Clarity in your governing documents will help encourage compliance and greater adoption by your members. Structuring governing documents in a way every member can grasp will help ensure success for your team.
The Constitution as a system of fundamental principles according to which a nation, state, corporation, or the like is governed. In the American Legion Auxiliary, it should constitute the Articles of Incorporation. It should also contain the core purpose and structure of your department or unit. The Constitution should contain articles that are rarely changed.
Bylaws are defined as the governing regulations of a corporation’s or society’s internal affairs. In your department or unit, this should include how you govern yourself and any fundamental rules voted on by the organization. Bylaws should be amended every five to 10 years as needed and supported by Standing Rules.
The Standing Rules are the issues that relate to the details of the administration of a society and which can be adopted or changed in the same way as any other act of the assembly. Standing rules can be suspended by a majority vote for the duration of the session, but not for longer. In the Auxiliary, your Standing Rules should be more specific than the Bylaws, administrative, and “process focused.” They should provide details about provisions in the Bylaws. They can be amended as frequently as needed to keep the organization up to date.
Civility lives in governing documents containing rules for all members to follow. Be sure to implement rules appropriately, follow your governing documents for how revisions should occur, and then help your members understand the changes by providing clarifying language and rationale for the change.
VT Dept. ALA Constitution & Bylaws
VT Dept. ALA Standing Rules
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