Rangerly and Unrangerly Behavior: Difference between revisions

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This section covers the HOW of rangering.
This section covers key points in the HOW of rangering.


== Authority ==
== Authority ==

Revision as of 19:28, 2 May 2017

This section covers key points in the HOW of rangering.

Authority

How much authority do Rangers have?

Absolutely none—other than any authority which a participant chooses to give us at that particular time.

Or, more accurately, no more than any other participant at Firefly.

One of the inherent contradictions to being a Ranger is that we have no inherent authority. We make an effort not to be authority figures, but people WILL look to us as authority figures, and there are rare times in which we DO need to act as authority figures.

The rare times in which Rangers act as authority figures are:

  1. Burn perimeter: We help enforce the perimeter that is set by the Fire Safety Team
  2. In an emergency: We help create a perimeter to ensure that First Aid staff can do their job sufficiently.
  3. The OOD is authorized to act on behalf of the Firefly Board in certain limited conditions having to do with participant and event safety.

That is it.

In those cases, Rangers are just acting as sober, identifiable assistance to other teams: to Fire Safety and First Aid, or on behalf of the Firefly Board. Often, we end up being the communicators of rules that have been determined by the community and the Board, but even then we rarely dictating or enforce. We strive to help hold the Community and its values together.

Any situation where someone is asking you to make a judgment call or enforce a rule, you can kick it sideways. You can pass it to Khaki, who will pass it to whoever needs to be involved.

Non-confrontational, Non-authoritarian Methods

So what do we do if we DON’T have authority?

  • Focus is on participants: It’s not about us
  • We use non-confrontational methods
  • We mediate, influence, and persuade rather than dictate, enforce or dominate
  • Help participants help themselves
  • We provide good information
  • Walk away when needed

Social capital

What is social capital?

We use the term “social capital” to describe the trust and confidence that participants, staff, law enforcement, and medical personnel have in the Rangers: our “street cred.”

Social capital is our sole source of authority; it is what we run on. Without the confidence of participants and staff, we would be unable to function effectively.

Rangering involves building and using social capital appropriately.

Reputation, Credibility and Effectiveness

By helping participants in trouble, by treating everyone with respect, and by acting professionally and with integrity, we have, over time, built up a lot of social capital with participants and staff.

Because of the Rangers’ social capital:

  • People will listen to you in way that they would not listen to a random participant offering advice or asking them to change their behavior.
  • Law enforcement, medical, and other departments will often seek your assistance and pay attention to your input.
  • When Rangers are perceived as helpful, effective, collaborative, professional, and impartial (i.e., high social capital), we will be listened to, taken seriously, and trusted.
  • When Rangers are perceived as authoritarian, uptight, entitled, unprofessional, or incompetent (i.e., low social capital), we will be ignored or resisted.

Adding & subtracting Social capital

Social capital is like a bank account: every good interaction you have with a participant or staff member makes a deposit into our social capital account, and every bad interaction withdraws from it.

Unfortunately, bad interactions with Rangers often make good stories, so participants will tend to tell all their friends when they’ve seen a Ranger acting unprofessional or authoritarian.

When you do good, you make a small deposit in our account; when you do bad, you make a huge withdrawal.

We expect every Ranger to act as an ambassador and an educator, both to participants and to other volunteers. When out in the city or on a call, talk to participants and staff about what we do and why we do it. Let them know that we’re here for them, and show them by your actions that we are a resource they can trust.

Un-Rangerly Behavior

What is Un-Rangerly Behavior?

Both members of the community and fellow Rangers can report incidents of un-Rangerly behavior to any member of the Ranger Council, the Firefly Conduct Committee, or a similar community organization dedicated to the oversight of Ranger behavior.

Un-Rangerly behavior shall include, but is not limited to:

  • Harassment
  • Violence
  • Sexual misconduct
  • Misusing community trust
  • Failing to report an emergency
  • Knowingly neglecting ranger responsibilities
  • Being intoxicated on-duty
  • Failing to keep the privacy of confidential information

Ranger Responses to Un-Rangerly Behavior

The Firefly Ranger Organization takes incidents of un-Rangerly behavior while identifiable as a Ranger (coming on or off shift, while at HQ, anytime you are in costume or wearing a Ranger laminate) very seriously. Ranger Leadership (Khaki, OOD, Ranger Leads) will follow up on any reported incidents. See more in the Ranger Charter.

Results of un-Rangerly behavior

Khaki may choose to remove any Ranger from a shift.

The Ranger Lead & Ranger XO (each) may choose to de-lam a Ranger for the duration of the event. De-lamming a Ranger means that they are no longer considered a Ranger for the duration of the event.

The Ranger Council may vote (after a fair hearing) by majority to remove a Ranger permanently and/or recommend further community action.

A Ranger may also self-recommend consequences for their own un-Rangerly behavior, subject to approval by the Ranger Lead, Ranger XO, or the Ranger Council.

Violations of the Firefly CODE OF CONDUCT

If un-Rangerly behavior also violated the Firefly Code of Conduct, then the Conduct Committee with be consulted, as indicated in the Firefly Code Of Conduct.