How to Chair a Meeting
Call to Order
Start Your Meeting on
Time.
Rap your gavel.
I hereby call this
meeting to order.
Wait for quiet—THEN,
begin business of the meeting.
Roll Call of Officers
The Recording Secretary
will call the Roll of Officers.
The Recording Secretary
should then call roll in a loud, clear voice—with pauses for response.
Reading of Minutes
The Secretary will read
minutes of last meeting.
Are there any additions
or corrections to the minutes? [pause] If not, the
minutes will stand approved as read.
If there are corrections
to the minutes —ask for unanimous consent to additions or corrections.
(Business referred by
minutes to this meeting should be taken up under unfinished business.)
Reading of Correspondence
The Recording Secretary
will now read the correspondence.
Letters requiring action
by the membership will be discussed by the Executive Board prior to the
meeting. At this meeting they should be read along with the recommendations by
the board. Recording Secretary should summarize long or unimportant letters.
Routine letters and ads
should not be taken up at this meeting.
Reports of Officers
President’s
Report:
Includes action taken by the Executive Board at its last meeting and the agenda
for this meeting. In larger locals, minutes of Executive Board meetings and the
agenda for this meeting might be duplicated for distribution. (In this report,
the President should advise the members of problems facing the local; what are
the priorities and what direction and action the local should take.)
The President’s Report
may be followed by motions from the floor:
·
to
accept the Report of the Executive Board;
·
to
adopt the agenda for this meeting;
·
other.
Does the Chair hear
a motion from the floor to…
Secretary-Treasurer’s
Report:
Should be copied and passed out at the meeting—see example form, Appendix
E, International Constitution.
Does everyone have a
copy of the Secretary-Treasurer’s Report? [pause]
Are there any
questions? [pause] If there are
no objections, the Secretary-Treasurer’s Report will stand approved.
Should someone raise an
objection, a motion of approval is required.
We will now hear a
report from
[give name].
Reports of Staff and Committees
Staff Report: May include giving the latest
information on grievances, council activities, organization activities, process
in collective bargaining, other information of current interest to the
membership.
Committee
Reports:
Should be made only when there is something worthwhile to report.
We will now hear a
report from ___________________ Committee.
The President should go
over the Committee’s Report with the Chairperson before the meeting. General
progress reports of a committee’s activities may be voted upon at the
conclusion of the report:
You have heard the
report of the ____________________ Committee, does the
Chair hear a motion to accept the report?
However, if a Committee
Report contains specific recommendations which call for membership action:
You have heard the
report of the __________________ Committee, with the recommendation that the
membership authorize, etc. Does the Chair hear a motion from the membership on
the _________________ Committee’s recommendation?
Reports may be heard
from:
·
Stewards
Committee
·
PEOPLE
Committee
·
Organizing
Committee or
·
other committee appointed by the President with approval of
the Executive Board.
Unfinished Business
Unfinished
Business: Includes
any items left over, or referred from a previous meeting—which requires
membership action.
Is there any
unfinished business?
This may be followed by
a motion from the floor dealing with the specific items of unfinished business.
Note: Some reference to
the item of unfinished business should be available in the minutes of the
previous meeting.
New Business
New Business: Includes items raised at this
meeting which were not necessarily included on the agenda, but which require
membership action.
(These items may have
come up as a result of Committee Reports or correspondence.)
Is there any new
business?
This, also, may be
followed by a motion from the floor dealing with the specific item of new
business.
Good and Welfare
Good and
Welfare:
This part of the meeting gives the members a chance to discuss the general
welfare of the Union. It may also be used for some planned activity,
refreshments, visiting speaker, acknowledgments, etc.
Is there any Good
and Welfare?
(Motions should not be
made or any official business conducted during this part of the meeting.)
Adjournment
Adjourning the Meeting:
Keep your meetings
short—
If the business of the
meeting is finished and no one has made motion to adjourn, the Chair should ask
for one.
Do I hear a motion
to adjourn?
Notes for the Chairperson
Occasionally, the Chair
may call for a motion—
Does the Chair hear
a motion to ?…
A motion must be
seconded.
The Chair must state the
motion and call for discussion—
It has been moved
and seconded that … Is there any discussion?
A motion may be amended—
An amendment has
been made and seconded that … Is there any discussion on the amendment?
VOTING: If a motion has an
amendment—vote on the amendment first, then on the motion.
Sometimes a member may
rise on a “Point of Order.”
I rise on a point of
order, this discussion does not pertain to the
business at hand.
The Chair then makes a
ruling—
Your point is
well-taken [not well taken] and… [make the correction].
Sometimes a “Point of
Information”—
I don’t understand
the meaning of this motion...
The Chair then clarifies
the motion for the member—
The meaning here
is...
There is no discussion
of a motion to:
·
Adjourn
the Meeting
·
Lay
on the Table
·
Take
a Recess
·
Close
Debate
·
Vote
on a Point of Order
·
Limit
Debate
·
Withdraw
a Motion
For a detailed
description of the rules of order see Parliamentary
Procedure at a Glance by O. Garfield Jones. Copies can be
ordered from AFSCME Education Department, 1625 L Street, N.W., Washington, DC
20036.