City Clerk
Roberts Rules of Order
Points
The following three points are always in order:
- Point of Order: a question about
process, or objection and suggestion of alternative process. May
include a request for the facilitator to rule on process.
- Point of Information: a request for
information on a specific question, either about process or about
the content of a motion. This is not a way to get the floor to say
something you think people should know. People misusing points of
information in this fashion will be defenestrated, or otherwise
sanctioned forcefully.
- Point of Personal Privilege: a
comment addressing a personal need - a direct response to a comment
defaming one's character, a plea to open the windows, etc.
Motions
All motions must be seconded, and are adopted by a majority vote
unless otherwise noted. All motions may be debated unless otherwise
noted. Motions are in order of precedence: motions may be made only
if no motion of equal or higher precedence is on the floor (i.e.,
don't do a number 5 (move to end debate) when the body is discussing
a number 4 (move to suspend rules).
- Motion to Adjourn: not
debatable; goes to immediate majority vote.
- Motion to Recess: not debatable.
May be for a specific time.
- Motion to Appeal the
Facilitator's Decision: Not debatable; goes to immediate vote.
Allows the body to overrule a decision made by the chair.
- Motion to Suspend the Rules:
suspends formal process for dealing with a specific question.
Debatable; requires 2/3 vote.
- Motion to End Debate and Vote or
Call the Question: applies only to the motion on the floor. Not
debatable; requires 2/3 vote.
- Motion to Extend Debate: can be
general, or for a specific time or number of speakers. Not
debatable.
- Motion to Refer to Committee:
applies only to the main motion. Refers question to a specific
group with a specific time and charge.
- Motion to Divide the Question:
breaks the motion on the floor into two parts, in manner
suggested by mover.
- Motion to Amend: must be voted
for by a majority to be considered and by a 2/3 to be passed. If
amendment is accepted as "friendly" by the proposer of the
amendment then many bodies will allow it to be accepted without
a formal vote; this is a way of including a consensus-building
process into procedure without endless debate over amendments to
amendments. Strictly speaking, however, once the main motion is
made it is the property of the body to amend.
- Main Motion: what it is you're
debating and amending.
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