Difference between revisions of "Annual report (2013–2014)"

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During Fiscal Year 2013–14, Wikimedia DC continued to develop its governance practices as a key element of its organizational growth strategy. Over the course of the year, Wikimedia DC adopted several new policies, including an [[Advisory Committee Policy]], an [[Ethics Policy]], a [[Fiscal Control Policy]], a [[Technology Access Policy]], a [[Travel Policy]], a [[Volunteer Policy]], and a [[Whistleblower Policy]], as well as amending a number of existing policy in light of the organization's changing circumstances.
 
During Fiscal Year 2013–14, Wikimedia DC continued to develop its governance practices as a key element of its organizational growth strategy. Over the course of the year, Wikimedia DC adopted several new policies, including an [[Advisory Committee Policy]], an [[Ethics Policy]], a [[Fiscal Control Policy]], a [[Technology Access Policy]], a [[Travel Policy]], a [[Volunteer Policy]], and a [[Whistleblower Policy]], as well as amending a number of existing policy in light of the organization's changing circumstances.
   
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Wikimedia DC continued to expand its committee structure, creating two new standing committees, the [[Executive Committee]] and the [[Safe Space Committee]], as well as four additional advisory committees, the [[Communications Committee]], the [[Content Programs Committee]], the [[Public Policy Committee]], and the [[Technology Programs Committee]].
* Committees
 
   
 
==Grantmaking==
 
==Grantmaking==

Revision as of 01:39, 18 October 2014

This report describes the activities of Wikimedia District of Columbia during Fiscal Year 2013–14, covering the period from October 2013 through September 2014.

Programs

At the beginning of the 2013–14 fiscal year, Wikimedia DC realigned its program structure to reflect the three interconnected factors that make the Wikimedia movement a success: content, technology, and community. As described in Wikimedia DC's annual plan:

The aim of Wikimedia DC is to make free content available to the world. The development and promotion of technology gives us tools to distribute free content. Most importantly, building a vibrant community makes all of this possible.

Content

Over the course of the fiscal year, Wikimedia DC supported a total of 21 edit-a-thons in partnership with 13 separate cultural, academic, and professional institutions, including the Smithsonian Institution, the National Archives and Records Administration, the Library of Congress, the University of Delaware, the University of Maryland, George Washington University, the National Museum of Women in the Arts, the Phillips Collection, the Laurel Historical Society, the D.C. Historical Society, the American Statistical Association, the American Chemical Society, and Frederick County Public Libraries.

Edit-a-Thons by Month Edit-a-Thons by Partner Institution
1
2
3
4
5
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
  •   Smithsonian Institution
  •   National Museum of Women in the Arts
  •   Laurel Historical Society
  •   D.C. Historical Society
  •   American Statistical Association
  •   Library of Congress
  •   University of Delaware
  •   National Archives
  •   Frederick County Libraries
  •   George Washington University
  •   Phillips Collection
  •   American Chemical Society
  •   University of Maryland
Average Edit-a-Thon Attendance by Month
5
10
15
20
25
30
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4

The edit-a-thons were attended by a total of 137 volunteer participants, who collectively made 1019 edits to Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects, adding a total of 290,453 bytes of content. Of these, 276 edits, corresponding to 64,599 bytes of content content, were made by newcomers, while 743 edits, corresponding to 225,854 bytes of added content, were made by experienced editors.

  • Scan-a-thon
  • Summer of Monuments

Technology

Over the course of the fiscal year, Wikimedia DC supported 3 hack-a-thons in partnership with the Smithsonian Institution and the National Archives and Records Administration.

Community

Wikimedia DC partnered with Wikimedia New York City to organize the inaugural WikiConference USA. Approximately 250 people from throughout the United States, as well as a handful of Canadians, participated in the three-day event, which featured four keynote speakers and several panels, presentations, and discussions on all manner of topics affecting the Wikimedia community, including the gender gap, paid editing, on-wiki policy and procedure, and offline outreach.

  • Workshop Facilitator Training
  • Social events

Public policy

This year the chapter established a committee on public policy issues. The committee drafted comments for a panel at the US Copyright Office on proposed legislation on orphan works. These are works whose copyright holder cannot be identified or cannot be located, so permission to use the work cannot be obtained. Wikimedia DC participated in a roundtable panel on this subject at the Library of Congress, and we submitted official written comments to the U.S. Copyright Office on proposals to handle orphan works.

Wikimedia DC volunteers also met with House and Senate staffers on Capitol Hill for briefings on subjects of mutual interest, including copyright rules and support for making cultural content freely available online.

In August, Wikimedia DC and the Cato Institute hosted a panel on Wikipedia editing for Congressional staff. The event received significant press coverage in light of the ongoing controversies surrounding Congressional editing. We later published a blog post on the subject of Congressional staff making edits to Wikimedia.

Members of the committee attended a Supreme Court case on software patents, Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank International, and we are accumulating expertise on this topic. In addition, our chapter joined the Congressional Data Coalition, we held an open government hackathon at the Sunlight Foundation.

Organizational development

Membership

At the end of Fiscal Year 2013–14, Wikimedia DC had 72 members, corresponding to a 18% increase from the beginning of the year.

Governance

During Fiscal Year 2013–14, Wikimedia DC continued to develop its governance practices as a key element of its organizational growth strategy. Over the course of the year, Wikimedia DC adopted several new policies, including an Advisory Committee Policy, an Ethics Policy, a Fiscal Control Policy, a Technology Access Policy, a Travel Policy, a Volunteer Policy, and a Whistleblower Policy, as well as amending a number of existing policy in light of the organization's changing circumstances.

Wikimedia DC continued to expand its committee structure, creating two new standing committees, the Executive Committee and the Safe Space Committee, as well as four additional advisory committees, the Communications Committee, the Content Programs Committee, the Public Policy Committee, and the Technology Programs Committee.

Grantmaking

As part of our charitable activities, Wikimedia DC provides small grants to individuals, community groups, and nonprofit organizations to fund activities that align with our mission to advance general knowledge and to collect, develop, and disseminate educational content under a free license or in the public domain.

In Fiscal Year 2013–14, Wikimedia DC received six grant applications with a total value of $1,753.72 from individuals and organizations across the United States. Based on these applications, five grants (corresponding to 83.3% of the submitted applications) with a total value of $1,403.72 (corresponding to 80.0% of the total amount requested) were approved and funded. The grants provided by Wikimedia DC were used to fund activities and events in Laurel, Maryland; Boston, Massachusetts; Brooklyn, New York; and Portland, Oregon.

Benefactors

Wikimedia DC programs are made possible in part by the generous contributions of our members. Member contributions are collected through a tiered sponsor membership program, which allows members to donate additional funds to support Wikimedia DC activities when establishing or renewing their memberships. Wikimedia DC expresses its sincere gratitude towards these sponsor members for their contributions:

Gold Sponsors: James Hare, Kirill Lokshin, Peter Meyer, John Sadowski
Silver Sponsors: Georgina Bath, Vijay Goswami, Christopher Maloney, Elaine Meyer, Diane Shaw, Sarah Stierch
Bronze Sponsors: Christopher Alhambra, Jim Carpenter, Meghan Ferriter, Peter Hess, Stephen Katsurinis, Christopher Licciardi, Scott Miller, Jake Orlowitz, Nicholas Papacostas, John Rogers, Sage Ross, Misty Sweet, Jacqueline Taylor, Joshua Westgard

Measures of success

Our goal this year is to hold events with at least eight institutions, including at least two new institutions.

hold six events with the Smithsonian

at least 50 volunteers logging a total of at least 700 volunteer hours and creating or improving at least 175 articles.

r this year is to hold two scan-a-thons at the National Archives, yielding at least 50 digitized documents.

tal of three hack-a-thons this fisc

at least two technical projects.

of a stable set of online tools tha

t one edit-a-thon in this space, making use

holding two social events per month, inc

at least four flagship events, designe