MINUTES OF A SPECIAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING OF
THE ANCIENT HARMONIOUS SOCIETY OF WOODSHEDDERS

Saturday, 21 September 2002 - 12 p.m.
Orleans Room, Hotel Sofitel - Houston, TX

Members Present (18):  Toban Dvoretzky, President (Chair of the Meeting); Dick Blatter; Greg Economides; Lloyd Erickson; Ted Freyer; Tommy Gartman; Joe Grear; John Grosnick; John Hammond; Charles F. Jones; John Lickert; Lowell McCulley; Bill Moring; Steve Shannon, Executive Vice-President; Rodney Sparks, At-Large (Secretary of the Meeting); Gene Taylor; Jim Ward; Harvey Yarborough.

President Dvoretzky declared a quorum present and called the meeting to order with the singing of "Down Mobile."

The four expired positions on the AHSOW Board of Directors and the nominees therefor (Earle Holt, Dick Richards, Glenn Schilberg, Tom Wiener) were raised as the first item of business.  Dvoretzky stated that each nominee had been interviewed, each understood and accepted responsibility for executing the duties required of him, and each exceeded the qualifications for nomination and election for service on the AHSOW Board of Directors.

Before accepting a motion to elect the slate, Dvoretzky asked the group whether anyone had been lobbied or unduly influenced to cast a vote either for or against this slate, or influenced to withhold casting a vote, by anyone at any time, including by anyone in the room.  No one had.  Moved/seconded (Hammond/Lickert) to elect the slate of nominees; no discussion; passed unanimously.  Absentee balloting (27.3% of entire AHSOW membership) was:

  364 in favor of electing the slate (96.8%);
    3 opposed to electing the slate   (0.8%);
    9 votes of abstention             (2.4%);
   14 ballots disqualified.

 

Since the two tellers appointed to count the electronic and postal absentee ballots were AHSOW Hall of Fame members and eminently trustworthy, the absentee tallies were declared valid and the nominees elected.


Dvoretzky stated an item that was tabled and pursued no further at the Annual Membership Meeting in Portland (July 2002):  amendment of the language of the AHSOW Bylaws.  A fair summary of the proposed changes was read.  A motion (Erickson/McCulley) to take from the table and raise as business the issue of voting on the proposed amendment of the AHSOW Bylaws passed unanimously.

Before accepting a motion to vote on amending the Bylaws, Dvoretzky asked the group whether anyone had been lobbied or unduly influenced to cast a vote either for or against this issue, or influenced to withhold casting a vote, by anyone at any time, including by anyone in the room.  No one had.  Moved/seconded (Economides/Erickson) to amend the language of the AHSOW Bylaws as noted.  After clarification of the significance of amending the language, the question was called; passed unanimously.  Absentee balloting (26.4% of entire AHSOW membership) was:

   362 in favor of amending the language (96.5%);
     5 opposed to amending the language   (1.3%);
     8 votes of abstention                (2.1%);
     3 ballots disqualified.

 

Dvoretzky then stated that, before the possible certification of these votes may occur, the assembly must debate a matter of procedure:  "You MUST DETERMINE whether it is acceptable to have complied with the spirit of the motion to table in Portland, or whether a clear instruction has been violated, and it is necessary to have complied with the substance of that motion."  The Portland motion, with names disguised, was read thus:

   "The question of approving the Bylaws amendment was called.  Member 'A' raised a point of order, stating that some AHSOW members, those without e-mail, had not been notified of the proposed changes to the Bylaws.  Following considerable discussion, member 'B' said that it appeared that there was major overlapping of the old Bylaws and the proposed Bylaws, and he made a motion that the motion to restructure the Bylaws be tabled until a complete set of Bylaws dealing with the restructuring of the Board of Directors could be offered to the membership.  Member 'A' seconded the motion.  There followed a discussion in which the parliamentarian addressed some of the issues by speaker phone.  The parliamentarian's final comment was that the motion to table was the motion on which the assemblage should vote.  If the motion carried, he said, the meeting should be adjourned and a copy of the proposed bylaw changes restructuring the board should be distributed to those who did not have e-mail.  Then he said:  'Conduct a vote by a written ballot and an e-mail ballot, get them certified again by the old secretarial position, and then start to put the organization back together.'  The motion to table was passed by an approximate 18 to 4 margin, and the President adjourned the meeting."


As a result of thorough discussion, the group determined that:

   1)  A motion to "table" cannot have any conditions attached to it; the Portland motion should have been stated as one to "postpone the motion to restructure the Bylaws until..."  Thus, the full and entire effect of the Portland motion was merely to table action on the amendment of the bylaws for the duration of the Portland meeting.

 

   2)  The condition attached to the Portland motion, as stated, said that the motion should be tabled until a complete set of Bylaws "could" be offered to the membership.  Since a prior, redacted, and proposed set of Bylaws already existed at that time, they "could" be offered to the membership.  Thus, the condition attached to the Portland motion to table, even if the condition were valid, was met.

 

   3)  Prior notice of agenda items before AHSOW's Annual Membership Meetings is not required.  It met the conditions of AHSOW's governing documents if attendees of that meeting simply walked in the door and were either handed an agenda then or were told then what was on the agenda.

Notwithstanding these three points, and temporarily disregarding the overwhelming mandate of the absentee tallies, which indicated that few members were confused or considered themselves hoodwinked, Dvoretzky stressed that the group must determine what was reasonable and what should have been done:  Should the entire sets of Bylaws have been distributed, or was the presentation of a fair summary sufficient?  Further discussion ensued, and the group concurred that the fair summary was adequate; objections to the changes were not a fundamental objection to the actual issue, but instead matters of personalities or communication, which were things that can be fixed with an active Board of Directors doing its job; and that the organization should be allowed to move forward.  Motion (Freyer/Jones) to certify the absentee ballots.  Before allowing the question to be called, Dvoretzky asked whether anyone present had concerns from a legal or parliamentary standpoint; no one had any.  The question was called; motion passed unanimously.  Accordingly, Dvoretzky declared that the language of the AHSOW Bylaws shall be amended.

 

The 1:1 overlay of Board positions and officerships was illuminated.  It was recommended that the AHSOW Bylaws undergo further revision (by a professional corporate attorney) to clarify this matter and to bring the Bylaws more into consonance with standard corporate practice.


Moved (Hammond/acclamation) to adjourn; meeting adjourned shortly before 1 p.m. with the singing of "How I Wish that I Could Help the Sandman."

Respectfully submitted,

Rodney Sparks, Secretary of the Special Membership Meeting

 


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