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Ensure that bylaws allow holding formal Board votes outside of public Board meetings #101
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So does "ensuring" this involve proposing edits to the bylaws? |
If we conclude that the current version of the bylaws somehow doesn't, then yes. But this doesn't mean to preclude that after a review we conclude that the bylaws at present make no stipulation that formal board votes can only be held during a public Board meeting. (Having said that, a formal Board vote does need to be conducted in public.) |
The current bylaws don't say whether voting has to take place during a public Board meeting or not. The most relevant point relating to this topic is:
It doesn't say whether "turn-out" requires participation in a public Board meeting, but we have not required that in the past for votes (we have not had 10% of members showing up to the meetings). |
Turn-out means number of ballots cast. For the public Board meeting, most decisions are approval votes by the attending Directors (such as approving the minutes from the last Board meeting, and all other motions.) I think it's clear that we (and the bylaws) want votes of the Board to be public. Public here has meant that anyone can attend the event where such votes are cast, which includes a sufficient advance notice (mandatorily to all members, but we meanwhile in addition make this public for everyone). There have been two kinds of "votes":
It's hard to imagine how we'd disassociate the former from an actual public Board meeting. So I think we're in essence talking about the latter, although it's possible we decide to convert a motion that would need a public Board meeting to be held and a quorum of Directors attending it, to a vote held separate from the Board meeting. For these electronic ballots, the following questions come to mind for which we may well want the bylaws to provide some clarity in regard to properties a permissible mechanism we might choose must have (and it sounds like currently they don't):
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If we stick with board members (and attending members) being together in person or virtually for a short meeting style (even just one hour), this is fundamentally difficult to participate in from the other side of the world due to the time zones. We might consider proxy votes, whereby absent board member A assigns their proxy vote to member B, and assuming member B attends both A and B could count to quorum. That might work well in person, but seems less easy to do with electronic ballots tied to email addresses. The minor wording change currently proposed on #102 explicitly allows the electronic ballot to stay open 24 hours (while paper ballots would explicitly be counted during the in-person meeting) so that absentee members could vote after the public discussion. This does not contribute to being quorum though, the thrust of Hilmar's issue here. The ideas here is presumably to make asynchronous formal votes of the board practical (e.g. electronic ballot open 24 hours) without being tied to a public board meeting (but with some public announcement still needed for openness). |
I have to say I'm strongly opposed to allowing proxy votes. It opens the door to abuse and gaming. I believe quite strongly that we're better off finding a solution that facilitates global participation while mandating everyone has their own vote, and achieving this without hindering quorum.
Yes I saw this. I don't think it helps solve a problem (there's nothing in the bylaws currently that says a ballot can't stay open for 24 hours), but adds a stipulation that might cause a problem in the future (we might want a ballot to stay open for 36 hours). If we want to say something about the duration ballots can stay open, then we could add that ballots can remain open past the end of a public Board meeting. But again, the bylaws don't currently say that they can't, and I think what we want clarity on in the Bylaws is not how long a ballot can or cannot stay open, but whether and under which conditions public ballots among the Board can take place separate from a public Board meeting.
Yes. But how long a ballot can or should stay open is a largely operational question, and IMHO not a policy question. (You could argue that we don't want to allow ballots to stay open beyond some reasonable length of time, say a month, as a matter of policy. That sounds fine on its face, but nothing like this has ever been stipulated for the one type of ballot that is covered by the Bylaws but disconnected from a public Board meeting, namely referendums and other votes put in front of the membership, and it's never been an issue. So I'd still argue this just isn't necessary.) |
… President (#102) * Avoid gendered pronoun HTML and PDF update to follow * Deputy President subsuming the role of Secretary * Electronic ballots can stay open <24 hours for global participation Note this change does not actually help with getting quorum, it just makes it more explicit how absentee board members might still be able to vote (even though they can't be counted toward being quorate). * Use Vice President, rather than Deputy * Revert "Electronic ballots can stay open <24 hours for global participation" This reverts commit 38b7b11. Hilmar agrees on #101 that this change isn't actually necessary, we have the operational freedom to do this anyway, and my wording only restricts us. * Use whitespace indentation consistent with preceding rows Suggested during review Co-authored-by: Hilmar Lapp <[email protected]> --------- Co-authored-by: Hilmar Lapp <[email protected]>
The motivation here is for the bylaws not to require that formal Board votes be held and completed during a public Board meeting, because with all formal votes being conducted electronically there's no technical requirement for holding them during the meeting itself, and doing so can (and in the past has) actually create issues
These issues include having to have quorum during the time of the Board meeting (which is considerably more challenging with a globally distributed Board), everyone having to have received the electronic ballot in time, and everyone necessary maintaining internet connectivity during the time slot.
These issues would all go away if conducting the electronic vote can take place outside the time of the Board meeting, for example in a 24 hour period after the Board meeting. The Board meeting could then be devoted to introducing, arguing for/against, and discussing the choices (or candidates) to be voted on. This means that a vote's outcome wouldn't be known until some time later, but there isn't an obvious reason why this would be a problem, and the delay for knowing the outcome can be kept reasonably short (for example, 24 hours).
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