By Richard Thurston, 22 June 2007 11:17
NEWS
The only representative organisation for UK telecoms professionals is set to lose its status as an independent body.
The Communications Management Association (CMA) will, pending approval by its members, be swallowed by the British Computer Society (BCS), a much larger organisation which represents UK IT professionals.
The organisations argue the proposal is essential because IT and telecoms technology have converged and so there is no need for two separate user organisations.
If the proposal is passed, it will mean the end of the CMA's 49-year history as an independent organisation.
The CMA grew in popularity, from its establishment in the 1950s until the height of the dot-com boom, as the use of telecommunications rocketed.
But in 2001 its fortunes took a turn for the worse as funding drained from the industry. As a result, its annual exhibition and conference in Brighton collapsed and its membership base shrank rapidly.
Acceptance of the new proposal, which will be presented to members at the CMA's AGM in July, would see the association become a subsidiary of the BCS.
Both organisations would continue to sign members separately - with members of one organisation being granted affiliate membership of the other.
The BCS will establish a communications forum, which will be run by the CMA. The CMA will retain its headquarters in Leatherhead and its chief executive Glenn Powell, but its direction will be driven by a new strategic board.
Richard Thurston writes for ZDNet UK

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1. David G Harrington
'Fraid you've got the tone all wrong, Richard. The key element of our proposed BCS agreement is the retention of our identity as CMA, our freedom of action (especially in regulatory matters) and our continued ability to represent the interests of business users. The proposed "Strategic Board" will be composed of CMA members.
Best wishes,
David Harrington, Leader, Reg Affairs, CMA