This page describes a procedure for electronic voting (primarily of the EC).

The key steps of voting at in-person EC meetings that it attempts to replicate are:

  1. Participation by the whole EC: while some people may not be able to make an EC meeting, each EC member is informed of the time (and generally participates in picking a time that works for ~everyone) and has a chance to make it; per standing policies, quorum is a majority of the EC
  2. Discuss: attendees can discuss the issue, and potentially sway the opinions of the other attendees
  3. Vote: after the discussion (under RONR, with a 2/3 vote to close discussion, if necessary), EC members vote

In order to simulate the above in an email context, use the following procedures. In general, if a vote is expected to be controversial, having it at a public EC meeting is probably better than doing it by email, but something slightly controversial may make sense to do via email.

Non-controversial votes (white ballot equivalent)

  1. Propose the question ("Does Alice dance club level, and do we want to member her?")
  2. Specify a final deadline for voting ("Please respond by Sunday"), which should be at least a couple days out (three days, say). If the sponsor doesn't include a time frame, the chair (President/VP) should specify one. If the sponsor does include a time frame, the chair should confirm that it's reasonable.
  3. If there are objections, this was actually a controversial vote (your white ballot failed). See below.
  4. Once the final deadline is reached, if a quorum of EC members have replied in favor and nobody has objected, then the motion passes.
  5. Once the preferred deadline has passed, if all EC members have replied and there have been no objections, then the motion passes.

Controversial votes

  1. Propose the question ("Does Alice dance club level, and do we want to member her?")
  2. The chair (President/VP) should specify a timeline (say: at least three days for discussion, discussion ends after the list has been quiet for at least 36 hours; voting will take place over the next two days)
  3. Discuss
  4. Once the discussion has died down, the chair should declare that voting has begun.
  5. Once the voting period ends, if a quorum of the EC has participated and a majority voted in favor, the motion passes.