Administration Vision

From Augustan Society Staff Wiki
Revision as of 16:21, 16 February 2015 by Bruce (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

Administrative Structure

At present, the administrative structure of the Society is in the process of being normalized by efforts of Consuls. These efforts are not widely understood and are therefore often unappreciated.

  1. The membership elects the members of the Board of Directors
  2. The Board of Directors elects from its number the senior Officers, and from the membership elects the minor officers.
  3. The Board contracts with the Consuls for facilities and services.
  4. The President names the Chairmen of all principal committees, whether of the Board or of the Membership.
  5. Committee Chairmen name the members of their committees, a minority of which may be non-members.
  6. Committee Chairmen name the Chairmen of any Sub-Committees assigned to them.
  7. The Order of the Augustan Eagle is headed by the President, who names the officers from that group's membership, with Board confirmation.
  8. The Noble Company of the Rose is headed by the Magister Rosae who is elected from that groups membership by those members, with Board confirmation.
  9. The officers of the Noble Company of the Rose are named by the Magister Rosae, with Board confirmation.

As our membership has shrunk, it has become increasingly difficult to find candidates to stand for Director. While it was not long ago that the size of the Board was reduced from fifteen to nine, it may be time to consider additional reductions.

Proposal #6: The Society should consider linking the number of Directors to the size of the membership, with a maximum of 10% of the membership and a minimum of five.

The By-Laws permit the creation of an Executive Committee as a smaller version of the Board, with very broad authority to act when the Board does not meet. The motivation for this was two-fold: first, when meetings are held in person, it becomes difficult and expensive to bring Directors together on a frequent basis; second, the large Board had become unmanageable. Given that the meetings are now largely held via teleconference, and that the size of the Board has been cut, neither argument remains.

Proposal #7: The Society should consider discontinuing the use of the Executive Committee, and perhaps consider removing the option from the By-Laws.


There exist a variety of ways for a non-profit to be managed:

  1. Strong Executive Director, with a weak Board whose duties are reduced to contracting with the Executive Director.
  2. Strong Board of Directors, with a weak staff, headed perhaps by an Office Manager.
  3. Shared power between the Board of Directors and an Executive Director (similar to the present situation).

The first of these is idea when the perfect Executive Director is available. This was the structure of the Society for much of its first several decades. It suffers from major trauma and interruption of services when an Executive Director leaves (or dies).

The second of these is best when it's desired to have paid staff, but to keep expenses low. The keys to making this form work are excellent documentation of procedures and gentle oversight.

The third of these -- the present situation -- is often unstable, with responsibility and authority divided in uneasy ways unless carefully documented (which this Wiki is an attempt to address).

Proposal #8: The Society should pursue conversion of the administration from the present "shared power" arrangement to having a strong Board overseeing largely clerical staff.