Subject: Convergence of UK conservation organizations
Last night (30 September 2004), the IPC committee declared a 74% majority in favour of convergence. Here are the figures: Postal votes in favour: 276 Postal votes against: 92 Attending votes in favour: 17 Attending votes against: 11 Total votes in favour: 293 (74% of vote) Total votes against: 103 (26% of Vote) Total votes cast: 396 By the time of the EGM, 19 postal votes were declared not admissible because they arrived after the cut off time for the closure of the postal vote. In addition The Chair apologised for the non-arrival of ballot forms to some members, however this was due, she said, to the postal service and not the IPC's fault and there was nothing that could be done about it. As a consequence, 799 members did not vote because their votes were not received by the IPC office on time, did not receive their ballot form in the first place, deliberately abstained or, (worst of all), were apathetic about the issues. Anyway you look at it, in what has been probably the most outrageous interpretation of the democratic process, a declaration by the committee that the 24% of the membership who actually voted in favour of convergence outweighs the 76% who voted against, didn't vote or couldn't vote. On any constitutional matter concerning the society, votes should have been received which constituted a majority of the membership. In the case of the IPC, that would have been a minimum of 51% or 598 ballot returns (only 396 votes were cast), even then, for the motion to be carried, the vote would have still needed to be the majority of the membership (51% or 598 votes). The moment that the committee realised that the votes cast did not constitute a majority of the membership, they should have declared the ballot void and started the process again, which is the policy in most societies I belong to except, it appears, the IPC. Instead, for this highly important matter of dissolving the IPC, the committee decided to ignore logic and accept a majority of the returned votes, (in this case one third of the membership or 33%). Consequently, what is undeniably the vociferous minority of 'pro' voters have been given carte blanch to carry their plans through against those who voted 'no' and the unquantifiable non-votes (which can not in any legal system be considered as a 'pro' vote by default). I am truly sorry that some members did not receive their ballot papers and were denied their right to vote, but for those who simply did not bother to vote or abstained--you should be ashamed of yourselves! You have allowed the IPC to slit its own throat without a real mandate to do so. Jonathan S. Farley, Soon to be Ex-Member of the IPC Senior Conservator Royal Botanic Gardens Kew +44 208 332 5419 Fax: +44 208 332 5430 *** Conservation DistList Instance 18:17 Distributed: Thursday, October 7, 2004 Message Id: cdl-18-17-002 ***Received on Friday, 1 October, 2004