Jaz/Staze:
As someone who lives far away and usually doesn't have spare $, I too would be appreciative if there could be put into place, and advertised, some formal criteria for voting proxies.
Among the considerations:
--handwritten only, or typed but hand-signed?
--handed in in person only, or handed in by email (an upload with a real signature) or fax okay?
--notarized? witnessed? (good questions, Jaz!)
--okay for other votes, but not elections? or also for elections?
--by how far in advance do they need to be handed in?
--will the secretary need to verify their legitimacy? e.g., through a follow-up contact and/or comparison to signature on staff form?
Steve: Definitely keep me high on the list for the teleporter!
Thanks for the compliments/accord, and feel free to PM me later with whatever. Miss you!
Staze: I'm with you on the following points:
(a) There exists the possibility that some positions could be rendered as having official voice-but-no-vote status on the Board.
(b) There will be times and issues wherein the individuals who have the most crucial data on which to base certain fiscal and fiduciary decisions are the Secretary, the Treasurer, and/or the Facilities Director.
(c) Therefore, potentially scary financial consequences could emerge if the Secretary, Treasurer, and/or Facilities Director positions are demoted to not having votes on the Board.
However:
(c) realistically most likely would only come true if the other directors, who are staff-elected (or will be, if the proposed change around VP passes), either:
(1) fail to bother to become aware of the potential dire consequences of their votes before voting--which would constitute negligence on their part;
(2) fail to care about the potential dire consequences before voting--which would constitute malfeasance on their part;
(3) are insufficiently informed by the Secretary, Treasurer, or Facilities Director before their vote, due to disorganization or lack of information gathering by the S,T, and/or FD--which would constitute neglect on the part of the S,T, and/or FD;
(4) and/or are deliberately misinformed by the S, T, or FD--which would constitute malfeasance on the part of the S, T, and/or FD.
Trust me; I have lived through the aftermath of the equivalent of each of these types of situations, in various of my non-profit experiences. None of us want to go there! Any of these, committed either frequently enough or on a matter serious enough, or a financial, legal, or publicity level serious enough, could end the con--for a year, or permanently. Really. Is it possible that any of these 4 major FUBARs could occur? Absolutely.
Should we guard against such? Absolutely.
Is it likely that such could occur? --Not if we've done a good job of researching, documenting, and clarifying (a) what each job description entails;
(b) prerequisites for each job;
(c) qualifications of each applicant;
(d) the voting process most likely to prevent situations such as the above.
Given this, imho, what is logically up for debate is which of the following, individually or in combination, is most likely to provide a genuine safeguard:
(a) Maintaining status quo with regard to which positions are staff-elected vs. board elected vs. board or chair appointed;
(b) Maintaining status quo, other than with regard to vice-chair;
(c) Rendering all Board positions staff-elected;
(d) Opening the election portions of Board meetings to staff (for voice but not vote);
(e) Maintaining status quo vis-a-vis elections, but rendering Board-elected and/or Board-appointed positions voice-but-no-vote within the Board.
Other hypotheticals within the realm of possibility (though I can't presently speak to their plausibility nor to their desirability) would include:
(f) Have all Board meetings that are not Executive Sessions open to attendance by non-Board staff:
(1) anyone who can make it, or
(2) specific staff invited by the Board for specific reasons;
(g) Within those meetings, have:
(1) those non-Board staff eligible to have voice but no vote; and/or
(2) those non-Board staff eligible to have vote but no voice;
Re: (g) (1) or (2), these could be in general, or just on items particular to their department. For example, say the Board had to work on something particular to Gaming, and the Programming Chair invited the Gaming Coordinator and empowered that person to invite the person they've appointed for the given subsection up for discussion, e.g., say, DDR....Say there was a big financial pinch, and the Board had to decide if they could afford to run another DDR tourney, and needed a sense of just how ardently popular and well-attended such was in the previous years....These non-Board staff either might be given the floor only to inform the Board (e.g., provide facts and figures from prior years, but not opinions); or they might be given the floor to advocate to the Board (with their personal values/ opinions); but not given a vote; this would be voice-but-no-vote. Or they might not be given time to address the Board, but be allowed to be silently present to witness the vote, without participating in it. Or they might not be given time to address the Board, but would be allowed to participate **only in the vote particularly relating to their specific area of work for the con**. That would be vote-but-no-voice.
Hm, I guess I can be relied upon to complicate discussions to some degree, LOL!