Specific routing request]
[Committee / working lane / knowledge routing]
[Links or citations if public-safe]
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Council and Board?

The Council is the consultative layer: gathering priorities, proposals, and blockers from stakeholder groups. It produces public syntheses and surfaces decision-grade items.

The Board is the decision layer: receiving routed items from Council, deliberating in closed session, and issuing institutional approvals or rejections.

What is a Priority Slate?

A Priority Slate is the standard monthly submission containing:

  • Top 3 Priorities — What's materially changing
  • Top 3 Proposals — What the forum should consider
  • Top 3 Blockers — What's stuck and needs help

When are House Briefings held?

House Briefings are held on the second Tuesday of each month. This is the public gateway session where priorities are surfaced, proposals are discussed, and routing decisions are made.

How do I submit a proposal?

Submit proposals through the official portal at globalriskforum.com/proposals. All submissions must be public-safe and solution-forward.

What can't I do as a Council member?

Never execute, procure, or price on behalf of GRF. Never imply endorsement. Never disclose rosters. Never issue operational dispatch. Never represent GRF in negotiations without authorization.

Do I need to host any meetings?

No. GRF manages all convening logistics. Your role is to submit priorities, attend briefings, and follow through on assigned actions. Chairs coordinate front-of-house, but facilitation is handled by GRF staff.

Who can submit proposals—members only or public too?

Proposals can be submitted by anyone through the public portal. Members have priority visibility and can sponsor proposals for docket consideration. All submissions must meet public-safe criteria.

What happens if my proposal is not selected for spotlight?

All valid submissions are captured in the compilation. Not every item makes the spotlight shortlist, but all are recorded and can be routed to follow-up lanes or resubmitted in future cycles. The Chair explains routing decisions in the recap.

How do I join a committee or start a docket?

Committee invitations are extended based on expertise and interest expressed in your submissions. To propose a new docket, include a "docket request" in your Priority Slate with the issue, desired outputs, and timeline. The Chair will route viable requests to the appropriate lane.

What is "public-safe" vs "controlled"?

Public-safe outputs can be published without restriction—neutral summaries, routing decisions, and action lists. Controlled outputs are restricted to authorized participants and may contain sensitive details, draft positions, or pre-decisional material. Classification is determined by the Chair with CB review.

How are corrections issued and who can request them?

Any participant can request a correction to the record. Use the official correction script: "I need to correct a previous statement. [Correction]. The record should reflect this update." Corrections are logged with timestamps. No silent edits are permitted.

What does "member in good standing" mean in practice?

A member in good standing: (1) submits Priority Slates on time, (2) maintains integrity compliance (no boundary violations, COI disclosure), and (3) follows through on assigned actions within specified windows. Standing is reviewed quarterly and affects eligibility for committee roles and docket sponsorship.

Ready to Join?

Be part of the global conversation on risk governance. Contribute your expertise and shape coordinated responses.

All Council proceedings follow GRF handling protocols. Public-safe outputs only.

GRF maintains strict neutrality. No endorsements implied.

Have questions?