Jeremy69A, on 2017-January-26, 11:58, said:
The School Uniform regulations at the place I used to work had significant detail and, of course, students could have a lot of fun with phrases like "logos on outdoor coats or jackets must not be bigger than the size of two postage stamps" Any idea how big a stamp from the Pitcairn Islands is? Much of this was resolved by adding one line that said "or any other item deemed unsuitable by the headteacher" Perhaps the time has come for a simple, brief, addition to the Blue Book?
You seem to be defending shoddy regulations. As Longfellow wrote: "It takes less time to do a thing right than to explain why you did it wrong." I believe the world's smallest stamp measures 8 mm by 9.55 mm or .315 inches by .376 inches. It was issued by Bolivar, a province of Columbia, in 1863 and is called the Bolivar 10c green. Why school uniform regulations should deliberately be ambiguous by referring to postage stamps is anybody's guess. Perhaps the phrase "logos on outdoor coats or jackets must not be bigger than 20 mm x 10 mm" which is shorter and clearer is not readily understandable to the mathematically challenged.
In today's world, social media will peruse and criticise the regulations and their implementation for all sports, and we know that bridge is a sport, don't we? This is, in my opinion, healthy for the game and has led to beneficial change in sports such as cricket, tennis and football where poor regulations and poor refereeing are rightly pilloried or referees demoted. And yes, the minutes of the L&E and the decisions of ACs will be scrutinised by forums such as this. Strange how the L&E actually encourages this scrutiny by publishing booklets with comments on all the AC decisions every year, even making a big effort to catch up on missing years recently. I think you should be looking forward to the meeeting, and reacting to the comments of top players on both regulations and decisions.
And I was not aware that the L&E was struggling to find volunteers. I thought there were elections most years.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar