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Emailing minutes in advance


wfd086

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I am trying to convince an organization that we should be emailing the minutes of our meetings to all our members in advance so we can get away from the process of reading and approving the minutes that we currently use.  Would we need to amend our by-laws to allow the minutes to be sent out or can we just start sending them to the membership?

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The draft minutes can (and often are) sent to the members in advance, but they should be clearly marked as DRAFT minutes.  However, it is still necessary to go  through the steps to approve the minutes at a meeting, allowing an opportunity for corrections, unless there is a minutes approval committee which has the authority to approve the minutes. Also, the minutes must still be read upon the demand of a single member.  See pages 473-475.

Edited by Richard Brown
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2 hours ago, wfd086 said:

I am trying to convince an organization that we should be emailing the minutes of our meetings to all our members in advance so we can get away from the process of reading and approving the minutes that we currently use.  Would we need to amend our by-laws to allow the minutes to be sent out or can we just start sending them to the membership?

By sending draft copies to each member in advance you can get away from the process of reading (except that the minutes must be read anyway on the demand of a single member) but you still need to approve them at a meeting which, if there are no corrections, takes only a moment:

  1. Chair states: The first item of business is approval of minutes. Members have received draft copies; without objection, reading is waived. Are there any corrections to the minutes?
  2. Members may offer corrections. (Usually agreed to by unanimous consent, but if there is obection, by majority vote.)
  3. Chair states: If there are no (further) corrections, the minutes stand approved (as corrected).

Draft copies should be clearly labeled as such, to avoid future confusion.

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59 minutes ago, Gary Novosielski said:

By sending draft copies to each member in advance you can get away from the process of reading (except that the minutes must be read anyway on the demand of a single member) but you still need to approve them at a meeting which, if there are no corrections, takes only a moment:

  1. Chair states: The first item of business is approval of minutes. Members have received draft copies; without objection, reading is waived. Are there any corrections to the minutes?
  2. Members may offer corrections. (Usually agreed to by unanimous consent, but if there is obection, by majority vote.)
  3. Chair states: If there are no (further) corrections, the minutes stand approved (as corrected).

Draft copies should be clearly labeled as such, to avoid future confusion.

I think that a special rule could be adopted to permit the majority (or some higher number) to order the reading waived. Without that, and member can require it. 

You are spot on with the part I have bolded.  It is not required in RONR, but it is an exceptionally good idea. 

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