agendas and minutes

28
Agendas and Minutes

Upload: laddie

Post on 23-Feb-2016

32 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Agendas and Minutes. Agenda. Purpose of the Agenda. Sets the expectations for members. Items of business that will be addressed. The order in which they will be considered. Who Sets the Agenda?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Agendas and Minutes

Agendas and Minutes

Page 2: Agendas and Minutes

Agenda

Page 3: Agendas and Minutes

Sets the expectations for members.◦ Items of business that will be addressed.◦ The order in which they will be considered.

Purpose of the Agenda

Page 4: Agendas and Minutes

Presiding officer (president), or designee, is responsible for developing the agenda and announcing the meeting.

Who Sets the Agenda?

Page 5: Agendas and Minutes

Left to discretion of each committee chair. Chair and secretary develop agenda jointly. Secretary with input from individual

members. Topics generated at end of each meeting.

Who Sets the Agenda?(Alternatives for Committees)

Page 6: Agendas and Minutes

No matter what approach is taken…◦ Executive board should adopt rules that specify

procedures for individual members to contribute items to the agenda of an upcoming meeting.

◦ Members can order that items be placed on the agenda of a specific future meeting.

Accessing the Agenda

Page 7: Agendas and Minutes

Call to order Roll call (establish a quorum) Approval of agenda Approval of Minutes Public Forum Officer’s Reports Advisor’s Report Unfinished business New business Announcements Adjourn

Elements and Sequence

Page 8: Agendas and Minutes

Call to order Roll call

◦ Confirm quorum◦ Quorum: the number of members of a group or

organization required to be present to transact business legally, usually a majority.

◦ Majority: 50+1◦ If Quorom is not met: Robert's Rules provides that

"in the absence of a quorum, any business transacted is null and void."

Elements and Sequence (continued)

Page 9: Agendas and Minutes

Approval of the agenda◦ Simply means we agree to take up the items and

address them in the order presented.◦ Not an opportunity to review the items and add

new ones. Approval of Minutes The members of the group agree that the written

minutes reflect what happened at the meeting. If there are significant errors or omissions then the minutes will be redrafted and submitted again at a later date. Minor changes may be made immediately.

Elements and Sequence (continued)

Page 10: Agendas and Minutes

Reports

◦ This is where the executive board and advisor report on what they have been working on and any announcements.

Elements and Sequence (continued)

Page 11: Agendas and Minutes

Unfinished business◦ Subject matter brought up at a previous meeting,

but needs further discussion or action. Items tabled, postponed, referred to a committee Items that will overturn or renew an action previously

decided.

Elements and Sequence (continued)

Page 12: Agendas and Minutes

New business◦ Not an opportunity to address items not on the

agenda. Simply a category that includes subject matter that the body has not taken up at a previous meeting.

Elements and Sequence (continued)

Page 13: Agendas and Minutes

Adjourn: End meeting

Elements and Sequence (continued)

Page 14: Agendas and Minutes

24 hours Date, time, place, and subject matter. Official newspaper, public, and other media. May not change agenda after it has been

posted.

Notice Requirements

Page 15: Agendas and Minutes

Minutes

Page 16: Agendas and Minutes

The official record of the actions of the governing body.◦ Accurate record that a meeting was held.◦ Captures the substance of the official action taken

by the body.

Purpose of the Minutes

Page 17: Agendas and Minutes

Legal requirement– “Substance” of actions taken.

What to Record

Page 18: Agendas and Minutes

“Substance”—an intelligible abstract or synopsis of the essential elements of the official action taken by a local governing body, including the subject matter of a motion, the persons making and seconding the motion and the roll call vote on the motion. { 985.01(6) }

What to Include...

Page 19: Agendas and Minutes

Kind of meeting. Name of the organization. Date, time, and place of the meeting. Name of the presiding officer and the

secretary, or their substitutes. Members present and establishment of a

quorum.

RONR Recommendations

Page 20: Agendas and Minutes

Action on the minutes of the previous meeting.

Exact wording of each motion, the name of the maker, and whether it passed or failed.

Points of order and appeals. For reports, the name of the committee and

the reporting member. The hour of adjournment.

RONR Recommendations (continued)

Page 21: Agendas and Minutes

Opinion or interpretation of the secretary. Judgmental phrases—”members expressed

total confidence”, “lengthy report.” Discussion. Motions that were withdrawn. Detailed reports.

What Not to Include, According to RONR

Page 22: Agendas and Minutes

Minutes should focus on what the body did, not on what was said.

What was:◦ Announced◦ Reported◦ Discussed◦ Ordered◦ Commitments made◦ Decisions made

Core Concept

Page 23: Agendas and Minutes

Simply record that the body received the report, who gave the report, and the subject matter.

Written reports can be kept on file. Body should not vote to accept or approve

the report.

Reports and Announcements

Page 24: Agendas and Minutes

If a decision is made by unanimous consent, the minutes should reflect it.

Show the distribution of counted votes (“Motion carried, 5-2”).

Roll call vote – indicate how each person voted.

Voice vote – indicate outcome and that voice vote was taken (Motion carried, voice vote).

Recommendations for Recording Formal Decisions

Page 25: Agendas and Minutes

Better to record “without negative vote” rather than unanimous—unless you know.

Must, in local government, record person seconding (not in RONR). [ 985.01(6) ]

As a recorder, make sure you get the wording down before the vote is taken.

Recommendations for Recording Formal Decisions

Page 26: Agendas and Minutes

At the subsequent meeting of the body. Preferably, signed by presiding officer.

Approval of Minutes

Page 27: Agendas and Minutes

Minutes of Meeting B should show what corrections were ordered in the minutes of Meeting A.

The original minutes of Meeting A should be corrected so that the error remains apparent.

Retain original version in the minute book. Corrections may be made at any time.

Correcting Minutes

Page 28: Agendas and Minutes

Yes. You may interrupt, if necessary. Encourage the use of written reports that

are kept on file. Record the arrival and departure of

members during the meeting.

Other Issues