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Register No: 29742R
RULES
of
Doncaster Rugby League Supporters Society |
LIMITED
Registered under the
Industrial
and Provident Societies
Acts 1965 - 78
RULES
NAME AND DEFINITIONS
- The name of the Society
is to be Doncaster Rugby League Supporters Society
Limited and it is called “the Society” in the rest of these
Rules;
OBJECTS
- The Society’s objects
are, either itself or through a subsidiary company or society trading
for the benefit of the community and acting under its control:
- To strengthen bonds between
the community and Doncaster Rugby League Football Club in Doncaster
and surrounding area;
- To maintain and encourage
development of Rugby League at all levels irrespective of race, religion,
colour, gender or ability in Doncaster and surrounding area;
- To encourage the club to
take proper account of the interests of its supporters and of the community
it serves in its decisions;
- To maintaining at least a
‘Semi Professional Rugby League Club’ in Doncaster.
POWERS
- The Society may achieve
these objects in whole or in part through an interest or interests in
companies or societies provided that the objects of the companies or
societies are consistent with the Society’s objects. In particular
the Society may acquire an interest in the Club or any limited company
owning or controlling the Club either itself or through a subsidiary.
- In order to achieve its
objects the Society may either itself or through a subsidiary company
or society acting under its control:
- buy, sell and lease property;
- borrow;
- grant security over its
property and assets;
- establish promote and maintain
for the purposes of the Society any lawful fund raising scheme;
- buy and hold shares in the
Club;
- hold and exercise proxies
for shares in any company owning or controlling the Club either itself
or through a subsidiary;
- promote means to give supporters
greater opportunity to invest in the Club;
- award pensions, allowances,
gratuities and bonuses to past and present employees (including their
dependants and people connected with them) of:
- the Society;
- any predecessor of the Society;
and
- any subsidiary company or
society of the Society;
- set up and maintain itself
or with others trusts funds or schemes (whether contributory or non-contributory)
intended to provide pension or other benefits for the people referred
to in Rule 4(h);
- indemnify or take out and
maintain insurance for the benefit of people who are or were:
- members of the Society Board
or the Executive Board; or
- officers; or
- employees; or
- trustees of a pension fund
- indemnify or take out and
maintain insurance for the benefit of people who are or were elected
or nominated by the Society to serve on the board of any company owning
or controlling the Club;
- so far as permitted by
these Rules take out and maintain insurance against any risks to which
the Society may be exposed;
- co-operate with other supporters
organisations, co-operatives and societies conducted for the benefit
of the community at local, national and international levels;
- do anything else which
is necessary or expedient to achieve its objects.
- The business of the Society
is to be conducted for the benefit of the community served by the Club
and not for the profit of its members.
APPLICATION OF PROFITS
- The profits or surpluses
of the Society are not to be distributed either directly or indirectly
in any way whatsoever among members of the Society but shall be applied:
- to maintain prudent reserves;
- on expenditure to achieve
the Society’s objects.
MEMBERSHIP
- The members of the Society
are the people whose names are entered in the register of members.
- The first members are the
people who sign these Rules in applying for registration.
- Membership is open to any
person firm or corporate body who or which:
- is a supporter of the Club;
or
- has an interest in the game
of rugby league in the Area and is in sympathy with the objects of the
Society; and
- agrees to be bound by these
Rules and Rule 6 and 106 in particular.
The Society Board shall have power
to refuse membership to any person who does not in the opinion of the
Society Board meet these requirements.
The following shall be conditions
of membership for any member who holds shares in any company owning
or controlling the Club:
- The member must give proxy
voting rights for all such shares to the Society or its nominee so that
the shares are voted in accordance with the policy of the Society.
- The member must sign as
many blank proxy forms as the Society Secretary reasonably requires
whenever requested to do so.
- If the member intends to
attend a general meeting of the Club:
- 7 days notice must be given
to the Society Secretary; and
- the voting rights attached
to the shares must be exercised in accordance with the policy of the
Society.
- Every member holds one
share in the capital of the Society.
- The Society Board will
decide and issue a form of application for membership. Members
are to pay an annual subscription of such reasonable sum as the Society
Board shall decide, the first payment to be made at the time of application
for membership. The sum of £1 from the first payment shall be
applied to purchase a share in the Society.
- The Society Board will
have power to offer associate or affiliate status with or without payment
or subscription to corporate or unincorporated bodies which support
the aims of the Society, and may recognise that a share in the capital
of the Society is held on behalf of any unincorporated organisation
but no-one shall be entitled to vote at any general meeting of the Society
who is not the registered holder of a fully paid up share in the Society.
- The Society Board shall
have power to offer a class of junior membership with or without payment
to minors under the age of 16 but no person under the age of 16 shall
be entitled to a share in the society or be entitled to vote at any
general meeting of the Society.
- No person under the age
of 18 may be an officer of the Society.
- A corporate body or firm
which is a member may by resolution of its governing body appoint any
person it thinks fit to be its deputy and revoke such an appointment.
A copy of any such resolution signed by two members of the governing
body and in the case of a local authority by the authorised officer
of the Council shall be sent to the Secretary of the Society.
The deputy will be entitled to exercise all rights of membership on
behalf of the corporate body including seeking election as an officer
and speaking and voting at any general meeting. References in
these Rules to a member being present in person include members which
are corporate bodies being present through their deputy.
- No member may hold more
than one share in the Society either individually or jointly.
SHARES
- The shares of the Society
have the nominal value of £1 each and may not be transferred or withdrawn.
- If a member ceases to be
a member, the share registered in the name of that member is to be cancelled
and the amount subscribed for the share is to become the property of
the Society.
- Shares do not carry any
right to interest, dividend or bonus.
REMOVAL OF MEMBERS
- A member shall cease to
be a member if they:
- fail after written demand
to pay their annual subscription;
- die (in the case of the
individual);
- cease to exist (in the case
of a body corporate);
- are the nominee of an unincorporated
Society or firm which is wound up or dissolved;
- are the nominee of an unincorporated
organisation or firm which removes or replaces them as its nominee;
- are not the holder of a
fully paid up share;
- are expelled under these
Rules; or
- withdraw from membership
by giving at least one month’s written notice to the Secretary.
- A member may be expelled
by a resolution carried by the votes of not less than two-thirds
of the members present in person or by proxy and voting on a poll at
an annual or special general meeting of the Society of which notice
has been duly given. The following procedure will be adopted:
- A written complaint must
be made to the Society Board that the member has acted in a way detrimental
to the interests of the Society.
- Details of the complaint
must be sent to the member in question not less than one calendar month
before the meeting with an invitation to answer the complaint and attend
the meeting.
- At the meeting the members
will consider evidence in support of the complaint and such evidence
as the member may wish to place before them.
- If the member fails to attend
the meeting without due cause the meeting may proceed in their absence.
- A person expelled from membership
will cease to be a member immediately following the vote at which the
resolution to expel them is carried.
- No person who has been expelled
from membership is to be re-admitted except by a resolution carried
by the votes of
two-thirds of the members present in person
or by proxy and voting on a poll at any general meeting of which notice
has been properly given.
ORGANISATION
- The powers of the Society
are to be exercised by the members, the Society Board and the Executive
Board of the Society in the way set out in the Rules which follow.
RIGHTS AND POWERS OF MEMBERS
- The members have the rights
and powers available to them under the law relating to Industrial and
Provident Societies and are to decide in particular the issues specifically
reserved to them by these Rules.
- The members may by a resolution
carried by not less than two-thirds of the members voting at a general
meeting but not otherwise give directions to the Society Board.
The following provisions apply to any directions given:
- Any direction must:
- be consistent with these
Rules and with the Society’s contractual, statutory and other legal
obligations; and
- not affect the powers and
responsibilities of the Society Board, Chief Executive and Executive
Board under Rules 26,27 and 28.
- Any person who deals with
the Society in good faith and is not aware that a direction has been
given may deal with the Society on the basis that no direction has been
given.
- The functions of the annual
general meeting shall include:
- receiving:
- the revenue account
and balance sheet for the previous financial year; and
- a report on the Society’s
performance in the previous year;
- appointing:
- financial auditors;
- auditors of any other aspect
of the performance of the Society;
- electing officers of the
Society.
DUTIES AND POWERS OF SOCIETY BOARD
- The Society Board is to
ensure that the business of the Society is conducted in accordance with
these Rules and with the interests of the community and in accordance
with any relevant Statements of Best Practice published by Supporters
Direct, and may appoint and supervise the Chief Executive and the Executive
Board. The Society Board:
- may exercise all the Society’s
powers which are not required by these Rules or by statute to be exercised
by the Society in general meeting;
b. may delegate any of its powers
to committees consisting of such of its own number (and others, provided
that Society Board members remain in a majority on such committees)
as it thinks fit who shall, in the function entrusted to them,
conform in all respects to the instruction given to them by the Society
Board. The following provisions apply to any such delegation:
- The Society Board may retain
or give up the right to deal itself with issues delegated;
- Any delegation may be revoked
and its terms may be varied;
- The proceedings of any sub-committee
shall be governed by the rules regulating the proceedings of the Society
Board so far as they are capable of applying;
DUTIES AND POWERS OF CHIEF EXECUTIVE
AND EXECUTIVE BOARD
- If a Chief Executive is
appointed, he or she will, subject to the duties and powers of the Society
Board as set out in these Rules, manage the Society’s business in
accordance with these Rules and will have power to act in the name of
the Society.
- If other members of an
Executive Board are appointed they together with the Chief Executive
will, subject to the duties and powers of the Society Board as set out
in these Rules and to directions as to their responsibilities given
by the Society Board, manage the Society’s business in accordance
with these Rules and will have power to act in the name of the Society.
- Any person acting in good
faith and without prior notice of any irregularity is not to be concerned
to see or enquire whether the powers of the Chief Executive or the Executive
Board have been properly exercised.
SECRETARY
- The Society is to have
a Secretary whose functions will include:
- acting as Secretary to the
Society Board;
- attending all meetings of
the Executive Board;
- acting as Secretary of any
subsidiary company or society of the Society;
- summoning and attending
all general meetings of the Society and keeping the minutes;
- keeping the register of
members and other registers required to be kept by these Rules;
- monitoring the conduct of
the Society’s affairs to ensure that it is conducted in accordance
with these Rules;
- arranging for members of
the Society Board to obtain independent legal, accounting tax or other
professional advice if he or she considers it appropriate;
- publishing to members in
an appropriate form information which they should have about the affairs
of the Society;
- preparing and sending all
returns required to be made to the Registrar.
- The Secretary shall not
be a member of:-
- the Executive Board;
- any board or committee of
management of any subsidiary company or society of the Society.
GENERAL MEETINGS
- The Society is to hold
a general meeting (called the annual general meeting) within six months
of the end of each financial year. The first annual general meeting
may be called by the Society Board at any time within this period.
- All general meetings other
than annual general meetings are called special general meetings and
are to be convened by the Secretary either:
- by order of the Society
Board; or
- if a written requisition
signed (except where these Rules say otherwise) by not less than 20
members or 10% of the membership, whichever is the higher, is delivered
to the Society’s registered office. The requisition must state
the purpose for which the meeting is to be convened. If the Secretary
is not within the United Kingdom or is unwilling to convene a general
meeting any Society Board member may call a general meeting.
- A special general meeting
called in response to a members’ requisition must be held within 28
days of the date on which the requisition is delivered to the registered
office. The meeting is not to transact any business other than
that set out in the requisition and the notice convening the meeting.
- Notice of a general meeting
is to be given either:
- in writing; or
- by notice in any newspaper
circulating in the Area; or
- where a member has agreed
to receive notice in this way, by such electronic means as the Society
Board shall decide at least 14 clear days before the date of the meeting.
The notice must:
- be given to all members
and to the members of the Society Board and to the auditors;
- state whether the meeting
is an annual or special general meeting;
- give the time, date and
place of the meeting; and
- indicate the business to
be dealt with at the meeting.
- Any notice to a member
may be given either:
- personally; or
- by sending it by post in
a prepaid envelope addressed to the member at their registered address;
or
- by leaving it at that address;
- or (if a register of e-mail
addresses is maintained by the Society and the member has notified the
Society of an e-mail address) by e-mail to their registered e-mail address.
Notices or communications sent
by first class post to members at their registered address are deemed
to have been duly served 48 hours (excluding Sundays) after being posted.
Proof that an envelope containing a notice was properly addressed, prepaid
and posted shall be conclusive evidence that the notice was given.
The proceedings at a general meeting are not invalid if:
- there has been an accidental
omission to send a notice to a member or members; or
- the notice is not received
by a member or members.
- A member present either
in person or by proxy at any meeting of the Society shall be deemed
to have received notice of the meeting and, where requisite, of the
purposes for which it was called.
- Before a general meeting
can do business there must be a quorum present. Except where these
Rules say otherwise a quorum is 20 members or 10% of the members entitled
to vote at the meeting whichever is lower.
- The Society Board may decide
where a general meeting is to be held and may also in the interests
of democracy:
- arrange for the annual general
meeting to be held in a different part of the Area
each year;
- make provision for a general
meeting to be held at different venues either simultaneously or at different
times. In making such provision the Society Board shall also fix
an appropriate quorum for each venue, provided that the aggregate of
the quorum requirements shall not be less than the quorum set out in
the previous Rule.
- It is the responsibility
of the Society Board, the Chair of the meeting and the Secretary to
ensure that at any general meeting:
- the issues to be decided
are clearly explained;
- sufficient information is
provided to members to enable rational discussion to take place;
- where appropriate, members
of the Executive Board, experts in relevant fields or representatives
of special interest groups are invited to address the meeting.
- If the chair of a general
meeting or the Secretary considers that steps should be taken to ensure:
- the safety of people attending
a general meeting; or
- the proper and orderly conduct
of the meeting;
they may take whatever steps are
necessary to deal with the situation. They may in particular,
if they think it necessary:
- require people to prove
their identity;
- arrange security searches;
- stop certain things being
taken into the meeting;
- refuse to allow members
into the meeting or have members removed from the meeting, where the
behaviour of those members is or is likely to be violent or disruptive.
- The Chair of the Society
Board or in his or her absence some other Society Board member nominated
by the members of the Society Board shall preside at all general meetings
of the Society. If neither the Chair nor such other Society Board
member is present and willing to act, the Society Board members present
shall elect one of their number to be Chair and if there is only one
Society Board member present and willing to act he or she shall be Chair.
If no Society Board member is willing to act as Chair or if no Society
Board member is present within fifteen minutes after the time appointed
for holding the meeting, the members present and entitled to vote shall
choose one of their number to be Chair.
- If no quorum is present
within half an hour of the time fixed for the start of the meeting:
- if the meeting was convened
on a requisition of the members, it is to be dissolved;
- in any other case the meeting
shall stand adjourned to the same day in the next week at the same time
and place or to such time and place as the Society Board determine.
If a quorum is not present within half an hour of the time fixed for
the start of the adjourned meeting, the number of members present during
the meeting is to be a quorum.
- Subject to these Rules
and to any Act of Parliament, a resolution put to the vote at a general
meeting shall, except where a poll is demanded or directed, be decided
upon by a show of hands.
- On a show of hands every
member present in person, and on a poll every member present in person
or by proxy is to have one vote. In the case of an equality of
votes the Chair of the meeting is to have a second or casting vote.
- Unless a poll is demanded,
the result of any vote will be declared by the Chair and entered in
the minute book. The minute book will be conclusive evidence of
the result of the vote.
- A poll may be directed
by the Chair or demanded either before or immediately after a vote by
show of hands by not less than one-tenth of the members present at the
meeting (in person or by proxy).
- A poll demanded on the
election of a Chair or on a question of adjournment shall be taken forthwith.
A poll demanded on any other question shall be taken either forthwith
or at such time and place as the Chair directs not being more than thirty
days after the poll is demanded. The demand for a poll shall not
prevent the continuance of a meeting for the transaction of any business
other than the question on which the poll was demanded. If a poll
is demanded before the declaration of the result of a show of hands
and the demand is duly withdrawn by or on behalf of those who demanded
it, the meeting shall continue as if the demand had not been made.
The result of the poll will be treated as the resolution of the meeting
at which the poll was demanded. No notice need be given of a poll
not taken forthwith if the time and place at which it is to be taken
are announced at the meeting at which it is demanded. In any other
case at least seven clear days’ notice shall be given specifying the
time and place at which the poll is to be taken.
- Unless these Rules or an
Act of Parliament say otherwise, all resolutions are to be decided by
a simple majority of the votes cast.
- The Chair of any meeting
may with the consent of a majority of the members present adjourn the
meeting. The following are the arrangements for adjourned meetings:
- No business is to be transacted
at any adjourned meeting other than the business not reached or left
unfinished.
- An adjourned meeting is
to be treated as a continuation of the original meeting but any resolution
passed at an adjourned meeting is to be treated as having been passed
on the date on which it is in fact passed.
- When a meeting is adjourned
for fourteen days or more, at least seven clear days’ notice shall
be given specifying the time and place of the adjourned meeting and
the general nature of the business to be transacted. Otherwise
no notice need be given of an adjournment or of the business to be transacted
at an adjourned meeting.
- A proxy is to be appointed
as follows:
- in writing;
- in any usual form or any
other form which the Society Board may approve;
- under the hand of the appointer
or of their attorney duly authorised in writing; and
- by depositing the appointment
document at the registered office of the Society or at such other place
within the United Kingdom as the Society shall specify not less than
two clear days before the day fixed for the meeting at which the proxy
is authorised to vote. Where the appointment document is exercised by
an attorney on behalf of the appointer the authority under which it
is executed or a copy of such authority certified notarially or in some
other way approved by the Society Board is to be lodged with the appointment
document.
- The following further rules
apply to proxies.
- No person other than the
Chair of the meeting can act as proxy for more than 3 members.
- Any question as to the validity
of a proxy is to be determined by the Chair of the meeting whose decision
is to be final.
- A proxy need not be a member
of the Society.
- A vote given or poll demanded
by proxy or by the duly authorised deputy of a corporate body, shall
be valid unless notice of termination of the authority is received by
the Society at the registered office or at any other place at which
the instrument of proxy was duly deposited before the commencement of
the meeting or adjourned meeting at which the vote is given or the poll
demanded.
- No objection shall be raised
to the qualification of any voter except at the meeting or adjourned
meeting at which the vote objected to is tendered. Any objection
made in due time about any vote whether tendered personally or by proxy
is to be determined by the Chair of the meeting, whose decision is to
be final. Every vote not disallowed at the meeting will be valid.
POSTAL BALLOTS
- Where the Society Board
considers that a significant issue has arisen which should be determined
by the members of the Society; the issue shall be determined by a postal
ballot of the members of the Society conducted in accordance with such
procedure as the Society Board shall determine subject to the following
principles:
- Notice of the ballot shall
be given to each member of the Society in the same way as notice of
a meeting is to be given;
- The notice must set out
clearly the issue to be decided;
- Sufficient information must
be provided to members to enable an informed decision to be made; and
- The date by which voting
papers are to be returned must be clearly stated.
In any case where a postal ballot
is appropriate the Board may make such provision as it thinks fit to
permit notice of the ballot to be given and voting to be conducted by
electronic means.
CONSTITUTION OF SOCIETY BOARD
- With effect from the Society’s
first annual general meeting, the Society Board is to have not less
than 6 and not more than 15 members and will be made up as follows:
- 12 members of the Society
Board or such higher number as shall be required so that elected members
of the Board are in a majority over co-opted members will be elected
by the members in accordance with such arrangements as shall be determined
by the Society Board;
- Not less than 2 members
will be co-opted by the Society Board in accordance with a Board Membership
Policy which it will develop and adopt and shall be required, if they
are not already members, to become members of the Society. The
purpose of the Board Membership Policy will be to ensure that:
- the Society Board has the
skills and experience which it needs to operate effectively;
- the interests of the community
served by the Society are adequately represented;
- the level of representation
of different groups on the Society board strikes an appropriate balance
having regard to their legitimate interest in the Society’s affairs.
- a representative or representatives
of the Borough Council for the Area on behalf of itself and neighbouring
local authorities;
- a representative or representatives
of the young;
- a representative of disabled
supporters;
- a representative of local
business;
- a representative or representatives
of any supporters group or groups of the Club;
- a representative or representatives
of employees of the Club;
- a representative or representatives
of the Sports Council and any community scheme run in association with
the Club;
- a representative of the
players at the club, through a professional association or otherwise.
- A representative of the
Black and Ethnic Minority Network, DMBC Neighbourhood Development.
- If at any time and for
any reason after the first annual general meeting the number of members
of the Society Board shall drop below 6 the remaining Society
Board members may act but only for the purpose of filling vacancies
or calling a general meeting.
- Until the first annual
general meeting the members of the Society Board will be the people
who sign these Rules in applying for registration and such other people
as they co-opt.
- Members of the Society
Board will normally serve for periods of 3 years in accordance with
the Board Membership Policy. Co-opted Society Board members may be re-appointed
for a further period subject to these Rules.
- Members of the Society
Board will not receive any payment for serving on the Society Board
other than:
- the payment of expenses
incurred in carrying out their duties; and
- nominal Society Board Fees
approved by the members in general meeting.
- No person can be a member
of the Society Board who:
- is subject to a bankruptcy
order or has in place a composition with their creditors;
- is subject to a disqualification
order made under the Company Directors Disqualification Act;
- has a conviction for
an indictable offence (other than a spent conviction as defined by the
Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974);
- is or may on the basis of
medical evidence be suffering from mental disorder;
- fails to abide by any rules
for the conduct of elections made by the Society Board.
- Any member of the Society
Board who:
- ceases to comply with the
criteria set out in these Rules; or
- ceases to be a member of
the Society; or
- resigns.
- Any member of the Society
Board who:
- fails without good cause
to attend 3 consecutive Society Board meetings; or
- fails without good cause
to participate in board training
is to vacate the office of Society
Board member if required to do so by a majority of the other Society
Board members.
- At the second and third
annual general meeting of the Society one third of the members of the
Society Board first elected by the members (to be chosen by lot) will
resign from office. Thereafter the one third of the members of the Society
Board elected by the members who have served the longest at the date
of the annual general meeting each year will resign. If at any
time the number of elected directors is not divisible by three,
the Society Board shall decide the number of elected directors to resign
in accordance with this Rule, which shall be approximately
one third of the total number.
- Casual vacancies arising
amongst the members of the Society Board elected by the members will
be dealt with as follows.
- If a vacancy caused by retirement
or removal is not filled at the meeting at which they retire or are
removed, the vacancy may be filled by the Society Board.
- A vacancy occurring by death
or resignation may be filled by the Society Board.
- In each case the member
appointed to fill the vacancy is to retire at the next annual general
meeting and the Society Board will make provision for an election to
be held. For the avoidance of doubt the retiring member may stand
for re-election at the meeting at which they retire.
- A Society Board member
may be removed from office by a resolution carried by the votes of not
less than two-thirds of the members present in person or by proxy and
voting on a poll at an annual or special general meeting of the Society
of which notice has been duly given. A Society Board member may
be suspended from office by a resolution of the other members of the
Society Board on the grounds of conduct detrimental to the interests
of the Society subject to such Society Board member having been provided
with a fair opportunity to be heard. Such suspension shall be
for a period not exceeding 4 months.
SOCIETY BOARD MEETINGS
- The Society Board will
elect a Chair from amongst its elected members and will meet at least
4 times in every calendar year at such times and places as they think
fit. Seven clear days’ notice of the date and place of each
meeting is to be given in writing by the Secretary to all members of
the Society Board to the Chief Executive and to such other members of
the Executive Board as the Society Board desire to attend the meeting.
50% of Society Board members including at least four members of the
Society Board elected by the members or such higher number as the Society
Board may determine will form a quorum. A Society Board
meeting may be called by shorter notice if it is so agreed by all the
Society Board members entitled to attend and vote at the meeting.
- Unless the Society Board
decides otherwise, the Chief Executive (if appointed) is to be invited
to attend each meeting of the Society Board. Other members of
the Executive Board are to attend meetings of the Society Board when
requested to do so.
- Meetings of the Society
Board may be called either by the Secretary, or by a notice in writing
given to the Secretary by the chair of the Society Board, or by two
Society Board members who are not both elected by the members of the
Society or both co-opted Board members, specifying the business to be
discussed. The Secretary is to communicate every such notice to
all Society Board members as soon as possible and the meeting is to
be held at a venue decided by the Secretary not earlier than seven days
and not later than fourteen days after the receipt by the Secretary
of the notice. Should the Secretary fail to convene the meeting,
the Chair or the two Society Board members who have given the notice
in writing may call the meeting. No business is to be done at
the meeting other than the business specified in the notice.
- The Society Board may agree
that its members can participate in its meetings by telephone video
or computer link. Participation in a meeting in this manner shall
be deemed to constitute presence in person at the meeting.
- The Society Board may appoint
specialist advisors to advise on any issue and may invite them to attend
and speak (but not vote) at meetings of the Society Board.
- Subject to the following
provisions of this Rule, questions arising at a Society Board meeting
shall be decided by a majority of votes. In case of an equality
of votes at a Society Board meeting the Chair shall have a casting vote.
No resolution may be passed if it does not have the support of one or
more members of the Society Board elected by the members.
- A resolution in writing
signed by all members of the Society Board will have the same effect
as a resolution passed at a meeting of the Society Board and may consist
of several identical copies of a document each signed by one or more
Society Board members.
- Save for the exceptions
referred to below, no Society Board member is to have any material financial
interest personally or as a member of a firm or company or as a director
or other officer of a business trading for profit or in any other way
whatsoever in any contract or other transaction with the Society.
For the purposes of this rule, an interest of a person who is connected
with a Society Board member shall be treated as an interest of the Society
Board member. The exceptions are that Society Board members may:
- buy tickets or season tickets
for matches and use the facilities of any club in which the Society
is interested;
- be paid expenses including
travelling expenses;
- receive Society Board fees;
- if they are co-opted members
of the Society Board be employees of the Club;
- declare an interest in a
particular contract or issue and:
- not be present except with
the permission of the Society Board in any discussion of the contract
or issue;
- not vote on the contract
or issue (and if by inadvertence they do remain and vote, their vote
is not to be counted).
- Any member of the Society
Board who discloses a financial interest as described in the preceding
Rule must vacate their office either for a period or permanently if
requested so to do by a majority of the remaining members of the Society
Board. Any member of the Society Board who fails to disclose any
interest required to be disclosed under the preceding Rule must permanently
vacate their office if required to do so by a majority of the remaining
Society Board members.
COMMITTEES OF THE SOCIETY BOARD
- The Society Board may delegate
any of its powers to committees of the Society Board and in particular
may appoint a membership committee to consider proposals submitted by
the Executive Board regarding membership rates and benefits.
- The Society Board will:
- decide the membership of
each committee;
- appoint the Chair of each
committee;
- lay down the procedure to
be adopted by each committee (including the quorum);
- produce a written record
of the scope and authority of each committee.
CONSTITUTION OF THE EXECUTIVE BOARD
- The Executive Board may
have the following members who will be full or part time employees of
the Society:
- a Chief Executive
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