
Dear Parliamentarian Vol. 70 December 2001
Answers to your Parliamentary Questions
"Dear Parlimentarian" is written by the author of Parliamentary Procedures Made Simple: The Basics, an 80 minute video that tells how to have better meetings.
Dear Parliamentarian:
I need some information on the following situation at the church I attend.
To give you some background on this situation:
One year ago, an amendment was added to our By-Laws that the chairman of the
deacons could remain as chairman, and as a deacon until we were able to find a permanent
pastor. We had an interim pastor for about 2 years, but he has left and we do not have a
permanent pastor and have not had one for almost 2 years. The amendment that was added was
that this chairman could remain in his position until a permanent pastor was found, but
that this would have to be voted on annually for him to remain as chairman. This time has
arrived and a vote was taken and he was not elected to remain in this position. It was
announced and put in the bulletin for 3 weeks that this vote was going to be taken at the next business meeting. Two weeks ago was this
meeting, and not very many members were in
attendance. But what this chairman had done was to have
a handful of absentee ballots (proxy votes) to be counted. Since our By-Laws DO NOT STATE that proxy votes are allowed,
which he was not aware of, these proxy votes could not be counted. The vote was taken, and
he was not re-elected to remain as chairman. Now he and others seem to be circulating some
kind of petition for people to sign that they want this vote to be reconsidered or
retaken. The only ones who know about this are the members who were not there to vote. My
question is this, Is this legal according to the Robert's Rules of Order? Can a group of
members that do not like the way the vote turned out, and who were not there to vote, and
were informed of this meeting for 3 weeks, somehow or another make a motion to revoke? And
if so, what are the terms that must be met in order for a revoke to be taken. I imagine
that the excuse they are using is that they
did not know that their proxy vote could not be counted. To me, this chairman should have
informed them of this, and if he didn't know, he should have checked on this himself.
There is nothing stated in our by-laws that refers to anything
like this. I have just purchased a
copy of the Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised 10th.
edition, and I cannot seem to find out exactly what I am looking for. I know that this
book refers to a quorum and I understand that
if our by-laws do not state how many should make up a quorum, that a quorum is the members
who were present at the time this vote was taken. I can use any and all information you
can give me on this matter. In your reply, I could use any and all references you could
give me so that I can make everyone aware of this.
Thank you,
Bill Orrock
borrock@erols.com
Dear Bill,
Thank you for giving me all this
information. However, you need to tell me
The Parliamentarian
Dear parliamentarian,
We are a relatively new (2 yrs old) not-for-profit organization, which
functioned harmoniously until recently. Everything
was
The problem is this. We are a small assembly and the board is comprised of 7 members who form a tight voting block. Add to the mix that they'll get 3-5 "allies" in the general assembly
and when we try to overrule the board, they narrowly
win the vote.
Other matters come up for example when the board limits debate to 3 minutes per person without a vote of the assembly (I
realize we need a 2/3 vote but it doesn't
matter to them) or suddenly make statements that a member can't vote unless they pay a 5$ membership fee which is
not referenced in the by-laws or any previous
meeting or has ever come to a vote. I
constantly call them out of order but they know their "block" will out-vote any
dissenter. And at this point many other
members of the assembly are starting to think that I'm just trying to give the board a
hard time. The President is new (September
'01) and is not at all familiar with any rules of order.
Duggan
New York
Dear Duggan,
Try a different technique.
It's called asking questions. Instead
of raising a point of order, since there is so much wrong going on, try instead, "a
point of information." You could rise
and say, "Mr. President, I am puzzled
about something... or I have a question..... Could
you explain......" don't be
confrontational.
By asking pertinent questions you get the rest of the members
thinking. That is very important to win
people over to your side. However, if a
majority is going along with this fascism, perhaps this is not the organization to be a
member of. The other thing you might want to
do is try to become a member of the board and try reason.
You are in a very difficult situation. The only thing I know is try to win people over to
your side, or get an attorney.
The Parliamentarian
Dear Parliamentarian:
If you don't mind I would like to run another question by you for your
opinion. This Board I sit on, recently
removed two (2) individuals from an ongoing committee that
has been working on an event for more that three years. The new
president felt he could not work with
these individuals and was able to persuade a slight majority of the Board to replace these
individuals. This caused quite a stir and there is now a petition circulating around the
club to ask the Board to reconsider their decision. I personally was not in favor of the
removal of these men. Would it be proper or improper for me to sign this petition given
the fact I sit on the Board? Not that it matters but the petition is being supported by an
overwhelming majority of the members.
Larry Meyers
Dear Larry,
You are member of the organization and certainly can make your
wishes known by signing the petition. It also
may encourage the members to know that a board member agrees with them. If the members win out, perhaps the
president needs to keep a low profile and try to find a way to work with these committee
members.
The Parliamentarian
Copyright 2001 Robert McConnell
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