What is a meeting?
A meeting is where members of an organization get together to make decisions on proposals. Usually, there will be a person or people who orchestrate a meeting, usually called a “Chair” or “Facilitator”.
A meeting has an agenda, which is the list of items to be discussed and/or voted on.
- Each Item is addressed one at a time in turn
- Each Item is proposed by a member
- A Second may also be required
Addressing Items
- First, discuss and possibly amend
- An Amendment is basically a mini agenda item that modifies the ‘parent’ proposal
- Agenda item
- Amendment
- Amendment to the amendment
- Amendment
- After amending, return to the discussion
Voting
- Turns a proposal into policy
- Can happen when:
- Everyone is done talking
- End of a time limit
- “Call the question” (vote immediately to end debate)
- There can be many ways to vote, and the number of votes required for a proposal to pass can vary!
Then You Move To The Next Agenda Item
- Then You Move To The Next Agenda Item
- When all the Items on the Agenda are addressed, the meeting concludes.
Motions
- Magic words members can say to:
- Introduce a proposal … “Move to Adopt.”
- Introduce an amendment … “Move to Amend.”
- End debate and vote now … “Call the Question.”
- Postpone the current Item to a later meeting … “Move to Refer.”
- Not sure what’s going on, or think a mistake has been made?
Say “Point of Order”
Overall meeting structure.
- Agenda item #1
- Discuss
- Vote
- Agenda item #2
- Discuss
- Amendment
- Discuss amendment
- Vote on amendment
- Amendment
- Discuss amended item #2
- Vote
- Discuss
- End of meeting
You are now smarter.