It was huge, and it was very important. It was the first renewal, and the reason it was so important was that if I could only make an observation, then it was up to the committee, and one committee member could simply say, “I don't agree with delisting this person”, and that would end it and would mean all of the work was for nothing.
The resolution change did two things. One was that they gave me a recommendation power. Quite frankly, my “observations” were recommendations; I just called them observations. Secondly and more importantly, they changed the burden and the trigger to provide that if I recommended delisting, the person would come off the list in 60 days unless the whole committee disagreed with me—and that never happened—or unless it went to the council for a vote, and that never happened. That was critical, because it meant it was consensus over term.