Jump to content
The Official RONR Q & A Forums

SBFFA

Members
  • Posts

    4
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

SBFFA's Achievements

  1. Did you miss the part that the person making the motion is acting as lead in a group of members that all belong to a separate organization? Or does that not matter?
  2. I should have clarified the lawsuit is over. A committee was appointed, a report was given to the board based on their research. The board made a resolution adopting the report, and took it to the members to ratify. The previously absentee members made a motion to do the research over. For clarity: This organization was created by employees of a company that wanted to fight discrimination for minorities within the company. Over the last 20 years people have retired from the company, stopped paying dues, stopped coming to meetings and have not been involved in our membership organization at all. Over the last 20 years these retired people have not been considered members regarded as members or even communicated to or referred to as members. No meeting notices were sent to them they were just known as retired. When a motion was recently made and adopted to sell a derelict property that we own, a lawsuit was filed by those retired people. In the lawsuit they stated that they were in fact members and that they should have been allowed to vote and be part of the process. Keep in mind that no dues had been paid by them they hadn’t come to any meeting in over 20 years in some cases. At the conclusion of the lawsuit the judge decided that not paying dues and not coming to meetings did not divest them of their membership rights and that they in fact were members and had every right to be included on the vote of the sale of the derelict property, and that the vote we took was not correct because it did not include ‘all of the members’. A special meeting was called, and they came to the meeting along with dues paying members. A motion was made and seconded to sell the derelict property, and one of the retired people made a motion to allow 30 days for ’them’ to be able to come up with an alternative to selling. Now I'm going to describe who ‘them’ is. These retired people created their own organization that is specifically for retired people from this company. The lawsuit included 25 retired people that the judge says are now members and have always been members of our organization. So when they want ‘them’ to be allowed to research any alternative to selling the property they are referring to this other organization. I don't believe this is an accurate motion as that other organization is not a current member of our organization and has nothing to do with our organization, so the motion was questionable to begin with. The real issue I have here is if there has already been a committee there has already been research done, there's already been a report given to the board from the committee about what to do, and we go to call for vote - can any member motion for us to do all that work again? I know that any member can make a motion, but that just puts everybody on a hamster wheel if we do the work and we come up with an answer they don't like so they motion for us to do it again.
  3. We have a situation where the President appointed a committee 2 years ago to come up with a recommendation on what to do with a derelict property we owned. The recommendation was to sell the property. Some absentee members sued the association to stop the sale of the house after they noticed it was listed. No they are coming back to the meetings and want to make a motion to allow them 30 days to present to the board information we have already researched and looked into. Do we have to do that, or do we allow the motion to go to discussion and vote?
  4. The President of our association recently held a special meeting. It was a very contentious meeting to say the least. During the President's presentation he was interrupted several times with "I have a question" from several members. While answering the question, a couple other members started talking and it turned into a conversation. One of the members made a motion, who was not recognized and it was quickly seconded. The president said he was not going to accept the motion as this was a special meeting about one subject and even though the motion could be considered part of what the meeting was about, it wasn't really. Is this allowed? Can the president ignore a motion? Does that mean any business that happens at the meeting is not valid?
×
×
  • Create New...