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Has Anyone Heard From The APS About The Current Boston Judging Fiaso And Comments On S C F?

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Pillar Of The Community
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Posted 06/15/2026   3:43 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this topic Add Parcelpostguy to your friends list Get a Link to this Message
My guess if we were still in the Scott English APS era, we would have heard from the APS Executive Director by now regarding the SCF Topic: https://goscf.com/t/91432 .

Are they even aware of the conversation here (there)?

It would be sad if all we heard was the sound of a broom and the slap of a rug hitting the floor regarding Boston 2026.

Edit: Made two letters capital as is proper in the title.
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Edited by Parcelpostguy - 06/15/2026 3:46 pm

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Posted 06/15/2026   6:12 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Parcelpostguy to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply




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Bedrock Of The Community
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Posted 06/15/2026   6:27 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add revcollector to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
I suggest that no one should hold their breath while waiting. It's going to take some serious shaking up of the powers that be to even get a pretense of information.
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Pillar Of The Community
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Posted 06/15/2026   7:06 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Parcelpostguy to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
The APS should have some road map to an answer since odd judging issues have been dealt with previously per Ken.


Quote:
Ken Lawrence

Bad judging history

I no longer have access to the confidential minutes of my time on the APS Board of Directors, but I recall the furor after an APS StampShow jury chaired by Charles Verge gave exhibits by Verge's friend and colleague Ron Brigham both the Champion of Champions Award and the StampShow Grand.
Janet Klug was so angry that she proposed and the Board adopted strict rules that forbade APS certified judges from scoring or voting on exhibits in which they had been involved, requiring them to declare any such ties to exhibitors, requiring them to recuse themselves, and penalizing any certified judge who was found to be in violation.
If those rules are still in effect, that might give APS additional authority to investigate and take action against Boston 2026 violators.
Besides the controversy over the Grand Prix National, I'm told that the Boston jury reduced the scores and awards of several exhibits (Large Gold down to Gold, etc.)
When I was an FIP judge, that was all but forbidden. Whenever a scoring team reported a score lower than an exhibit had received previously, the team was compelled to justify it to the presidium, and the presidium had to agree.
Reasons might be that the previous score was a mistake, shown by specific evidence, or the exhibitor might have changed the exhibit in a way that diminished it. But the presidium had to be convinced, and seldom was convinced. I wonder whether that rule remains in effect.
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Bedrock Of The Community
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Posted 06/15/2026   7:15 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add revcollector to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Rules only work when someone in power enforces them. I am not convinced at this moment that this will happen. I hope it does.
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Pillar Of The Community
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Posted 06/16/2026   07:21 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add angore to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
I am not sure Scott English would actually be doing anything different at this point other than politically oriented public comments.

From what I read, there is no fixing FIP but I am sure those high end exhibiting seeking glory want FIP's prestige.
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Al
Edited by angore - 06/16/2026 07:24 am
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Posted 06/16/2026   08:49 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add revcollector to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Apparently you did not see the exhibits in question. They need no one to give them prestige, they had it all by themselves. FIP would be the ones getting prestige by admitting they are biased at best or crooked at worst.
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Posted 06/16/2026   09:44 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add gvol21 to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
I appreciate Scott Trepel's comments on Frajola's board; his threatening to resign his APS membership should hopefully get their behinds in to gear on this one.

As others have said, APS leadership needs to move quickly on this. Don't let it fester as they're doing right now.
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Posted 06/16/2026   3:46 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add ScottEnglish to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
I am not sure Scott English would actually be doing anything different at this point other than politically oriented public comments.


I'm not an APS public figure anymore, just a life member. There's no need for me to catch your speculative strays, Al.

You're not sure, so maybe sit it out. That's the problem with some of these boards. People with a grain of knowledge turn it into expertise.

I was committed to being transparent, and I was to a fault. If you or anyone else didn't like the answers, I can't help you.

To the point, I have no knowledge of what happened, other than what I have read. My guess is that it's not as black-and-white as it seems, but I wouldn't stake my life on predicting an outcome.

It's been 11 months since I was Executive Director of the APS. I went to a little MSDA stamp show last week in Wisconsin. It was good to catch up with folks again, and I heard good things about Boston otherwise.

Best to everyone.
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Posted Yesterday   10:22 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Parcelpostguy to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
First, foremost and much to my surprise, I must commend the APS for taking steps such that I could post this--

After receiving the latest Newsletter regarding Boston 2026 in which a request for Boston 2026 stories was made (again), I sent in the following:


Quote:
Tue, Jun 16, 9:51 AM

Hello,

My story involves:

Please do a story on the fraudulent judging which occurred at Boston 2026. That is far more important and informational than the fluff and puff pieces you keep sending out. How was our APS President involved and why did the APS not stop the debacle?

Dan


When I checked my email I found:


Quote:
1:30 pm [6-18-2026]
Good morning Dan,

Thank you for your patience. Yesterday afternoon, our president issued the following statement:

https://stamps.org/news/boston-gran...-action-plan

Stay well,

Susanna


At the link mentioned, one will find:


Quote:
Boston Grand Prix National Award – Response and Action Plan
Message from the APS President

To our APS Community:

I would like to address as President of the APS some of the controversy regarding the judging of exhibits which has been a topic of discussion across the hobby since the end of the Boston 2026 World Expo.

But rather than just discussing details of what may or may not have occurred, I will speak about a path forward for the APS.

The essence of the controversy was that only one US exhibit was nominated for the Grand Prix National. While it is not unprecedented for there to be only one nominee, it was certainly unexpected. Many of the actions I will outline will be brought before the APS Board. Also, and very importantly, Boston 2026 was a tremendous success on many levels.

Unfortunately, a single event has caused distress for the many who had worked for years, some for more than 10 years, leaving them with a sense of diminished accomplishment. That is very unfortunate and undeserved. None of this reflects on the individual exhibiting results and awards. If you exhibited at Boston, your results are fair and appropriate. There is no correlation to be drawn from the Grand Prix National situation to other judging.



The Background

The exhibition was held under 'Fédération International de Philatélie' (FIP) rules, and was managed by the Boston 2026 show committee, which was given its "franchise" over a decade ago by the APS. Consequently, the APS did not have direct control over the show, with Boston FIP jury procedures contractually agreed to between the parties several years ago.

The exhibition had nearly 700 exhibits and a judging corps of 43. The actual detailed judging was divided by exhibit class and assigned to small-sized teams of judges.

The Grand Prix National (GPN) is awarded to those exhibits focused on the philately of the host country, in this case, the United States. These exhibits were judged by a team that was composed of 4 judges including the Jury President. This team would then make its recommendation(s) for the GPN, which would be brought before the full Jury Presidium (President, VPs, and secretary) who could then follow through on it or send it back for reconsideration.

Somewhat unusually, but not without precedent, this team submitted a single exhibit which in their collective judgement was the best candidate for GPN as sole nominee for consideration. Had there been additional nominees, this would have been put to a vote of the entire jury of 43. With only a single nominee no vote was taken by the entire jury beyond that nominee. Herein lies the controversy: there were three exhibits potentially eligible for the GPN with scores of 97, and additional possible candidates that scored 96 points. Therefore, the consternation that has ensued is not without reason.



What happened in Boston can be improved

In retrospect, the National Team's opinion that there was a single outstanding candidate above and beyond the others was presented to the entire jury. Based on numerical scores alone there were several extraordinary exhibits with equal ranking which deserved consideration.

There has been the suggestion that the result was "rigged." This assertion is unfounded. The outcome was ultimately a result of the initial nomination by the GPN team, which was unchallenged by the jury president, who given his extensive prior experience would normally ask the GPN team to reconsider their nominations. Based on the outcome this did not occur. The failure to act, given the presence of several apparently equally qualified exhibits is the source of concern.

The APS had no standing in final jury selection, scheduling, process, and team composition as set forth in a series of signed agreements entered into with the FIP over a 10-year period.

The Boston jury cannot revisit its decisions. The APS cannot hold an "inquest" into the jury's deliberations. These are subject to FIP confidentiality rules. The violation of jury confidentiality would set a very difficult precedent for future juries. Juries need to operate with openness and frankness without details being shared. The fundamental issue is that jury leadership did not properly exercise oversight. There never should have been any allegation of bias.



Moving Forward

What occurred in Boston cannot recur. The APS must evaluate the causes, and assert fuller representation in the process going forward.

Shortly after the conclusion of Boston 2026, the President of the jury was asked to resign from any official role representing the APS.

For 100 years, the APS as the U.S. national federation for philately delegated its administration of international shows to ad hoc specially formed committees. As a result, the APS lacked direct control and was constrained in its actions by this relationship. This structure is virtually unique worldwide and will be re-evaluated. For future shows, the APS will be looking to acquire greater direct oversight. The reputation of the APS is paramount. The APS needs greater control in FIP show oversight than it has had to date.

The APS's current relationship with the FIP leaves the society at a strategic disadvantage. The APS currently has no representation on the FIP Board, and the APS's cohort of FIP accredited jurors has contracted markedly. Reestablishing influence within the FIP requires sustained effort, particularly given the multi-year nomination, qualification, and development cycles involved.

The APS is actively working to place qualified candidates into positions that will strengthen its future representation and influence. At Boston 2026, the APS made meaningful progress and laid a foundation for continued progress in the years ahead.

Nevertheless, our recent experience with the FIP at the show reinforces ongoing concerns. We are seeking a positive and productive relationship with the FIP going forward, as the current one can be improved.

APS leadership term limits are already in place. There are currently 'soft' judging term limits in place which need to be rethought and more formally codified. The FIP has also recently removed all of its published references to age limits from their Jury Guidelines.

Exhibiting makeup and evaluation have continued to evolve, with techniques and expectations changing more rapidly than the regulatory framework. I am appointing an independent committee to report directly to me as a sounding board. By recruiting from outside traditional sources, I hope to bring a diversity of viewpoints.

Again, thank you for your valued input.



Respectfully,

Mark Banchik

APS President


Edited to remove a useless inserted system number from the first email.
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Edited by Parcelpostguy - Yesterday 10:24 pm
Bedrock Of The Community
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Posted Today  10 Hrs 20 Min ago  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add rogdcam to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
There has been the suggestion that the result was "rigged." This assertion is unfounded.


It is "unfounded" based upon what information? How weak.
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Posted Today  5 Hrs 7 Min ago  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add drkohler to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
At the link mentioned, one will find: .. 100 lines of word salad.

...If you exhibited at Boston, your results are fair and appropriate...

I met just a few exhibitors who would strongly disagree - but who am I to judge (pun intended)..
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Edited by drkohler - Today 5 Hrs 4 Min ago
Pillar Of The Community
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Posted Today  3 Hrs 35 Min ago  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add angore to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
"Juries need to operate with openness and frankness without details being shared."

Openness and not sharing details seems to be a contradiction in terms.

As I read it, McCann (?) was asked to resign as APS rep to FIP and APS will create a committee to study it.
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Al
Edited by angore - Today 3 Hrs 31 Min ago
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Posted Today  1 Hr 32 Min ago  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Germania to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Somewhat unusually, but not without precedent, this team submitted a single exhibit which in their collective judgement was the best candidate for GPN as sole nominee for consideration.



Quote:
While it is not unprecedented for there to be only one nominee, it was certainly unexpected.


Does anyone know of previous FIP shows where only one exhibit was the sole nominee? If there are, then some procedural changes need to be considered. If not, well ...
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Bedrock Of The Community
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Posted Today  1 Hr 9 Min ago  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add revcollector to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
The problem is not whether it has happened before, the problem is that there were at least two other exhibits which clearly met the specific requirements needed and were ignored. That smacks of collusion between the judges (not involving the winner, who I am sure had no idea this was happening). That is the problem, and since they are unlikely to say a word about this, I have doubts as to whether we will ever really know the whole story.
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Posted Today  1 Hr 8 Min ago  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add txstamp to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
FIP shows where only one exhibit was the sole nominee?


and also where there were other exhibits scoring at least 96 or better.

From what I think I understand, one nominee would be appropriate if no other exhibit scored 96 or better, which was not the case here.
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