Originally Posted by
Daryl DeArman
Interesting take, and a reasonable person could read it that way.
However, another reasonable person could read "may" to mean "being permitted/allowed", not to mean "optional or discretional".
The use of "if any" is there because if no breach was found, no penalties would apply. Conditional, not discretionary.
We can not/should not allow the circumstances where a car found to be non-compliant for any reason is permitted to have a finishing position ahead of any car that was not found to be non-compliant. There should be no "get it fixed for next time" on violations found AFTER the completion of a given competition. Easy, simple, non-politcal, non-discretionary.
In the GCR, "may" means "may", and "shall" means "shall". See section 1.2.3.A, relevant passage highlighted.
1.2.3. Interpreting and Applying the GCR
A. Interpreting the GCR shall not be strained or tortured and applying the GCR shall be logical, remembering
that the GCR cannot specifically cover all possible situations. Words such as “shall” or “shall
not”, “will” or “will not”, “can not”, “may not”, “are” or “must” are mandatory; and words such as
“may” and “should” are permissive.
Stewards work with a set of penalty guidelines. They are available for all to read in the File Cabinet on scca.com, under Road Racing Stewards Material.
The guidelines set out a set of recommended penalties for common infractions, including compliance. Note that they are guidelines, not rules. Stewards may increase or decrease the penalty according to circumstances. I have done as little as a logbook entry for a compliance issue, again according to circumstances.
That said, the guideline penalty is the normal expected action. A few years ago, we tracked all penalties during a season. 80% followed the guidelines; lesser/greater penalties accounted for about 10% each.
At a Majors/Super Tour, I would expect a non-compliance to attract a move-behind-compliant cars.
This, of course, is entirely separate from the question of whether the rule under discussion was properly stated.