More Resources
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How to Call the Question and Close Debate in a Board Meeting
How to Call the Question and Close Debate in a Board Meeting -
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The Terms You'll Hear at Your First Meeting (And What They Mean)
You show up to your first board meeting, someone makes a motion, someone else calls the question, and you nod like you've been doing this for years.
You have no idea what just happened.
This is that glossary.
Quorum The minimum number of members who must be present for the board to conduct business. No quorum, no votes. Usually defined in the bylaws.
Agenda The official list of items the board plans to discuss or vote on. What's on it gets discussed. What's not on it generally doesn't get voted on.
Bylaws The governing document for the organization — structure, roles, term limits, voting rules. The rulebook for how the organization runs, separate from Robert's Rules which governs how meetings run.
Public Comment The portion of the meeting where community members can address the board. Usually time-limited. Board members listen and typically don't respond directly.
Motion A formal proposal for the board to take action. Making a motion doesn't signal support , it puts something on the table for consideration.
Second Confirmation from another member that the motion is worth discussing. One word. Procedurally required. Also doesn't indicate support.
Call the Question A way to end debate and move to a vote. Not a personal attack on whoever was still talking.
Abstain Choosing not to vote. Not a yes, not a no. Often used when a member has a conflict of interest on the item.
Recuse When a board member removes themselves from discussion and the vote on a specific item due to a personal or financial conflict of interest. The right move when something hits too close to home.
Tabled A motion set aside for a future meeting. Not dead. Just waiting.
Point of Order A flag that something in the meeting isn't following the rules. Can be raised by any member, immediately, without waiting to be recognized. The chair rules on it and the meeting moves on.
Point of Clarification A request to better understand a motion, a procedure or a term being used. A question, not a debate tactic.
Recess A short break. The meeting resumes after.
Adjourn The formal end of the meeting. Once adjourned, it's over.
Minutes The official record of what the board decided. Motions, votes, actions taken. Not a transcript of everything said. Approved at the next meeting.
Resolution A formal written statement of a board decision, used for significant actions that need documentation beyond a standard vote.
Consent Agenda Routine items bundled together and approved in a single vote. Any member can pull an item off for separate discussion if needed.
You don't need to memorize all of this before your first meeting. You just need enough to follow what's happening and feel comfortable asking when you don't.
Congratulations. You're officially bilingual. The second language is Board, and unlike most second languages, you'll actually use it every month.
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