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Parliamentary Principle


Guest Gary c Tesser

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The first one is overly broad. There are some things such as holding Special Meetings and using absentee voting where the bylaws (or applicable law) must authorize it or it can't be done. However, that is not necessarily true for other things. Maybe Wa"

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>>If its not in the bylaws, it can't be done.<<

That is generally true, but it isn't directly stated, but implied.

For example, boards are powerless. So when asked whether the board can do X, one must read the bylaws.

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