| Bioguy, that's a different concern than the person who raised this initially. These exceptions are going to be rare. In the case of a repair person, we may not even know in advance the name of the person dispatched, so the Area Host may need to give a "blank check" exception to whoever Epilog sends out. So I'm hesitant to want to add more required procedures around this. The real question in my mind is that if the Area Host is asked why X person is using a tool without being a member listed on the Wiki, the Area Host can say "Oh, that's the master blacksmith who was teaching a class." or "Yeah, that was the guy from Inventables who was installing limit switches on the ShapeOko." Also, member tool usage today has virtually no traceability. Having a list of authorized users does us little good in determining who broke X tool. There is value in listing authorizations on the wiki, such that any member can check to see if the person using the tool is authorized. But in the case of an exception, it should be very clear anyway, e.g. a class advertised on the calendar, or the person is clearly servicing the tool. --[[User:Rdpierce|Rdpierce]] ([[User talk:Rdpierce|talk]]) 00:26, 22 February 2015 (CST) | | Bioguy, that's a different concern than the person who raised this initially. These exceptions are going to be rare. In the case of a repair person, we may not even know in advance the name of the person dispatched, so the Area Host may need to give a "blank check" exception to whoever Epilog sends out. So I'm hesitant to want to add more required procedures around this. The real question in my mind is that if the Area Host is asked why X person is using a tool without being a member listed on the Wiki, the Area Host can say "Oh, that's the master blacksmith who was teaching a class." or "Yeah, that was the guy from Inventables who was installing limit switches on the ShapeOko." Also, member tool usage today has virtually no traceability. Having a list of authorized users does us little good in determining who broke X tool. There is value in listing authorizations on the wiki, such that any member can check to see if the person using the tool is authorized. But in the case of an exception, it should be very clear anyway, e.g. a class advertised on the calendar, or the person is clearly servicing the tool. --[[User:Rdpierce|Rdpierce]] ([[User talk:Rdpierce|talk]]) 00:26, 22 February 2015 (CST) |