Path to 86
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This page describes how someone ends up on the 86 page - the stages of community process that lead to a permanent ban from Noisebridge. |
Overview
The 86 page lists people who are no longer welcome at Noisebridge. Getting added to that page is not arbitrary - it's the result of a community process that balances accountability with opportunities for repair.
The path to 86 is not inevitable. At any point, a person's willingness to acknowledge and repair harm can divert them away from a ban. The 86 is reserved for those who refuse accountability, deny harm, or continue harmful behavior.
The Stages
Stage 1: Incident(s)
Something happens - either a single severe incident or a pattern of behavior that causes observable harm to individuals in the community or to Noisebridge as an organization (or both).
Often, before reaching this stage, the person has already been asked to leave temporarily - and either refused, or returned and repeated the harmful behavior.
Examples of harm include (but are not limited to):
- Physical threats or violence
- Theft or property destruction
- Harassment or intimidation
- Repeated boundary violations after being asked to stop
- Using the space in ways that endanger others
- Sleeping in the space after being told not to
- Bringing banned individuals back into the space
Stage 2: Community Discussion
People who witnessed or were affected talk about it - in Discord (especially bravespace and steward channels), in person at the space, or both. This is where the situation gets contextualized and the harm gets named.
This discussion happens organically among Noisebridge regulars - Members and associate members who are present and paying attention.
Stage 3: Skeptical Inquiry
The community asks hard questions:
- What actually happened?
- What harm occurred, and to whom?
- Has this person been talked to directly?
- Were good-faith communication attempts made?
- Is there a pattern, or is this a one-off?
- Does this warrant a permanent ban or something less?
This skepticism protects against hasty or unfair bans. Adding someone to the 86 page is socially risky - if the community doesn't broadly agree, the result is protracted conflict and an unenforceable ban.
Stage 4: Willingness to Repair (The Off-Ramp)
At any point in this process, a person's willingness to acknowledge and repair harm generally diverts them away from the 86.
This is the crucial off-ramp. People who:
- Acknowledge the harm they caused
- Take responsibility without deflecting
- Make genuine efforts to repair relationships
- Change their behavior
...are unlikely to end up on the 86 page. The community generally wants to keep people in, not push them out.
The path toward banning is reserved for those who refuse this accountability.
Stage 5: Rough Consensus Emerges
If repair isn't happening, a shared sense develops through ongoing discussion that the person should be 86'd.
This isn't a formal vote - it's a convergence of perspective among regulars who've been paying attention. We call this "lowercase-c consensus" - a genuine agreement that emerges organically rather than through a formal process.
The timeframe varies enormously:
- Severe incidents (violence, weapons, clear danger) may result in near-immediate consensus
- Pattern-based cases may take months or years of observation and complex social unpacking
Stage 6: The Edit
Someone who feels confident (typically a steward-level contributor - longer-term members, board members, or proven-trustworthy regulars) adds the person to the 86 page.
Documentation on the page is intentionally minimal - enough to identify the person and convey the general nature of the issue, but not so detailed as to endanger victims or create fodder for conflict.
Stage 7: Enforcement
The community treats the 86 as legitimate and enforces it. Because the ban emerged from genuine community agreement, people trust it:
"Oh, you were 86'd? Yeah, you can't come back. Sorry."
This trust is the foundation of the system.
Getting Off the 86 Page
If you've been 86'd and want to return to Noisebridge, see the mediation request process on the 86 page.
The short version: email mediation-request@noisebridge.net expressing willingness to acknowledge what went wrong and find a pathway back. If a member is willing to mediate, they'll contact you.
See Also
- 86 - The list of banned individuals
- Conflict Resolution - Overview of how we handle conflicts
- Mediation - The mediation process
- Ask To Disengage - De-escalating conflicts before they get to this point
- AskToLeave - Asking someone to leave temporarily