Field Guide

Field Guide — a walkthrough

Live: https://conferencefieldguide.org · Each conference has its own subdomain — Río Texas (riotexas.conferencefieldguide.org) and North Georgia (northgeorgia.conferencefieldguide.org).

Field Guide is a community guide to annual conference. It does three things, in this order of priority: help people understand what conference is and does, let them ask about anything that's unclear, and surface where people stand on what's being decided. It's a multi-conference platform — two conferences are live today, and onboarding another is data, not a fork.

Everything is built from each conference's own public materials — pre-conference reports, session handbooks, the Conference Journal, and the Book of Discipline — and every report carries a citation back to the exact page of the source document. Field Guide isn't affiliated with or published by any annual conference or by The United Methodist Church; it's built by an active UMC pastor as a community resource.

This document explains what's there today, what moderation looks like, and what's possible next.


1. The public experience — understanding conference

Everything below is open to anyone, no account required. Each conference lives at its own subdomain with a top nav; the paths below are relative to it.

Sourced, not asserted. Each conference's handbook or pre-conference report is hosted on the guide, and every report's citation deep-links to the exact page — so a reader can always check the official source for themselves.

Bilingual. An EN/ES toggle switches report and resolution content to Spanish using the conference's own published translations (we never machine-translate), and the menus and labels are bilingual too. Conferences that don't publish in Spanish — like North Georgia — run English-only.


2. The community layer — asking and weighing in

On every body, agenda item, process page, action item, and information report, anyone can take part:

Anyone can contribute. Signed-out contributions are always reviewed before they appear. Signing in — with Google or an email magic-link, no password — lets you build standing in a conference over time, and one sign-in now carries across the whole site and every conference subdomain.


3. Trust — how standing is earned

Standing is per conference, not global. Five tiers:

TierWhoWhat they can do
Visitor / Member (0–1)new or signed-incontribute; everything is reviewed first
Regular (2)earned automaticallycontributions auto-publish (no queue)
Editor (3)appointedalso reviews the moderation queue
Steward (4)appointedalso appoints trust and applies edits

Members reach Regular on their own: when their published contributions are endorsed as helpful, they earn reputation, and at a threshold they're promoted automatically. Editor and Steward are appointed by a steward — judgment, not just volume. The first steward of a conference is granted by hand (pnpm grant-trust <email> <conference> 4); after that it's all in-app.


4. What moderation looks like — the Steward's desk

Editors and Stewards get a Steward's desk (/moderate) in their nav; nobody else sees it, and every action re-checks trust on the server, not just in the UI. It has four sections:

  1. In the queue — every pending question, note, and perspective, with its target and author. One click to Publish (it goes on the guide and the author earns reputation) or Reject.
  2. Proposed edits — suggested changes to the guide's own text, shown as a before/after. Apply writes the new text straight into the guide and credits the author; Reject sets it aside.
  3. Flagged — published items someone reported, with the reasons. Dismiss the flags or Unpublish.
  4. Members & trust (Stewards only) — see each member's reputation and appoint them Editor or Steward.

The whole point: the official spine stays trustworthy because a person decides, while the community does the heavy lifting of surfacing questions and perspectives. Nothing from the public reaches the published guide without a steward's nod, and stewards can act in seconds.


5. A living guide — wiki edit-proposals

The spine isn't read-only. On any page, a signed-in member can "Suggest an edit" — pick a field (a summary, or the full text), edit the current wording in place, and add a note on why. It's always queued (even for Regulars — the canonical text is shared), and a steward sees the before/after diff and applies or rejects it. Over time the guide gets more accurate because the people who know correct it, with a steward in the loop.


6. What's possible from here

The foundation — multi-tenant, role-aware, bilingual, sourced to the public record, with a full contribute→review→publish→edit lifecycle — opens several directions:


Status

Live in production at conferencefieldguide.org, each conference on its own subdomain, with sign-in and moderation active; the old guide.wrootlabs.com now redirects here. New stewards are added with pnpm grant-trust <email> <conference> 4 after they sign in once — from there, stewards appoint others in-app.