PARLIAMENTARY PROCEDURE
IN THE SENATE
The parliamentary authority
for the Eastern Kentucky University Faculty Senate is the current
edition of Roberts Rules of Order, Newly Revised (RONR),
which applies in all cases where it does not conflict with the Senate
bylaws or special rules of order. Senate members should familiarize
themselves with the bylaws and special rules of order. For the finer
points of parliamentary law, Senate members may consult RONR or
the Senate Parliamentarian.
RIGHTS OF MEMBERS
Members of an assembly have
the following rights: to attend meetings; to make motions and nominate;
to debate; to vote; to hold office, if qualified; to have the agenda
followed; and to have the rules enforced. Any motion that abridges
or denies any of these rights requires a two-thirds vote.
ORDER OF BUSINESS
By custom the Faculty
Senate follows the following order of business:
- Approval of Minutes
- Report of the President
- Report of the Executive committee
- Report of the Faculty Regent
- Report of the COSFL Representative
- Report of the Student Senate President
- Reports of Standing Committees
- Reports of Special, or Ad Hoc, Committees
- Special Orders (Special
orders are items of business that according to the bylaws must
be taken up at a specified meeting or items that were postponed
from the previous meeting and made a special order-i.e., given
priority in the order of business-by a two-thirds vote.)
- Unfinished Business and General Orders
(Unfinished business is business that was on the agenda for the
previous meeting but was not reached before adjournment. General
orders are items postponed from the previous meeting by a majority
vote.)
- New Business
- Adjournment
DEBATE
Except by consent of the
assembly, members may debate only when a motion is pending, and
debate must always be germane to the pending question.
A member may speak only twice
to the same motion. If, however, the motions goes over to another
day--if, for example, it is postponed to the next meeting--the member
may speak twice again. A member who has spoken to a particular motion
may not speak again until everyone who wishes to speak the first
time has done so.
A member who wishes to speak
waits until the previous speaker has concluded, then rises, addresses
the chair, and waits to be recognized. Members are recognized in
the order in which they seek recognition except that, insofar as
practicable, the chair alternates between members who wish to speak
for and against a measure.
All remarks in debate are
addressed to the chair, never to another member. No speaker may
attack the motives or the character of another member. Past actions
of the assembly may not be criticized except in debate on a motion
to amend or rescind the past action.
KINDS OF MOTIONS
Main Motions
Main motions may be made
only when nothing is pending. Main motions require a second, are
debatable, and require a majority vote.
Ranking Motions
Certain motions have
rank; that is, a motion with lower rank cannot be made while
a motion of higher rank is pending. The ranking motions, from
lowest to highest, are listed below with an S if they
require a second, with D or U to indicate whether
they are debatable or undebatable, and with an M or 2/3
to indicate the vote required.
- Postpone Indefinitely (S,D,M)
- Amend (S,D,M)
- Refer to a Committee (S,D,M)
- Postpone to a Definite Time (S,D,M)
- Limit or Extend the Limits of Debate (S,U,2/3)
- Previous Question (Close Debate) (S,U,2/3)
- Lay on the Table (S,U,M)
- Call for the Order of the Day (ruled on
by the chair)
- Question of Privilege (ruled on by the
chair)
- Recess (S,U,M)
- Adjourn (S,U,M)
- Fix the Time to which to Adjourn
Important exceptions: (a)
motions to amend may be made while any motion is pending that has
a legitimate variable and (b) certain motions with high rank (raise
a question of privilege, recess, and fix the time to which to adjourn)
are privileged only if they are made while business is pending.
A motion to recess, for example, if made when nothing is pending,
is a main motion and is therefore debatable.
Incidental Motions
Certain motions arise
incidentally as other motions are being considered. These motions,
by and large, are disposed of as they arise. Like the ranking
motions, incidental motions may be amended if they have a legitimate
variable. Some of the most commonly used incidental motions
are as follows:
- Point of Order (ruled on by the chair,
subject to appeal)
- Appeal (S,M, debatable unless (a) a nondebatable
motion is pending or (b) it has to do with decorum in debate)
- Point of Information (answered, or referred
to a knowledgeable member, by the chair)
- Parliamentary Inquiry (answered by the
chair, not subject to appeal)
- Suspend the Rules (S,U,2/3)
- Objection to the Consideration of the
Question (MUST be made before debate begins on the motion in question,
S,U,2/3)
- Withdraw a Motion (S,U,M, but often handled
by general consent)
- Request (S,U,M, except that a request
to be excused from a duty is debatable)
- Division of a Question (S,U,M)
- Consider by Paragraph or Seriatim (S,U,M)
Bring Back, or Restorative
Motions
Certain motions are used
to bring back before the assembly motions previously disposed
of: The voting requirements for these motions vary depending
on the circumstances. Consult Roberts Rules of Order,
Newly Revised.
- Take from the table (S,U,M)
- Rescind/Amend Something Previously Adopted
(S,D, See RONR)
- Discharge a Committee (S,D, See RONR)
- Reconsider/Reconsider and Enter on the
Minutes (S, D or U, depending on whether the motion it is proposed
to reconsider is debatable; M)
VOTING
A voice vote is taken whenever
a majority is required for adoption. If, after the chair declares
the result, a member is in doubt, the member may demand that the
vote be retaken as a standing vote. (Without rising or seeking recognition,
the member calls out "Division!") The chair who is in
doubt of the result of a voice vote may ask for a standing vote
and may have the vote counted. A member who wishes the vote to be
counted must make a motion to that effect.
A standing vote is taken
whenever a 2/3 vote is required for adoption.