[Durham INC] By-law changes (two versions)

John Schelp bwatu at yahoo.com
Fri Sep 18 18:44:23 EDT 2009


folks,

I agree that delegates of member neighborhoods should be able to vote on any issue at any meeting for which they show up.

It would be helpful if the person(s) who modified/posted the second version of the by-law changes on the INC website could explain why their text differed from the hard-copy that was distributed at the August meeting.

have a good weekend,
John


> Tom and INC delegates--
> 
> I agree with the position you take below: I think that the
> appointed
> delegates of member neighborhoods should be able to vote on
> any issue
> at any meeting for which they show up. This is especially
> true now,
> when meeting agendas and minutes are available
> electronically,
> important issues and upcoming votes are announced and
> discussed on the
> listserv, and it is so easy for neighborhoods to keep
> informed about
> INC activities and to determine which are crucial to their
> interests. 
> 
> OWDNA spent a great deal of time at our last meeting
> discussing INC's
> proposed by-law changes, and while I'm speaking as an
> individual and
> not as a representative of OWDNA, I will say there was
> strong agreement
> with the position I've outlined above.
> 
> I will also say that many of us were quite disturbed about
> the 2
> different versions of the by-laws in circulation. Our INC
> delegate
> attended the INC meeting and came to the OWDNA meeting
> prepared to
> discuss the version of the proposed by-laws distributed at
> the meeting.
> I and other members had reviewed a version of proposed
> changes 
> provided in a link in an INC email. We were pretty
> surprised to find we
> were discussing two different versions of the proposed
> changes to INC
> by-laws. I found it even more disturbing that the
> electronic version
> contained the proposed change Tom raised below. 
> 
> I believe that so long as a neighborhood is a member in
> good standing
> and has sent a credentialed delegate, it should be allowed
> to vote.
> Neighborhood associations that join INC have the right to
> decide for
> themselves which issues on the INC agenda are priorities
> for them. Tom
> is exactly right that "participation
> by member neighborhoods is a
> barometer of the value of INC."
> 
> I would encourage INC to address why there were two
> versions of
> proposed by-laws in circulation and to insure that all
> neighborhoods
> discussed and approved the same version of changes. It
> might be that
> the vote itself will have to be postponed and delegates
> will all need
> to return to their associations to seek approval for the
> same version,
> and return next month to cast votes.
> 
> Just MHO,
> 
> Kelly Jarrett


> Tom Miller wrote:
> 
>   Fellow INC Delegates: 
>   
>   At several INC meetings
> during the spring and summer,
> including the meeting last month, I reported to you that
> the bylaw amendments that
> Colin and I were working on held no major changes other
> than a proposal to
> include a conflict-of-interest provision.  At last
> month’s meeting I
> passed out copies of the proposed changes and a resolution
> to adopt them. 
> I also informed you that the changes had been posted on the
> web. 
>   
>   What I did not know at
> the time that I spoke to you was that
> the version of the proposed by-laws available via the web
> was not the same as
> the hard copy I passed around at the August meeting. 
> The web version
> contains a proposed rule which would allow or prevent
> member neighborhoods the
> right to vote on issues based upon the attendance of
> delegates.  Had I
> known that this provision had been added to the proposed
> revision of the by-laws,
> I would have brought it to your attention. 
>   
>   At our meeting next week,
> Watts-Hillandale’s delegates
> will argue strongly against any version of the bylaws which
> contains a
> provision which would prevent a member neighborhood from
> voting on an issue
> based upon the attendance record of the member
> neighborhood’s
> delegates.  INC is an organization of neighborhoods,
> not individuals.  Once a neighborhood qualifies for
> membership and its
> delegates are credentialed, that neighborhood should be
> allowed to vote
> on an
> issue that it cares about.  If the member neighborhood
> isn’t as
> organized as other member neighborhoods and can’t get
> a delegate to
> every
> meeting or even to a series of meetings, it should not be
> penalized on
> the
> occasion when it does send a delegate - especially if the
> neighborhood
> has sent
> the delegate to address an issue of importance to that
> neighborhood. 
> Consistent and inconsistent participation by member
> neighborhoods is a
> barometer of the value of INC.  The greater the value,
> the more likely a
> neighborhood will expend the money and the organizational
> energy necessary to
> join and attend.  No by-law stick will coerce member
> neighborhoods into
> participation if the value is not there. 
>   
>   Instead of this very
> dubious approach to improve
> participation, I suggest that we become better at enforcing
> the core
> rules that
> have been in the bylaws from the beginning.  Once upon
> a time, a
> neighborhood organization who wished to join had to fill
> out an
> application
> form attesting to its qualification for membership using
> the criteria
> established
> in the by-laws.  The organization had to submit a
> letter credentialing
> its
> delegates and when those delegates changed, a new letter
> was required. 
> In
> those years, it was not unusual for 60 -80 neighborhood
> representatives
> to
> attend each meeting.  The organization respected
> itself and thereby
> earned
> the respect of its members.  In saying this I do not
> wish to suggest
> that
> the organization today does not respect itself or that it
> is unworthy
> of respect. 
> The organizational effort then was extraordinary and
> perhaps
> unsustainable over
> the long term.  The ongoing effort by our officers to
> keep the
> organization vital, including even this review of the
> by-laws, is proof
> of
> their commitment and worthy of our respect, but I believe
> that we
> should try harder
> to attract participation before we consider any measure to
> coerce it. 
> And, if nothing works and only coercion is left, then I
> suggest that
> INC should dissolve.  
>   
>   Tom Miller 
>   WH-HNA




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