TL;DR
In Arbitrum, governance focused on treasury management and program adjustments. A proposal to deploy 5,000 ETH into yield-generating strategies continues the DAO’s push to reduce idle capital, while recent events highlight the importance of maintaining strong risk frameworks as exposure to DeFi strategies grows. At the same time, proposed changes to the Audit Program aim to attract higher-quality teams by relaxing exclusivity requirements and introducing AI-based security scans for earlier-stage projects.
In ZKsync, the Foundation selected Rally to lead its Institutional Narrative Experiment, while governance infrastructure remains stable following ScopeLift’s takeover of Tally’s operations, ensuring continuity for key interfaces without expected disruptions.
Elsewhere, governance activity continues to evolve across ecosystems: Starknet introduced a new “Minor Upgrade” path to streamline upgrades, Uniswap is undergoing structural and financial consolidation with a renewed Council proposal and updated Foundation financials, and Polygon is exploring changes to validator incentives to improve sustainability and reward distribution.
Active Votes
Starknet: 5 SNF polls
- Which feature would most increase your activity on Starknet in the next 6 months? - ends on April 6 at 16:38 UTC.
- Which of these products would you use on Starknet? - ends on April 6 at 16:39 UTC.
- Are there on-chain activities you do not take part in due to a lack of privacy? - ends on April 6 at 16:40 UTC.
- How do you access or interact with Starknet’s infrastructure? - ends on April 6 at 16:41 UTC.
- How do you participate in Starknet’s staking mechanism? - ends on April 6 at 16:41 UTC.
Arbitrum: 2 Snapshot votes
- AIP: ArbOS 60 Elara - ends on April 2 at 19:45 UTC.
- Updating the Code of Conduct & DAO Procedures to Become Living Documents- ends on April at 18:36 UTC.
Everclear
- Governance Task Force 3.0 - H1 2026 - ends on April 3 at 12:38 UTC.
Lisk
- Test proposal #2: a new voting platform - ends on April 7 at 10:32 UTC.
Arbitrum
Transfer 5,000 ETH and Idle Stablecoins from the Treasury to the Treasury Management Portfolio
Entropy proposed transferring 5,000 ETH and around $150k in idle USDC from the Arbitrum DAO treasury into the Treasury Management Portfolio, aiming to put currently unallocated assets to work. At the moment, nearly 6,000 ETH sits idle, and the proposal argues that deploying a portion of it could improve capital efficiency while maintaining a liquidity buffer.
Based on recent performance, the Treasury Management portfolio has significantly improved its returns, with ETH strategies reaching a ~4.8% 30-day average yield, well above benchmark rates. The proposal estimates that allocating 5,000 ETH could generate roughly 240 ETH annually under current conditions, while also contributing to treasury diversification away from ARB and aligning with broader treasury management practices focused on yield generation and reduced idle capital.
L2BEAT’s Take
Moving idle assets into yield-generating strategies is a natural continuation of the previously approved proposal to consolidate idle funds into the Treasury Management Portfolio, which aimed to reduce capital inefficiency across the DAO. In that sense, deploying a portion of idle ETH follows the same line previously approved by the DAO.
Improvements to the Arbitrum Audit Program
Arbitrum proposed two updates to its Audit Program: the first would replace the strict exclusivity requirement with a more flexible alignment framework, and the second would introduce a pilot program offering AI-based security scans. The changes aim to address friction identified during the program’s first two quarters, particularly around mandatory exclusivity, which has reportedly discouraged some teams from participating or delayed approvals.
Under the new approach, projects may be exempt from exclusivity if they demonstrate meaningful alignment with Arbitrum, such as prioritizing deployments or liquidity on the network. In parallel, the introduction of AI security scans is intended to support earlier-stage teams that are not yet ready for full audits, helping improve code quality and readiness over time. The proposal does not request additional budget and would be implemented following an off-chain vote.
L2BEAT’s Take
Eliminating the strict exclusivity requirement feels like a reasonable step if the goal is to attract better teams that might otherwise stay away. That said, the key question is what “alignment” actually means in practice. If this flexibility is going to work, it should translate into real value for this ecosystem. Otherwise, there is a risk of funding work that ultimately benefits other ecosystems instead of Arbitrum.
On the AI scans side, this looks like a helpful addition, especially for earlier-stage teams that are not quite ready for a full audit yet. As long as it is treated as a stepping stone and not a replacement for a full audit, it could help improve the overall quality of projects entering the program over time.
ATMC Update: Resolv Exploit and Treasury Exposure
Entropy shared an update following the recent Resolv exploit, confirming that the Arbitrum DAO Treasury has no exposure to the incident and did not incur any losses. The exploit involved the unauthorized minting of around 80M unbacked USR tokens, leading to sharp depegs across related assets and impacting several DeFi protocols across multiple chains.
While some Arbitrum-based protocols were indirectly affected, the DAO’s positions remained largely insulated. A ~$1M USDC position managed by kpk in Fluid was successfully exited without losses, and other potential exposure points (e.g., Morpho, Euler) either had no DAO allocation or were already limited through caps and risk controls. The ATMC stated that it will continue to monitor the situation as recovery efforts for affected assets and protocols evolve.
March 2026 Security Council Election: Compliance Check
Arbitrum has entered the Compliance Check phase of its March 2026 Security Council elections, running from March 29 to April 12. During this stage, the Arbitrum Foundation reviews the 12 qualified candidates to ensure they meet legal, constitutional, and service agreement requirements.
Candidates who successfully pass this phase will move on to the final Member Election stage, scheduled to begin on April 12.
ZKsync
ZKsync Selects Rally for Institutional Narrative Program
The ZKsync Foundation selected Rally as the winner of RFP 3 under its Community Activation Program, tasking the team with running an 8-week “Institutional Narrative Experiment” funded with 833,000 ZK. The initiative aims to strengthen ZKsync’s positioning within the Ethereum ecosystem through coordinated, high-quality content.
The program will be executed in three waves, covering institutional positioning, Prividium education, and real-world institutional use cases. Funding will be distributed in two tranches, with progress evaluated through mid-term and final reports, alongside predefined KPIs and quality controls.
ScopeLift to Take Over Tally Operations
Following Tally’s announcement that it will wind down operations, ScopeLift has reached an agreement to take over and operate Tally’s full stack moving forward, with a rebrand expected. The transition is being coordinated with the ZKsync Governance Team to ensure continuity for key governance infrastructure, including the vote.zknation.io interface and the Staking Pilot program.
According to the update, no disruptions are expected during the handover, with ScopeLift stepping in to maintain and support the existing systems while the transition and rebranding process unfolds.
Uniswap
Uniswap Council: Season 4 Report
The Uniswap Council shared its Season 4 report, highlighting continued expansion of Uniswap v3 across multiple chains, though at a slower pace as most major ecosystems have already been covered. The DAO also moved toward a more selective approach to incentives, reflecting mixed results and changing market conditions.
The report also points to growing governance complexity from multi-chain operations and ongoing discussions around quorum, voter fatigue, and scalability. Meanwhile, remaining funds have been consolidated under the new DUNI structure, with the UC stepping back from its previous operational role.
Uniswap Council (UC): Season 5 Renewal
A proposal was submitted to renew the Uniswap Council (UC) for Season 5, redefining its role as a DAO-elected operational layer focused on executing governance decisions, coordinating service providers, and maintaining accountability across DAO activities. The proposal reflects a shift toward a more structured and formalized setup, including the UC’s incorporation as a legal entity and closer coordination with the DUNI for treasury and payments.
Season 5 would extend the Council’s term to 12 months with a total budget request of $955k in UNI, covering operations, a grant graduation pipeline, and a new burn bounty program. The proposal also signals a stronger focus on treasury management strategies and UNI burn mechanisms, positioning the UC as a more active operational and coordination hub within the evolving Uniswap governance landscape.
Uniswap Foundation: Summary FY’2025 Financials
The Uniswap Foundation released its unaudited financial summary for FY2025, outlining its financial position prior to the implementation of the UNIfication governance proposal. The report highlights a year of ecosystem expansion, including the launches of Uniswap v4 and Unichain, as well as continued growth in developer activity.
As of December 31, 2025, the Foundation held approximately $85.8M in assets, including $49.9M in USD and stablecoins, 15.1M UNI, and 240 ETH. A total of $106.2M has been allocated toward grants, with an expected operational runway extending into early 2027. The report also reflects ongoing efforts to scale ecosystem support through grants, research, and infrastructure, while adapting to structural changes introduced through recent governance decisions.
Starknet
Starknet Introduces Minor Upgrade Path
Starknet updated its governance framework by introducing a new “Minor Upgrade” path alongside the existing Major and Emergency flows. The goal is to make upgrade processes more predictable while allowing faster iteration for smaller changes, without requiring Security Council involvement.
Under the new structure, Major upgrades continue to follow a longer review process with full oversight, while Minor upgrades move through a shorter cycle with parallel SNIP submission and a reduced freeze period. Emergency upgrades remain reserved for critical fixes, bypassing voting but requiring post-mortem reporting. Overall, the update formalizes clearer upgrade pathways, balancing speed with governance transparency.
RFC: Upgradeable Beacon Proxies for Shared Interfaces
Ericnordelo has created an RFC that explores introducing a beacon proxy standard in Starknet to coordinate upgrades across multiple contracts that share the same interface, such as pools, vaults, or user accounts. The idea is to allow many contracts to switch to a new implementation simultaneously, avoiding the need for individual upgrades or custom orchestration.
The proposal outlines a narrow, Starknet-specific approach, including a shared beacon contract that manages implementation updates and optional extensions such as beacon_call to support more flexible routing. While this could improve developer experience and standardization, it also introduces trade-offs, such as increased risk from shared upgrades and limitations due to Starknet’s lack of fallback functions.
Polygon
PIP-85: Priority Fee Distribution Adjustment
Polygon Labs members created a proposal to modify the PIP-65 priority fee distribution to better balance rewards among validators and, for the first time, to include delegators in fee sharing. The proposal suggests allocating 50% of the validator fee pool to stakers via periodic distributions, while adjusting the remaining validator rewards to be 75% equally distributed (performance-adjusted) and 25% stake-based.
The changes are intended to address growing disparities in validator earnings and improve overall sustainability, especially for smaller operators. By introducing a more balanced reward structure and extending fee participation to delegators, the proposal signals a shift toward a more inclusive fee model within Polygon’s validator ecosystem.
Quiet Corner
Some ecosystems saw no meaningful governance developments this week.
- Everclear
- Optimism
- Wormhole
- Hop
- Lisk
- Scroll
As always, if we missed something important, feel free to reach out. We’re happy to dig deeper.
Upcoming Events
Arbitrum
- Open Discussion of Proposals Governance Call - on 31.03 at 16:00 UTC.
- Improvements to the Arbitrum Audit Program: Open Discussion - on 01.04 at 15:00 UTC.
Scroll
- Weekly DAO & Governance Call - on 01.04 at 14:00 UTC.
- Scroll DAO Office Hours - on 03.04 at 14:00 UTC.
Hop
- Hop Community Call - on 01.04 at 17:00 UTC.
Discuss with L2BEAT
Join us every Friday at 3 pm UTC for our weekly Governance Office Hours to discuss proposals, ecosystem direction, and high-level governance strategy.
