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The name of the society is: Delta Music Makers Community Band Society.
The purpose of the Society is to provide musical education to
adult amateur musicians and to educate and increase the public’s
understanding and appreciation of the arts by providing musical
performances in the community primarily in and around the Municipality
of Delta in the Province of British Columbia.
Upon winding-up or dissolution of the Society, the funds and
property remaining after the payment of all costs, charges and expenses
properly incurred in the wind-up or dissolution, including the
remuneration of a liquidator, and after payments to employees of the
Society of any arrears of salaries or wages, and after payments of any
debts of the Society, shall be distributed to such charities,
registered under the provisions of the Income Tax Act, or such
qualified donees allowed under the Income Tax Act, as shall be
designated by the members. Any of such funds or property remaining
which had originally been provided for specific purposes, shall,
whenever possible, be distributed to qualified donees or charities
registered under the provisions of the Income Tax Act carrying on work
with similar nature to such specific purposes. This clause is
unalterable.
BY-LAWS
Part 1 – Interpretation
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In these By-laws, unless the context otherwise requires,
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“Directors” means the Directors of the Society for the time being;
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“Society Act” means the Society Act of the Province of British Columbia from time to time in force all amendments to it;
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“Registered Address” of a member means his address as recorded in the Register of Members.
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Words importing the singular shall include the plural and
vice versa; and words importing the male person includes a female
person and a corporation.
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The members of the Society are those persons who become
members in accordance with these By-laws and have not ceased to be
members.
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Subject to the approval of the Directors, any individual may become a member of the Society.
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Every person desiring membership in the Society shall make
application therefore in such form as required by the Directors and
upon approval of the application by the Directors, shall become a
member of the Society.
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Every member shall uphold the Constitution and comply with these By-laws.
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The amount of any membership fees or dues, annual,
quarterly, monthly or bi-monthly as the case may be, shall be as
determined by the Directors from time to time and shall be payable
forthwith. The amount of any membership fees or dues paid by a member
shall be entirely non-refundable.
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No member of the Society shall be remunerated by the
Society for their service to the Society, but a member shall be
remunerated for all approved expenses necessarily and reasonably
incurred by them, while engaged in the affairs of the Society.
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Membership in the Society is non-transferable.
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A person shall cease to be a member of the Society:
- on having not been a member in good standing for two (2) consecutive months; or
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on being expelled; or
- by resigning.
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- A member may be expelled by a special resolution of the members passed at a General Meeting.
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The notice of special resolution for expulsion shall
be accompanied by a brief statement of the reason or reasons for the
proposed expulsion.
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The person who is the subject of the proposed
resolution for expulsion shall be given an opportunity to be heard at
the General Meeting before the special resolution is put to a vote.
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All members are in good standing except a member who has failed
to pay forthwith the current fee owed by him to the Society, and he is
not in good standing so long as the fee or debt remains unpaid.
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Upon any person ceasing to be a member pursuant to paragraph 11
hereof, he shall no longer have any claim upon or with respect to the
funds or property of the Society, but shall continue to be liable for
the payment of any fees, debts or dues which were payable by him prior
to the time he ceased to be a member.
Part 3 - Meeting of Members
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General Meetings of the Society shall be held at such time
and place, in accordance with the Society Act, as the Directors decide.
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Every General Meeting, other than the Annual General Meeting (AGM), is an Extraordinary General Meeting.
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The Directors may, whenever they think fit, convene an Extraordinary General Meeting.
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The Society shall give not less than fourteen (14) days
notice of a General Meeting of the Society to its members entitled to
receive notice of a General Meeting, but those members may waive or
reduce the period of notice for a particular meeting by unanimous
consent in writing.
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of a General Meeting shall specify the place, the day, and the hour of
the meeting and, in the case of special business, the general nature of
the business.
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The accidental omission to give notice of a meeting, or
the non-receipt of a notice by any of the members entitled to receive
notice, does not invalidate proceedings at that meeting.
- Annual General Meeting of the members shall be held at least once
every calendar year and not more than fifteen (15) months after the
holding of the last Annual General Meeting.
Part 4 – Proceedings at General Meetings
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Special Business is:
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all business at an Extraordinary General Meeting, except the adoption of rules of order, and
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all business that is transacted at an Annual General Meeting, except
- the adoption of rules of order;
- the consideration of the financial statements;
- the report of the Directors;
- the report of the auditor, if any;
- the election of Directors;
- the appointment of the auditor, if required, and
- such other business as, under these By-laws, ought to
be transacted at an Annual General Meeting or business which is brought
under consideration by the report of the Directors issued with the
notice convening the meeting.
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- No business, other than the election of a Chairman and the adjournment,
or termination of the meeting, shall be conducted at a General Meeting
at a time when a quorum is not present.
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If at any time during a General Meeting there ceases
to be a quorum present, business then in progress shall be suspended
until there is a quorum present or until the meeting is adjourned or
terminated.
- A quorum is a majority of the registered members of the Society.
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If within thirty (30) minutes from the time appointed for
a General Meeting a quorum is not present, the meeting, if convened on
the requisition of the members, shall be terminated; but in any other
case, it shall stand adjourned to the same day of the next week, at the
same time and place, and if, at the adjourned meeting a quorum is not
present within thirty (30) minutes from the time appointed for the
meeting, the members present constitute a quorum.
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Subject to paragraph 25, the President of the Society, the
Vice-president, or in the absence of both, one of the other Directors
present shall preside as Chairman of a General Meeting.
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If at a General Meeting:
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there is no President, Vice-president, or other
Directors present within fifteen (15) minutes after the time appointed
for holding the meeting; or
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the President and all the other Directors present are
unwilling to act as Chairman, the members present shall choose one of
their number to be Chairman.
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- A General Meeting may be adjourned from time to time and from place to
place, but no business shall be transacted at an adjourned meeting
other than the business left unfinished at the meeting from which the
adjournment took place.
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Where a meeting is adjourned for ten (10) days or
more, notice of the adjourned meeting shall be given as in the case of
the original meeting.
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Except as provided in this paragraph, it is not
necessary to give notice of an adjournment or of the business to be
transacted at an adjourned General Meeting.
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- No resolution proposed at a meeting need be seconded and the Chairman of a meeting may move or process a resolution.
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In case of an equality of votes the Chairman shall not
have a casting vote or second vote in addition to the vote to which he
may be entitled as a member and the proposed resolution shall not pass.
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- A member in good standing present at a meeting of members is entitled to one (1) vote.
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Voting is by a show of hands.
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Voting by proxy is not permitted.
Part 5 – Directors and Officers
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- The Directors may exercise all such power and do all
such acts and things as the Society may exercise and do, and which are
not in these By-laws or otherwise lawfully or required to be exercised
or done by the Society in General Meeting but subject, nevertheless, to
the provisions of:
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all laws affecting the Society
- these By-laws
- rules, not being inconsistent with these By-laws, which are made from time to time by the Society in General Meeting
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No rule, made by the Society in General Meeting, invalidates a prior
act of the Directors that would have been valid if that rule had not
been made.
- The President, Vice-president, Secretary, Treasurer and one (1) or more
other persons shall be Directors of the Society. All such Directors
must be members in good standing of the Society.
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The number of Directors shall be six (6) or such greater number as may be determined at the Annual General Meeting.
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- The term of office for each Director of the Society shall be three (3) years.
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Successors for Directors whose terms of office
are then expiring shall be elected at the annual meeting of the members
in the year such terms expire. A director may serve for a maximum
of two consecutive terms.
- An election may be by acclamation; otherwise it shall be by ballot.
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Vacancies in the Board of Directors shall be filled by
election by a majority of the remaining Directors then in office even
though less than a quorum. A Director so elected shall serve for the
unexpired term of his predecessor.
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The members may by special resolution remove a Director
before the expiration of his term of office, and may elect a successor
to complete the term of office.
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No Director shall be remunerated by the Society for being
or acting as a Director, but a Director shall be reimbursed for all
expenses necessarily and reasonably incurred by him while engaged in
the affairs of the Society.
Part 6 – Proceedings of Directors
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- The Directors may meet together at such places as they think fit for
the dispatch of business, adjourn and otherwise regulate their meetings
and proceedings, as they see fit.
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The quorum necessary for the transaction of business shall be a majority of the Directors then in office.
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Election of Officers –At the first Director’s meeting
following an Annual General Meeting, the Directors shall elect a
President, Vice-president, Secretary and Treasurer.
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The President shall be Chairman of all meetings of the
Directors, but if at any meeting the President is not present within
thirty (30) minutes after the time appointed for holding the meeting,
the Vice-president shall act as Chairman, but if neither is present the
Directors present may choose one (1) of their number to be Chairman at
the meeting.
- A Director, together with the Secretary, on request of a Director, shall convene a meeting of the Directors.
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- The Directors may delegate any, but not all, of their powers to
committees consisting of such Director or Directors as they see fit.
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A committee so formed in the exercise of the powers so
delegated shall conform to any rules that may from time to time be
imposed on it by the Directors, and shall report every act or thing
done in exercise of those powers to the earliest meeting of the
Directors to be held next after it has been done.
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A committee shall elect a Chairman of its meetings; but if
no Chairman is elected, or if at any meeting the Chairman is not
present within thirty (30) minutes after the appointed time for holding
the meeting, the Directors present who are members of the committee
shall choose one (1) of their number to be Chairman of the meeting.
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The members of a committee may meet and adjourn as they think proper.
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For the first meeting of Directors held immediately
following the appointment or election of a Director or Directors at an
Annual General Meeting of members, or for a meeting of the Directors at
which a Director is appointed to fill a vacancy in the Directors; it is
not necessary to give notice of the meeting to the newly elected or
appointed Director or Directors for the meeting to be duly constituted,
if a quorum of the Directors is present.
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A Director who may be absent temporarily from British
Columbia may send notice or deliver to the address of the Society a
Waiver of Notice, which may be by letter, telegram, telex, facsimile
(fax), e-mail, or cable, of any meeting of the Directors and may, at
any time, withdraw the Waiver, and until the Waiver is withdrawn:
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no notice of meetings of the Directors shall be sent to that Director; and
- any and all meetings of the Directors of the Society,
notice of which has not been given to that Director shall, if a quorum
of the Directors is present, be valid and effective.
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- Questions arising at any meeting of the Directors and committee of Directors shall be decided by a majority of votes.
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In case of an equality of votes the Chairman shall have a second and deciding vote.
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A resolution proposed at a meeting of Directors, or
committee of Directors, needs to be seconded and the Chairman of a
meeting may move or propose a resolution.
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A resolution in writing, signed by all Directors and
placed with the minutes of the Directors, is as valid and effective as
if regularly passed at a meeting of Directors.
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In order to carry out the purposes of the Society the
Directors may, on behalf of and in the name of the Society, raise and
secure the payment or repayment of money in the manner they decide and,
in particular, but without limiting the foregoing, by the issue of
debentures.
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No debenture shall be issued without the sanction of a special resolution.
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The members may by special resolution restrict the
borrowing powers of the Directors, but a restriction imposed expires at
the next Annual General Meeting.
Part 7 – Duties of Officers
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The President:
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shall preside at all meetings of the Society and of the Directors;
- is the chief executive officer of the Society and shall supervise the other officers in the execution of their duties.
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The Vice-president shall carry out the duties of the President during his absence.
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The Secretary shall:
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conduct the correspondence of the Society;
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issue notices of meetings of the Society and Directors;
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keep minutes of all meetings of the Society and Directors;
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have custody of all records and documents of the Society except those required to be kept by the Treasurer;
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have custody of the common seal of the Society; and
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maintain the register of members.
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The Treasurer shall:
- keep such financial records, including books of account, as are necessary to comply with the Society Act;
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render financial statements to the Directors, members and others when required; and
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oversee the collection of dues and payment of accounts
and with three (3) other Directors, so designated, maintain signing
authority for cheques.
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- The offices of Secretary and Treasurer may be held by one (1) person who shall be known as the Secretary-Treasurer.
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When a Secretary-Treasurer holds office the total
number of Directors shall not be less than five (5) or such greater
number as may have been determined pursuant to paragraph 29(b).
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In the absence of the Secretary from the meeting, the Directors shall appoint another person to act as Secretary at the meeting.
Part 8 – Seal
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The Directors may provide a common seal for the Society
and they shall have power from time to time to destroy it and
substitute a new seal in place of the seal destroyed.
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The common seal shall be affixed only when authorized by a
resolution of the Directors and then only in the presence of the
persons prescribed in the resolution or if no persons are prescribed,
in the presence of the President and Secretary or President and
Secretary-Treasurer.
Part 9 – Notice to Members
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A notice may be given to a member, either personally or by mail, at his registered address.
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A notice sent by mail shall be deemed to have been given
on the second day following that on which the notice is posted and in
proving that notice has been given it is sufficient to prove that the
notice was properly addressed and put in a Canadian post office
receptacle.
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- Notice of a General Meeting shall be given to:
- every member shown on the register of members on the day the notice is given; and
- the auditor, if Paragraph 3 of the Constitution applies.
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No other person is entitled to receive notice of a General Meeting.
Part 10 – By-laws
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On being admitted to membership, each member is entitled
to, and the Society shall give him, without charge, a copy of the
Constitution and By-laws of the Society.
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These By-laws shall not be altered or added to except by special resolution.
DATED this 25th day of January, 2011.
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