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WilliamT (Arizona)
Posts: 489
Posted:
Our bylaws regarding meetings state"

ANNUAL MEETING OF MEMBERS. The first annual meeting of the Members shall be held within one year from the date of incorporation of the Association, and each subsequent regular annual meeting of the Members shall be held on the same day of the same month of each year thereafter..."
(The rest is regarding holidays)

MEETINGS OF DIRECTORS. Regular Meetings. "Regular meetings of the Board of Directors shall be held quarterly without notice, at such place and hour as may be fixed from time to time by the Board..." (The rest regards holidays.)

Last year our Annual Meeting of Members was held in November. The board had every month meetings that year. This year the board went to quarterly meetings which is the minimum requirement.

This year our board meetings were held in Jan, April, July -- and the fourth was supposed to be scheduled for October. Now the MC has designated October as our Annual Meeting of Members.

I see two possible problems with this. Am I correct or am I missing something?

First, if the Annual Member meeting is held in October, there will not be a 4th "board" meeting to meet the "quarterly" requirement. (There are no meetings scheduled beyond October, until January 2007.

Second, The annual member meeting in 2005 was in November so I have to assume that the original month was November. Anyway I believe that moving the Annual Member meeting to different months is in conflict with the bylaws.

Third, I interpret the bylaws as saying that the board must have 4 meetings (quarterly) plus an annual meeting, or a total of 5 meetings. Since the annual meeting is the election of directors, it seems virtually impossible to me to have a "board" meeting on the same night.

As usual, I really appreciate all of the comments and insight that all of you who are more experienced at board functions are willing to share.

Bill
RogerB (Colorado)
Posts: 5,067
Posted:
Bill, you are correct. I would amend the By-laws to state THE month (or as soon thereafter as feasible) to hold the annual meeting. You don't want to have meetings on a specific date, it could be a holiday or a day otherwise inconvenient to many members.

You possible could have a Board meeting before or after the annual meeting on the same date. However, it would be more reasonable to schedule a Board meeting within XX days after the annual meeting. This allows for electing officers and transfering files or information if necessary.

It should be quite easy to make these two amendments to the By-laws.

BrianB (California)
Posts: 2,820
Posted:
we have some similar words, but one thing we do is have our first board meeting right after the annual "election" meeting. At that first board meeting, they elect a president, etc.. there's no reason that both meetings can't be held one after another, time permitting.

GeraldT1 (<Not Specified>)
Posts: 519
Posted:
Bill,

1) If the 4th quarter meeting is held on the same night as the annual member meeting there is no conflict with reaching the quantity of meetings required.

2) You are 100% correct, holding the annual meeting in October instead of November is in conflict with your bylaws.

3) It is conceivable, and perhaps desireable to combine a quarterly meeting with an annual meeting. Meaning, more owners typically attend annual meetings and forgo quarterly meetings.

Even though your meeting seems it will be switched to October, I wonder what the harm would be in doing so, do you suspect anything, what is your impression?

If I was in your HOA, I'd press for the 4th quarter meeting and demand that all quarterly meetings of the board have a scheduled date and an agenda to the extent known published in a promintent location no less than 48 hours in advance. Tall bill, I know but here in New Jersey, it's the law and believe me, it provides recourse to the owners. I would not feel comfortable with the fact that business can occur in my HOA that affects my bottom line without my knowing about it or finding out within a period of time immediately afterwords.

Best of Luck!!
GeraldT1

LeeS1 (New Mexico)
Posts: 26
Posted:
Bylaws should not be so restrictive that there is absolutely no leeway in scheduling. You are correct in your paragraphs 'second' and 'third.' Look to your bylaws for the answers: Your BOD needs to meet quarterly - every 3 months. Unless your bylaws specify that one of the regular meetings shall be known as the annual meeting, then you are required to hold your 4 BOD meetings. See Robert's Rules 10th Ed. p91 ll-34. When management of the organization is left to a board, then the annual business meeting is called the 'annual meeting.' You also need to consult your state statutes as to what their requirements are for HOAs.
LeeS1 (New Mexico)
Posts: 26
Posted:
One other point--how can you manage an association without notice to the members/board as to when the meetings are? Absolutely takes top billing as one of the silliest clauses in a set of bylaws that I have heard about.
LeeS1 (New Mexico)
Posts: 26
Posted:
I disagree with Gerald's lst paragraph--that interpretation violates the bylaws. Key difference between regular board meetings and an annual meeting include:
1. The the officers and committee chairs must present annual reports at an annual meeting.
2. Officer elections are held at the annual meeting.
3. Any other business as specified in your bylaws as coming before an annual meeting assembly.
4. You read the minutes of the previous year's annual meeting and approve them.

Having said that, annual meetings are pretty mundane. I have written an entire script for our annual meeting--it makes things run smoothly and on time, and no one is speechless or saying incorrect information.

It is undesirable (but not illegal unless it violates your bylaws) to concurrently hold an annual meeting with your regular business meeting. Too many reasons to type here as to why you shouldn't do that. When your regular BOD meetings are publicized, you will get visitors. At an annual meeting, you want to be as neutral as possible in what is presented, staying, of course, within what you are required to do.

We hold a town hall meeting after our annual meeting, and it is informal. We hear the complaints and concerns of HOs, and develop an action item list where assignments are given to the committees to address. In short, stay away from matters that could produce a lot of conflict and a drawn-out annual meeting. Ours lasted 45 minutes, we had a 15-min. break with refreshments, and then launched into the town hall meeting for 1 hour. Everything ran like clockwork. If anyone had attempted to get out of line, the sergeant-at-arms would have jumped into actin.
RogerB (Colorado)
Posts: 5,067
Posted:
Lee, Gerald's last paragraph may violate YOUR by-laws but it complies with Colorado statute and many HOA's bylaws. Also, I disagree with your tone about annual meetings, were you a drill sargent in a previous job?

An annual meeting can be completed within the 2 hours you listed and still allow owner's to conduct official HOA business which the Board should honor. I am not against Town Hall meetings for larger HOAs; but I am opposed to Boards using this medium rather than allowing official voting by members on any items they so chose.
LeeS1 (New Mexico)
Posts: 26
Posted:
You're absolutely right--I keep forgetting that the members of this forum come from all over the map. And if I didn't see you in person, I'd think you were members of our HOA.

No, I wasn't a drill sergeant. I am a stickler for parliamentary procedure, though. Meetings just run more smoothly, you can cover a lot more, and you get out of there faster. (Ours often go to 10 p.m. Ugh!)Scripts may be foreign to many people, but they are very common for larger associations, and corporations. My experience has been that once someone has used a script for their annual meeting, they want to keep doing it. Scripts are often encouraged. (Again, it all depends...)

BrianB (California)
Posts: 2,820
Posted:
gotta disagree Lee on one small point, our officers are elected by the board, not by homeowners. Joe Homeowner does not elect the president of the association. Homeowners elect the board members at the annual meeting, and then the board members meet to elect officers from among themselves. That's how our by-laws require it.

we are a republic, not a democracy.

LeeS1 (New Mexico)
Posts: 26
Posted:
Let me clarify what I said--my mistake, and thank you Brian (really) for letting me know I was two tacos short of a plate on that comment. (I swear, guys, I was not drinking wine when I wrote that. Have been on the computer way too long, though!) Brian--you are right. Although, we do allow people to submit nominations for the positions. (We elect the officers two months before the annual meeting.)

Even in a HOA as large as ours, it is like pulling teeth to get people to run. Ours eats its volunteers young! For the past 7 days I have worked on HOA business for 40+ hours. While we have a lot of retirees (I am one), retirees are busier, in my experience, than most working folks--overcommitted in volunteer activities! We also have a new demographic of couples with children moving into our community, and most of those a 2-people working families.

One last humorous comment--if you were to ask some members of our community, they might want to label our HOA an autocracy.
My response is: Hey, join the board and you, too, can have complete freedom to work your tail off--unlimited ours, in fact!

Thanks for keeping me on my toes.
DavidH4 (South Carolina)
Posts: 35
Posted:
We have 160 townhomes and almost 500 single family homes in our association. We too find it hard to get people to run for the board. After we get a list of possible candidates, we have a Meet The Candidate night so the owners may ask questions of the individual candidates. Then we have the election at the annual homeowners meeting.After the new board is elected we have an organizational meeting after the annual meeting to elect officers. At present the Board is meeting monthly but we hope to start meeting quarterly. Hopefully we can do that as soon as we get some of the issues resolved.
It's a never ending battle 24 / 7 and a totally thankless job.

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