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I think under these circumstances the committee can recommend the proposal for which five days’ notice was given, and then immediately recommend amending the proposal with additional changes that the committee agreed upon after the notice deadline—provided that the additional changes don’t exceed the scope of the notice. (That is, you couldn’t give notice of a proposal to amend Article 2 and then sneakily replace it with an amendment to Article 5 on the day of, but you can amend what you’ve proposed within the general scope of that “no surprises” rule. In this case you’ve given the membership fairly broad notice that bylaw reforms will be adopted, so I think your further amendments, whatever they are, would probably be within scope of the notice.)
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Scott Forbes<sc...@scottforbes.net>
Date: On Sat, Feb 16, 2019 at 7:40 PM
Subject: Fwd: Re: Further amendments to the proposal
To: Angyl <an...@protonmail.com>
Cc: Annabelle Backman <abackm...@gmail.com>,Amy Madden <amye...@gmail.com>,43rd District Democrats Rules and Bylaws Committee <43rd-...@googlegroups.com>
Hi Angyl,The person chairing a meeting can’t make motions, so what they do instead is to “entertain” a motion (“the chair will entertain a motion to approve the minutes of the previous meeting”). The typical response when the chair entertains a motion is for someone to say “so moved,” followed by a second—but procedurally this is no different than any other motion: The motion the chair entertained could be debated, amended, and so on. It just so happens that most of the motions a chair entertains are basic housekeeping stuff, so they tend to pass without any debate or amendments.The chair (or the committee, or any individual) can also request Unanimous Consent for a motion, and if nobody objects then the chair bangs the gavel and the motion is adopted. (Did I send you a draft of the “How to Run a Meeting” training materials? Some of this is covered in there.) If anyone objects, then the floor is opened for debate and amendments as usual. This would probably be the best way to jump from the original proposal to the committee’s latest version, as long as it’s clearly understood that the floor would then be open for further debate and amendments on the proposed revision.— ScottP.S.: The committee’s mailing list is set up as a members-only list, so my replies to that address are bouncing. Feel free to forward if you think the committee would find it useful.