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Board Representation Gap - Who Looks Out for Fencing Families?

The Background

The USA Fencing Board sits at the apex of governance, strategy and policymaking for the sport of fencing in the US, and the Board provides the leadership that sets the tone and culture of the organization. The CEO executes on the Board’s strategies and policies, and follows the Board’s lead in setting organizational and member priorities. Board members have a fiduciary duty, whether elected or appointed to the Board, to represent the interests of USA Fencing and its members as a whole, and not just the constituency within USA Fencing that they come from. The various committees to whom the Board delegates its functions are held to the same fiduciary standards and must make recommendations in the best interests of all members.

However, Board members and committee members like the rest of us are humans, and they will bring perspective to and evaluate situations based on our own personal and professional experiences and values. It is quite hard to walk a mile in someone else’s shoes.

Which is why diversity on the Board is critical for optimal decision-making. Board members with diverse experience bases are better equipped to take into account the various competing interests and make the most equitable decisions.

The 2 main issues for fencing families

Despite minor aged fencers forming the largest constituency in USA Fencing (62% of membership):

  • The interests and perspectives of minor aged fencers and fencing families are not well represented on the Board.

  • Minor aged fencers and their families have no voice in how the Board is selected. To buy a voice to represent their kids, parents must purchase an Access membership on top of the Competitive membership they purchased for their kids just so they can vote in Board elections.

There is no current Board member who has recent and direct experience with the challenges and issues faced by fencing families with minor-aged fencers under 18.

Currently, about 11,120 adult members (out of an adult membership of about 13,600) equivalent to 31% of the membership of USA Fencing are eligible to vote in Board elections. Based on the track record at Board elections, less than 15% of eligible members actually cast their votes meaning that about 4% of the total membership decides Board elections. A small number of members call the shots for everyone else.

Note: We provide you with a detailed breakdown of current USA Fencing membership later in this article.

the unhappy history

There is a long, unhappy history of issues concerning USA Fencing’s minor-aged fencers and their families that are a direct result of their lack of voice in the organization.

The issues we highlight demonstrate the risks for fencing families if they do not have enough strong voices on the Board advocating for their interests. The risks are not confined to just the organizational indifference, the risks include actions from different constituencies within USA Fencing who may have competing or conflicting interests with those of fencing families as evidenced by the effort to eliminate youth fencing at the national level.

There are vocal and insistent minorities who consistently refer to youth fencers as “petri dishes” and parents as “clueless” within their constituency forums, displaying a remarkable lack of respect for fencing families. This hostility towards fencing families is disturbing.

Fencing families should not be treated as “fair game” for condescension, and mocking by other USA Fencing constituencies.

The most recent examples of risk to fencing families involves:

Other operational issues with serious financial implications for fencing families over the years include:

Without Board members pledged to prioritize the interests of fencing families, families will continue to encounter decisions made by USA Fencing leadership that run counter to their best interests.

how many minor-aged fencers are there in usa fencing?

Based on the USA Fencing membership database as of April 27, 2023, USA Fencing has a total membership of 36,171 members across all membership types, both adult and minor aged. The table and chart below make it quite clear that minor-aged fencers at 62% of total membership form the majority of USA Fencing members.

USA Fencing Membership breakdown chart of minor aged and adult fencers

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Minor-aged fencers form 62% of USA Fencing’s total membership and those with Competitive memberships form the single largest member bloc at 30% of total membership followed by those with non-competitive memberships who form 21% of the total membership, and those with Access memberships form 8.5% of total membership. College-aged fencers form 10% of total membership and adult, non-college-aged adult members including coaches and referees form 27% of total membership.

Chart of Fencers by age and Membership Type

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Fencing families need more representation and voice

Minor-aged fencers form a substantial majority of the membership and their families provide a substantial proportion USA Fencing’s revenues, yet they are not accorded the full rights of membership that gives them a voice in the organization, neither are they treated as valued customers.

There are several possibilities to give voice to the interests of minor-aged fencers:

  1. Give every minor-aged fencer a vote in Board elections that can be exercised on their behalf by a parent or legal guardian

    This will give about 14,000 fencing families the right to vote in Board elections if that right is given only to those membership types that carry voting rights for the equivalent adult membership.

    Due to a lack of awareness on the part of parents that they must be Access members in order to vote, parents have been minor participants in Board elections. We estimate based on USA Fencing’s current membership database that parents make up less than 800 out of 11,000 plus adult members eligible to vote. This must change.

    Parents should not be asked to pay a premium in the form of an Access membership in order to cast a vote representing their fencer’s interests.

    We believe that giving every eligible minor-aged fencer a vote exercisable by their parent or guardian is the fairest and most principled option as it places fencing families on equal footing with other voting members in USA Fencing. And it gives fencing families a rightful voice in who gets on the Board and looks out for their interests.

  2. Enshrine a Minor-Aged Fencers Committee as a Principal Committee of the Board

    The Principal Committee’s purpose will be to make recommendations to the Board and to review proposals before the Board on matters that affect the interests and well-being of minor-aged fencers as a result of proposed strategic, policy-related and operational decisions of USA Fencing.

    Committee members must include parents and coaches as well as representatives from the Tournament Committee, Referee Commission, National Office and the Board. Parents on the committee should be representative of the various age groups and membership types and should also include at least one parent with a fencer on the cadet or junior travelling team.

  3. reinstate town hall meetings and put them online

    The town hall meetings at NACs orchestrated by Donald Alperstein sadly came to end due to the pandemic. These town hall meetings between parents, the Board and National Office should continue online.

    An online forum is logistically easier for parents and will garner better attendance than the NAC forums which by their nature limited who could attend.

What can parents do now to get their voices heard

Every parent with Access membership acquired on or before February 1, 2023 should cast their vote in the Board elections. If the estimated 800 parents cast a vote, they will have a strong influence on the election.

Remember that elected Board members are likely to be the most responsive to the needs and interests of members who elected them to office.

There are candidates in this Board election who will be strong and effective advocates for the interests of fencing families. We must give them our votes!