Disbandment of the Rugby Soccer Union’s council is the important thing proposal made by a public session on reforms to the sport’s “dysfunctional” buildings.
The Governance and Illustration Evaluation Group, which was commissioned by the council and consists of a few of its members, has referred to as for the 63-person physique to be dissolved and changed by recreation representatives or a nationwide advisory group in a radical overhaul of the prevailing system.
The council’s present function is to drive coverage and cross rules for the sport, whereas additionally monitoring and overseeing the board on behalf of RFU members.
The overview group believes that disbanding the council – famously described as “57 previous farts” by former England captain Will Carling – would simplify a governance construction that’s “outdated, complicated and inefficient”.
“What I’ve witnessed is a dysfunctional framework, effectively established back in the 19th century, that is clearly unfit for the modern era,” said Ed Warner, an independent member of the review and chair of GB Wheelchair Rugby.
“I have no doubt this will rankle with a number of existing council members but I am hopeful that the logic of this streamlined structure, empowering those within community rugby, will win the hearts and minds of the majority.”
Views from clubs, players, coaches, volunteers and administrators will now be sought from across the game as part of a public consultation running from April 30 to June 30.
A final recommendation will then be made by the review group in the autumn, with the aim of holding a membership vote later in the year. It is hoped the proposals will be implemented before the start of the 2026-27 season.
RFU chief executive Bill Sweeney promised a reform of governance at Twickenham after a surviving a special general meeting last month that was triggered by member unrest at the pay and bonus scandal that erupted in November.