Amending Bylaws
How Does One Amend the Bylaws?
The first step is to look in your bylaws to
see what it states as the procedure. Just because Robert's
Rules of Order gives a procedure that does not mean that your
bylaws must give the same procedure.
Normally, it requires previous notice and a
two-thirds vote to amend the bylaws. However, I am a member of
two parliamentary organizations that allows for a different
procedure. One requires a two-thirds vote and previous notice or
the bylaws can be amended at a regular business meeting by a
unanimous vote of those present.
Recently at our last business meeting we
amended our bylaws by a unanimous vote to allow student members
to be elected to the office of secretary and treasurer.

How Do I Proceed?
After you find out how the bylaws are to be
amended. The next step is to write down what bylaw you want
changed and how you want it worded. Check with several other
people in the organization. Have them read it. Does the proposed
change make sense? Does this change affect other bylaws? If so
how? Do you need to propose other changes if this bylaw change is
adopted? Word the change carefully and completely.
The next step is giving previous notice. What
do your bylaws say has to be the correct previous notice? Can it
be sent in the mail with the call to the meeting? Does it have to
go to a Bylaw Committee first for review? Or does it have to go
through the Board of Directors or can you present it directly to
the membership? Can previous notice be given at a meeting of the
membership?

Giving Previous Notice
In giving previous notice, state which bylaw
you want to amend. If this is going out in the call to the
meeting write the bylaw as it now stands, naming the Article and
Section. Then state the proposed amendment and how it would read
if amended.
In giving previous notice at a meeting, have
the proposed amendment written out and give a copy to the
secretary. This must be included in the minutes.
Let's say Article III. Section 2. states,
"Membership dues are fifteen dollars ($15) per year and must
be paid by January 30. If not paid by January 30, the member is
considered delinquent and can not vote at any meeting until the
dues are paid. If dues are not paid by March 30 the member will
be expelled from membership."
A member wants to change the amount of dues
to twenty-five ($25) dollars per year.
At a meeting, the member would rise, address
the chair, and state, "Mr. President, I rise to give
previous notice that I will make a motion to amend our bylaws at
the next meeting. I will move to amend Article III, Section 2, by
striking out "fifteen dollars" and inserting
"twenty five dollars"."
At this point the member gives the proposed
amendment to the president. The president can state,
"Previous notice is given that at the next meeting we will
consider an amendment to the bylaws, to strike out "fifteen
dollars" and insert "twenty-five dollars" from
Article III, Section 2. The secretary records this in the
minutes".

An Important Point about Previous Notices
Once the notice has been given, members at
the next meeting cannot amend it beyond the scope of the notice.
This means that when the amendment is proposed and open for
discussion at the next meeting no one could propose an amendment
to the amendment to strike out "$25.00" and insert
"$30.00". This protects the rights of the absent
members. The absent members realize that dues might be raised to
$25.00 but not any higher.
Another consideration is that the dues cannot
be lowered beyond $15.00. The proposal was to "raise"
dues not "lower" the dues. In other words just because
an amendment is proposed does not mean it's carte blanche.
The only amendments that can be made to this proposed amendment
is anything between $15.00 and $25.00.

Giving Notice in Writing
Robert's recommends that if a notice is
required to be in writing, it should be signed by a seconder --
that way the membership knows at least two people want to discuss
it and time is not wasted by only one person who is interested in
this proposal.

At the Meeting
The bylaw amendment needs to be formally
presented usually under new business. The member must rise,
address the chair, and state the proposed amendment. It needs a
second. The chair places it before the assembly by restating the
proposed amendment and asks for discussion. The proposed
amendment is considered a main motion and both primary and
secondary amendments are allowed.
The vote taken should be a counted vote,
either by standing, show of hands or ballot vote. The vote should
be recorded in the minutes -- how many voted for and how many
voted against.

When Does the Amendment Take Effect?
It takes effect immediately unless the
members adopt a proviso for it to take effect at another time. A
proviso is an incidental motion and can be adopted while the
bylaw amendment is pending.

How Is it Written in the Minutes?
The secretary should take great care in how
this is written in the minutes. The secretary should write the
originally bylaw in the minutes and then the proposed amendment
and who proposed it. Finally, record how it was worded, when
adopted, and numerical vote (12 voted in the affirmative and 6 in
the negative. There was a two thirds vote in the affirmative and
the amendment was adopted.)

Final Suggestion
If bylaws are put on a computer disc then
printed and put in a three ring binder, it becomes easy to make
changes to the bylaws. When the bylaws are amended, record at the
bottom of the page amended the date it was amended.

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