Regional Council - What Council Does
Council takes most of the major decisions about the running of the society.
For example, with a few exceptions (SCAM and Field championships) it is generally
Council that decides what events will run and who will run them, or what the
Society's funds are used for and how budgets are set. Once activities are decided
on (and many are long-standing), Council monitors them on the basis of officers'
reports.
The business of Council covers:
- Appointment of Officials. Though the principal Officers of the Regional
Society are appointed at the AGM, much of the work of the Regional Society
is done by members of council, appointed by Council to specific posts as set
out in the Constitution.
- Activities of appointed Officers and Officials. Each officer is expected
to provide a report to every meeting of council of their recent and planned
future activities. The reports allow Council to monitor progress and for its
members to stay informed. Formally, too, council acceptance of a report forms
the continued authority for the officer to operate, though in practice this
function takes the form of questions about the report. Frequently, officers
will include questions or proposals for council, for example for guidance
on preferred ways of running a regional shoot, or formal suggested changes
in policy; Council will normally discuss and answer such questions by consensus
or vote.
- Approval of Judging appointments. Council approves individual candidate
judges at all levels for appointment. This is part of an approval mechanism
that includes the candidate Judge's peers (through the assessment process),
their own county organisation, and all other Counties in the region, before
GNAS formally appoints a judge. It is extremely rare for council to reject
a candidate, since they are usually supported by their own peers and by their
own county. But the mechanism is important in allowing all counties to comment
on a particular individual's suitability, since such appointments affect archers
in many counties.
- Approval of FITA Star event organisers. Formally, FITA Star events are awarded
to the Region, which accordingly is responsible for appointing suitable organisers.
This is one of the things GNAS requires to make sure that international record
status shoots will be run properly and by experienced organisers.
- Liaison. Council includes provision for liaison with the Regional Shooting
(Judges) and Coaching committees, and for Regional liaison with various National
bodies, including coaching and shooting committees and the EAF.
- "One-off" business. All the normal day to day business of the
Society is carried out by the Officers and Officials. But Council often has
to address matters which do not fit neatly into a particular officer's job.
Examples include EAF representation, general issues concerning all regional
tournaments, Regional policy on performance improvement, proposals for change
in archery administration or rules, one-off projects such as this website,
or requests for grants or loans (which often come first through the Secretary
or Treasurer). Council decides, in practice, what the Regional Society will
do in each case.