I think a committee is a good attempt at fixing a real defect in the business, but here's my problems with having a committee in charge of naming, defining, and adding new morphs into "the mix." Just my opinions here . . .
First, if I produce a new morph by finding that special wild caught specimen, and I take the time to bring out something that no one else has yet found, you better believe that I want to name that morph myself. Not only do I want to have the satisfaction of creatively naming a line of snakes that I produced, but I would want to make certain that people thought of me and my business when they thought of (fill in the blank). No committee ought to be able to overrule what I think my newly discovered morph looks like, and if the committee doesn't overrule, but simply rubber stamps whatever the breeder chooses, what good does it serve? If we don't think that the naming of a color morph can be a sticky subject to a breeder, read Rich's description of how the lavender/mocha fiasco panned out! Rich did adopt the lavender name (because they truly are lavender as adults), but it bothered him somewhat to change the name of the cultivar HE FOUND!
Second, I think a committee determining what makes a morph *true* in a snake is unneccessary. The reason I say this is because I think most people who have studied up on corns very much can see for themselves what the generalized *standards* are for each morph. Yes, I know that there are pet shops and breeders dishonest enough to advertize "rocket red sunburst motley-ish corn hatchlings" for only 59.99 each, but the informed buyer will not even pause at such an offer. The uninformed? Well, would they know enough to study the committee's guidelines anyway? If a committee did establish guidlines (I'm still not convinced you get all of THEM to agree on what an okeetee really is), this would still not stop disreputable breeders and pet shops from doing what they do now, and the uniformed would still line up to take all those normals, amels, anerys, and snows home for two to three times what they were worth.
Third, It seems to me that a committee would also be unneccessary to the recognition of new morphs in the business. Quite frankly, if Rich Z., Don Soderberg, Kathy Love, or a few others tell me they have something new, I believe it because of their reputation. If anyone else says they have developed some that no one else has (include those three mentioned above), I am COMPLETELY suspicious and not very likely to buy anything from them. No committee proclaimation is going to change that for me.
Breeding cornsnakes is like being in the pharmecuetical business. You work really hard on research and development, unveil your new find to your customers and collegues, and then sell as many as you can, for as much as you can, as soon as you can! You do this because you know that your time for having exclusive rights to your product is limited (the patent runs out on new drugs, and previous customers of a breeder become his/her competitors three years later when their purchases are then producing). Also, both industries have to be ever on guard for the knockoff wannabe generics!
Maybe it shouldn't be this way, but it seems to me that it will continue as long as: a) cornsnakes continue to produce an unbelieveable array of color and pattern possibilities and b) disreputable people try to cash in on the hard work of others and take advantage of the ill-informed.
My two cents' worth