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I.13 QUORUM AND PARLIAMENTARY PROCEDURAL RULES By custom, the Parliamentarian of the campus Faculty Senate has relied on Robert's Rules of Order, probably the most widely used manual of parliamentary procedure. The faculty legislation establishing the L&S Faculty Senate specifies that Robert's Rules shall govern its operation. If a faculty governing body, including the L&S Senate and departmental Executive Committees, has not adopted legislation governing some facet of its operation, then the operative procedures of the campus Faculty Senate are presumed to apply. An example is the definition of a quorum. At the same time, by adopting Chapter 5 of the Faculty Policies and Procedures (see http://www.secfac.wisc.edu/governance/FPP/Chapter_5.htm) the campus Faculty Senate has authorized a certain measure of home rule in the governance of academic departments. In the example of the definition of a quorum for departmental meetings, some departments require a two-thirds majority vote of a departmental executive committee for certain kinds of personnel actions. In the absence of specific departmental legislation, however, it should be assumed that Robert's Rules would apply.
This suggests that if your department has not already specified its rules for a quorum or other special voting requirements, you should do so if you believe that Robert's Rules does not meet your needs. For example, you should give some thought to whether you want to follow the Robert's Rules requirement that a majority of all members of your departmental or executive committees is needed for a legal quorum of those bodies, regardless of whether or not some of the members are away on leave or research funding for the semester or year. Conceivably, a quorum requirement that fails to take such absences into account might make it difficult or impossible to muster a quorum of an executive committee to transact necessary business legally. We suggest, therefore, that you consider adopting a quorum requirement that does not include members who are on leave or research or other University assignment away from Madison, but which recognizes their continuing right to attend and participate in any departmental meetings when they are available while in such status. We also suggest that you consider adopting a two-thirds majority voting rule, rather than a simple majority, for such important personnel decisions as faculty appointments, promotions, and tenure.
Don't overlook the requirement in FPP 5.22 for a specific annual vote by a departmental executive committee if it wishes to delegate certain matters to a subcommittee or the chair. These matters include the authority to make recommendations regarding any or all of the following matters:
The departmental executive committee may also delegate authority for recommendations for promotion to the rank of professor to a committee of the full professors of the department. As a matter of convenience, the chair should be included as a member of the delegated body. In legislative years, when it is almost certain that action on the biennial budget will not be completed before the end of the academic year, it is especially important to have a departmental mechanism in place that can act for the executive committee in implementing departmental merit salary recommendations in the likely event that a quorum of the executive committee is unavailable for this purpose. Another important consideration is the department's rules on the vote required for promotion to tenure. Some departments require a simple majority, while others require a higher majority, such as two-thirds. It is extremely important that the department be consistent in its rules, and that they be recorded in writing and announced to probationary faculty members in advance of tenure deliberations. Reviewed August 7, 2006 by EMK |
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It is the nature of this document to be a work in progress. The L&S Handbook is produced and hosted by the UW-Madison College of Letters and Science. South Hall, 1055 Bascom Mall, Madison WI 53706 This document is updated annually each summer; however, significant additions may be made at any time. Departments will be alerted to these when they are made. Most recent annual update: August 2006. Contact: Elaine M. Klein, Webmaster/Editor, L&S Online Handbook klein@ls.admin.wisc.edu or (608) 265-8484 ©2000-2006 UW System Board of Regents |