FFA Congress - update 6 July 2017
Football
Federation Australia issued this update on Thursday,
6 July 2017. Note the meeting is now expected in August 2017.
Football
Federation Australia (FFA) will welcome a FIFA/AFC mission to Australia in an effort to end an impasse over expansion of the sport’s
membership (Congress).
All
stakeholders in Australian football, including the FFA, agree with FIFA and the
AFC that FFA’s Congress should be expanded to include more members.
However the 10 current Congress members, who are the only stakeholders entitled
to a vote to change its membership, are divided over the make-up of a new
Congress.
The
FIFA/AFC offer to send a mission follows a decision by FIFA’s Member Associations
Committee that a two-stage expansion process proposed by FFA “does not reflect
an appropriate representation of all stakeholders”.
The FFA
proposal, which evolved over months of discussion with stakeholders and is
supported by 80 percent of the Congress members, would have immediately tripled
the representation of Hyundai A-League clubs and included a representative of
Professional Footballer’s Australia (PFA) for the first time.
The
second stage, following a formal consultation process, envisaged further
expansion based on the agreement of stakeholders. This second phase
expansion would have contemplated further special interest groups as well as
any rebalancing of A-League and Member Federation votes.
The
second stage was also proposed to have commenced after agreement of a new
operating model for the A-League, and would have taken this into account in the
further expansion and rebalancing of the Congress. This second-phase would have
been overseen by an FFA task force including representatives of Member
Federations, A-League Clubs and PFA. This proposal was not supported by the
Hyundai A-League clubs, Football NSW or PFA.
FFA’s
current Congress comprises one representative from each of the nine member
federations who represent the game in their region and a Hyundai A-League
representative who is nominated by a majority of the 10 Hyundai A-League
clubs. The Congress has the power to elect the FFA’s independent Board
and amend FFA’s constitution.
Under the
constitution, in order to expand, 75 percent of voting members must agree to a
resolution for it to be passed. The FFA proposal rejected by the FIFA
Member Associations Committee was supported by 80 percent of the voting members
and therefore would have been successfully adopted at an Extraordinary General
Meeting of the Congress.
The FIFA
Member Associations Committee is made up of 14 members from Argentina, Aruba,
Bahamas, France, Iceland, Madagascar, New Caledonia, North Korea, Oman, Samoa,
Sierra Leone, Switzerland, Turkey, Turks and Caicos Islands.
“We look
forward to working with FIFA and AFC representatives over the coming weeks,”
said FFA Chairman Steven Lowy AM. “As I said in March, FFA wants to see
an expanded Congress for Australia that reflects the way the game is evolving
in this country but also protects and promotes the interests of the whole of
the game.
“Our
Congress members have differing views on how that should happen so we will
continue to work with all parties to find a solution by the end of November.”
Mr Lowy
said that the Members Association Committee had advised that it would recommend
the establishment of a so-called “normalisation committee” to intervene
directly if an acceptable expansion of the Congress was not in place by
November 30 this year.