- Name of the Organization
- The name of the organization shall be the Arizona
Corsairs.
- Also referred to as the AZ Corsairs.
- Mission Statement
The Arizona Corsairs exist to incorporate the theme of pirates
and piracy in all forms; be it historical, legendary, cinematic, or
literary; in everything we do for our enjoyment and the enjoyment
of the general public.
- Membership
- Primary membership begins with a ship.
- Captaincy shall be defined and governed as follows:
-
- Any person who has met the basic requirements as set forth by
these articles (Article III, Section 2, Sub-section a.) shall be
said to hold captaincy. Officially Recognized Captaincy does not
expire; however, it may be revoked by a vote of quorum of the
Council of Captains (see article IV.).
- An officially-recognized captain may only sponsor one captain
at one time, unless otherwise selected by the Council of Captains
for reasons of mutiny as covered in Article VI, Section3.
- Once the sponsored captain becomes official, the sponsoring
captain may select another to be sponsored.
- Captaincy is a rank established by being sponsored by a
recognized captain of the AZ Corsairs for one year, upon which time
the captain will become an “Officially- recognized” Arizona Corsair
Captain before the Council of Captains. Only an
“Officially-recognized” AZ Corsair Captain may sponsor someone for
captaincy.
- A name for his or her ship.
- A “Roger”/Jack (ship’s colors, design, or motto to be displayed
on a flag).
- A ship’s mission statement that does not conflict with the
articles.
- At least five crew members who recognize him/her as captain for
one year.
- Before being sponsored, the said captain must have:
- A captain shall be responsible for himself and his crew at all
times.
- No ship law may conflict with the Arizona Corsairs Articles and
Code of Conduct.
- No ship laws may supersede the laws and titles of the
governmental jurisdiction in which the ship operates and
exists.
- The matters of discipline shall be the jurisdiction of the
captain involved, with the following restrictions:
- This annual tariff fee is required for ship’s recognition along
with primary contact information, including mailing address and
phone number.
- The annual tariff is subject to change, upon review and voted
by the Council of Captains.
- A seat upon the Council of Captains and all privileges that
come with that responsibility (Article V).
- The Captain’s Ship is listed on all websites and official
ledgers as being recognized as an “Official” Ship of the AZ
Corsairs.
- All crew from a recognized ship are recognized as members of
the Arizona Corsairs.
- Current tariff comes with these privileges:
- A captain is responsible for the annual tariff placed on
his/her ship for membership. (A captain may request the tariff from
his/her crew or not).
- Duties of the first officer:
-
- A first officer should attend Captains’ Council whenever
possible
- Most importantly the first officer must attend in the captain’s
stead at a council meeting to declare the captain’s vote by proxy
if the captain is unable to attend.
- The vote stated by the first officer is dictated as the word of
his or her captain and shall be counted as such.
- A captain is responsible to assign members of his ship as proxy
and at minimum there must at least be a first officer.
- To inform the incoming captain of the Articles and Code of
Conduct of the AZ Corsairs.
- To relate the traditions and history of the AZ Corsairs.
- To inform the probationary captain of meetings and current
events.
- Introduce the new captain to the Council of Captains.
- A sponsoring captain may pull sponsorship at any time, thus
removing membership status.
- May speak on behalf of the new captain in Council and
Tribunals.
- Mentorship.
- Responsibility of sponsoring captain
- Captain’s Duties & Responsibilities
- For a ship to form, it requires a captain and a crew.
- A crew member is someone that is considered a member of a ship
that they support and are supported from.
- Crew members are represented in the Council of Captains by
their captain.
- Crew Member
- With every ship membership there will be a membership packet
granted the captain to include:
-
- Set of business cards with AZ Corsairs contact
information.
- Access to the Captain’s Forum and Email Listings.
- Membership Packet
IV. Loss of Membership
- Captains’ and Ships’ Membership
It is important to note that a ship is how the captain’s crew
holds membership and is represented by council. This is a lifetime
title as long as annual tariffs are met and the captain wishes to
keep it.
-
- Any captain or crew member’s conduct or actions that would be
contrary to the Arizona Corsairs Articles or Code of Conduct could
be grounds to initiate a Council Tribunal.
- Any captain or sponsored captain may address the actions of a
crew member prior to a Captains’ Council or Tribunal.
- When the actions of a member have been brought to the attention
of the council, a Tribunal Meeting will be set forth within a
month, with all parties involved to be called forth before the
Council Tribunal.
- A Council Tribunal shall consist of not less than a quorum of
the captains (A quorum is 2/3 of the current captains that sit on
the Council of the Captains)
- Captain of the ship concerning the tribunal may not sit on the
tribunal.
- The tribunal shall hear the evidence on grounds that the
offender is innocent until proven guilty.
- There may be representation present at Tribunal for crew
members or sponsored captains. (Captains for crew members and
sponsoring captains for probationary captains)
- Any member may speak for themselves at anytime. (Right to
represent oneself)
- This may be any captain or first mate of the Tribunal’s
choosing on a majority vote.
- The individual must be chosen a week prior to the proceedings
at minimum.
- The inquisitor may not be chosen from the same ship as the
offender.
- The inquisitor is to research all the information and speak to
all the witnesses on behalf of the Tribunal to present a case.
- The inquisitor must share all of its findings with the defense
upon defense’s request.
- An inquisitor must be selected by the Tribunal prior to the
proceedings.
- The Tribunal will vote with majority for a judge among
themselves to only conduct the proceedings.
- The Tribunal will vote for majority for a secretary to report
the proceedings. (This does not have to be a member of the Tribunal
Council.)
- For crew member the Tribunal only needs a majority vote for
removal of membership.
- For captain or ship there must be a unanimous vote of the
Tribunal for loss of membership.
- If the captain or ship is brought before the Tribunal again for
any other reason, it will only take a MAJORITY vote of the Tribunal
for the loss of membership.
- In the case of a majority vote for the captain’s or ship’s
removal, the captain or ship will be placed on notice for six
months. After the six months, the notice will be removed and not
held against the person or ship again.
- For all cases of membership loss, the member shall be stripped
of all AZ Corsair titles and privileges and taken off the listings
on websites and ledgers. Any equipment and loaned items from the AZ
Corsairs should be returned.
- Upon hearing all arguments, either from both defense and
prosecution, the Tribunal will vote for removal of said membership
status.
- Any attempt to bring a person or ship up on the same charges
shall be considered “Double Jeopardy,” and will be ignored by the
Captains’ Council for convening a Tribunal.
- The Tribunal Council may recess a tribunal for any reason it
deems necessary, i.e., for length of arguments creating a need for
a break or for research into any argument.
- Tribunal Council
- Council of Captains
Preface: The Captains’ Council has been
established to discuss and vote on all issues that involve the
Arizona Corsairs as a whole. Individual ships are free to function
on their own and represent themselves as Arizona Corsairs so long
as they follow the Articles and Code of Conduct.
- The Council of Captains will meet every 3rd Sunday of the month
to do business, unless otherwise noted by the Council of Captains
for the purposes of holidays or conflicts of interest such as
official events. Then the meeting will be adjusted.
- Officers are chosen with a majority vote of the Council.
- Elections are to be held annually every September for officers
of the Captains’ Council.
- The Council is made up of all captains of the Arizona Corsairs
and all are considered equals at this Council.
- Officers of the Council will be elected for a service of not
longer than a year. (Nor allowed to be elected for a consecutive
year; however, they may be elected the year after not serving in
that position (i.e., A treasurer could be elected the next year as
ambassador, but not as treasurer).
-
- Officer Titles & Duties:
-
- Secretary
-
- Duties to include but not limited to:
-
- Recording minutes of the Captains’ Council meetings.
- Keeping and organizing the archives, including ship contact
information and status. (Materials to be supplied by
treasury).
- Posting of minutes from Captains’ Council meetings.
- Contact all captains on new matters prior to meetings.
- Control materials needed for meetings such as recorders,
conference calling, etc…
- Tertiary contact for external events or productions.
- Duties to include but not limited to:
-
- Tracking and collection of ship tariffs.
- Accounting for the Arizona Corsairs on a whole.
- Tracking of expenditures.
- Reporting of balances and shares.
- Check writing.
- Deposits.
- Account Transfers.
- Account access combined with Council Chair or Ambassador.
- Is responsible for the filing of annual taxes.
- Treasurer
- Duties to include but not limited to:
-
- Will conduct Captains’ Council meetings in absence of the
Council Chair as the position.
- Is the primary contact for external events or production
requests.
- Is a co-signer for account access combined with the
treasurer.
- Primary contact for media and press.
- Ambassador
- Duties to include but not limited to:
-
- To conduct Captains’ Council meetings using “Robert’s Rules” as
a guideline.
- Secondary contact for external events or production
requests.
- Is a co-signer for account access combined with the
treasurer.
- Secondary contact for media and press.
- Upon ties, chair may break it with an additional vote.
- Council Chair
- Officers of the Captains’ Council
- The Body of the Council
- Voting
-
- All events involving the Arizona Corsairs as a whole must be
voted on by the Council of Captains.
-
- Official events and projects require majority vote by
captains.
- Ship events are a matter of individual ships.
- All captains have a right to vote.
- If a captain is unavailable for the meeting, the first mate of
their ship may vote in their stead with all rights of the captain.
- A proxy vote may be a written and signed statement by the
captain of the absent ship, or given in such a way as to be
understood by all captains present. (Telephone, email, etc…)
- The proxy may only pertain to a singular matter/meeting and any
other vote/meeting would require another proxy.
- The proxy may be delivered by any means necessary to the
Council of Captains.
- If neither the captain nor first mate or any representative of
the ship is unable to be present for the vote, a proxy may be
chosen by the captain of the absent ship.
- In some cases a conference call or texting may be utilized by
the Council, but is not required.
- Majority will be ruled as 51% or more present at a
meeting.
- Quorum will be ruled as 2/3 of total Captains on Council.
- Powers of the Council
- Council has the right to alter or amend the Articles or the
Code of Conduct with a quorum vote(2/3 of total captains on the
Council).
- Council will create a Tribunal as covered in article IV section
2, for matters of discipline.
- Council will select events to be officially recognized and
backed by the Arizona Corsairs with a majority vote of the Council
(51% or more of Council present).
- Council has the right create events and programs for the
Arizona Corsair with a majority vote of the Council (51% or more of
Council present).
- Council will elect officers and representatives with a majority
vote of the Council (51% or more of Council present).
- Council will recognize a captain that has met all the
requirements of captaincy as covered in Article III, Section
2.
- Council is to decide on promotions and official gear and
collateral (i.e. flyers, brochures, posters, etc…) with majority
present.
- Council may create “sub-committees” or ship alliances to handle
events or projects.
- Alliances will report to the Council of Captains while planning
and executing events or projects.
- Alliance may be granted a stipend for event or project
expenses, as designated by the Council (Based on an
as-needed-basis).
- Sub-committees/Alliances will be granted power to purchase,
barter and act as an agent for the event or project it was formed
for.
- Mutiny
Mutiny is wherein the crewmembers of an existing
officially-recognized ship of the Arizona Corsairs wish to remove
the captain of said ship from its command. The following shall take
place:
- A Case of Mutiny
-
- Before a case of mutiny may exist; any crewmember of the ship
in question shall have convened with other crewmembers of the ship
and become aware of the significant state of the dissatisfaction in
not less than 1/3 of the crew.
- The significant state of dissatisfaction shall be recognized to
exist if the said crewmember that convened the meeting of mutineers
is willing to pursue the matter of mutiny before the Council of
Captains. (This should be a last possible remedy to any
unsatisfactory command condition on board the ship in
question.)
- The crewmember in charge of the mutiny shall inform the Council
of Captains that a state of mutiny is in effect in person before
the council with a written statement, including the signatures of
all mutineers involved as an official Act of Mutiny.
- In extreme cases the crewmember in charge of the mutiny may
make the Act of Mutiny available to all the captains of the Council
with copies of the signed agreement prior to a pre-scribed meeting
of the Council.
- The captain of said ship shall not disband the ship or take any
actions against the mutineers until such a time as the matter of
mutiny has been resolved before the Council of Captains.
- After the Act of Mutiny has been given to the Council of
Captains, including the captain in question;
- Council will make the Act of Mutiny an “Incidental Motion” with
a second by default at the first convened Captains’ Council after
the Act of Mutiny had been submitted.
- Failure to show on behalf of the Mutiny by the Mutineer in
Charge will be treated as default for the captain and the said crew
will remain onboard without reprisal.
- Failure of said captain to appear on behalf of the ship will be
treated as default for the mutineers and the mutineers will have
succeeded in their mutiny (See successful mutiny below).
- Both the Captain and the Mutineer in Charge are to appear
before the Council at this meeting.
- If no solution can be agreed upon by all parties, the Council
of Captains shall vote as to the outcome of the mutiny.
- A hearing of grievances and a reasonable attempt to resolve the
differences will be conducted by the Council of Captains.
- Council Resolution of Mutiny
- After a successful mutiny, the mutineer leader shall take on
the responsibilities defined by the Articles for a New Captain.
(See Article III, Section 2)
- The newly appointed captain will be granted a sponsorship from
the Council with the requirements of a year of sponsorship.
- This supersedes the limitations of only sponsoring one captain
as in Article III.
- With exceptions:
- Upon completion of the sponsored year, the new captain will be
recognized as a captain in accordance to Article III.
- If the mutineers are short the required five members, they will
have until the end of the year to attain the required number of
crew.
- The fellow mutineers that had signed upon the Act of Mutiny
shall be the new crew for the ship and answer to the leader of the
mutiny as captain.
- The captain of the original ship shall retain the rights to the
name, roger, and the remaining loyal crew of the current ship.
- Decision of a Mutiny
- Appendix: Parliamentary Procedure
(only used as a loose outline)
Parliamentary procedure provides the process for proposing,
amending, approving and defeating legislative motions. Although
following parliamentary procedure is not required, it can make
council meetings more efficient and reduces the chances of council
actions being declared illegal or challenged for procedural
deficiencies.
Many city councils and boards of county commissioners have
adopted Robert's Rules of Order, by reference, for the
purpose of providing rules of parliamentary procedure for meetings.
However, Robert's Rules was drafted primarily for large
assemblies and not so much for use by small legislative bodies such
as city councils or boards of county commissioners, and they are
quite formal and detailed. As a result, some local legislative
bodies have found it advantageous to craft their own less detailed
and less formal rules of procedure. So, as a practical matter, many
councils and boards of county commissioners that have adopted
Robert's Rules but that prefer to operate less formally
use them only where their own rules do not address a particular
procedural matter.
The following section summarizes important points from Robert's
Rules of Order. Other parliamentary rules or your own council rules
of procedure may contain different provisions.
• Only one subject may be before a group at one time. Each
item to be considered is proposed as a motion which usually
requires a "second" before being put to a vote. Once a motion is
made and seconded, the chair places the question before the council
by restating the motion.
• "Negative" motions are generally not permitted. To
dispose of a business item, the motion should be phrased as a
positive action to take, and then, if the group desires not to take
this action, the motion should be voted down. The exception to this
rule is when a governing body is asked to take action on a request
and wishes to create a record as to why the denial is
justified.
• Only one person may speak at any given time. When a
motion is on the floor, an order of speaking is prescribed by
Robert's Rules, allowing the mover of a motion to speak first, so
that the group understands the basic premise of the motion. The
mover is also the last to speak, so that the group has an
opportunity to consider rebuttals to any arguments opposing the
motion.
• All members have equal rights. Each speaker must be
recognized by the moderator prior to speaking. Each speaker should
make clear his or her intent by stating, "I wish to speak
for/against the motion," prior to stating arguments.
• Each item presented for consideration is entitled to a
full and free debate. Each person speaks once, until everyone else
has had an opportunity to speak.
• The rights of the minority must be protected, but the
will of the majority must prevail. Persons who don't share the
point of view of the majority have a right to have their ideas
presented for consideration, but ultimately the majority will
determine what the council will or will not do.
Business is brought before the council by motions, a formal
procedure for taking actions. To make a motion, a councilmember
must first be recognized by the mayor. After the councilmember has
made a motion (and after the motion is seconded if required), the
chair must then restate it or rule it out of order, then call for
discussion. Most motions require a second, although there are a few
exceptions.
Exact wording of motions and amendments is important for clarity
and recording in the minutes. If it's a complex motion, the motion
should be written down for the chair to read.
Robert's Rules of Order provides for four general types of
motions:
Main Motions
The most important are main motions, which bring before the
board, for its action, any particular subject. Main motions cannot
be made when any other motions are before the group.
Subsidiary Motions
Subsidiary motions are motions which direct or change how a main
motion is handled. These motions include:
• Tabling. Used to postpone discussion
until the group decides by majority vote to resume discussion. By
adopting the motion to "lay on the table", a majority has the power
to halt consideration of the question immediately without debate.
Requires a second, non-debatable, not amendable.
• Previous Question or Close Debate. Used
to bring the body to an immediate vote. It closes debate and stops
further amendment. Contrary to some misconceptions, the majority
decides when enough discussion has occurred, not the moderator. The
formal motion is to "call for the question" or "call for the
previous question," or simply, "I move to close debate." The motion
requires a second, is not debatable and requires a two-thirds
majority.
• Limit/Extend Debate. May be desired if
the group has adopted a rule limiting the amount of time that will
be spent on a topic, or if the group desires to impose a time
limitation.
• Postpone to a Definite Time. Similar to
tabling, except that the motion directs that the matter will be
taken up again at some specific date and time.
• Refer to Committee. Directs that some
other body will study the matter and report back.
• Amendment. Used to "fine tune" a motion
to make it more acceptable to the group. The amendment must be
related to the main motion's intent and cannot be phrased in a way
that would defeat the main motion. Two amendments may be on the
floor at one time: the first amendment modifies the main motion,
and the second amendment must relate to the first amendment. When
an amendment is on the floor, only the amendment may be debated.
The amendments are voted on in the reverse order in which they were
made, as each amendment changes to some degree the intent of the
main motion. As each amendment is voted on, an additional primary
or secondary amendment may be introduced. Requires a second,
debatable, majority vote.
• Postpone Indefinitely. This motion
effectively kills a motion, because, if adopted, a two-thirds vote
is subsequently required to take the matter up again.
Incidental Motions
Incidental motions are housekeeping motions which are in order
at any time, taking precedence over main motions and subsidiary
motions. These motions include:
• Point of Order. To bring to the group's
attention that the rules are being violated. You don't need not to
be recognized prior to making a point of order. This is not really
a motion, but requires the moderator to make a ruling as to whether
or not immediate consideration is proper.
• Appeal from the Decision of the Chair.
The group can overrule the chair on any decision. While the motion
must be seconded, it cannot be amended. When this motion is moved
and seconded, the moderator immediately states the question, "Shall
the decision of the chair stand as the judgment of the council?" If
there is a tie vote, the chair's decision is upheld. The motion is
not debatable when it applies to a matter of improper use of
authority or when it is made while there is a pending motion to
close debate. However, the motion can be debated at other times.
Each person may speak once, and the moderator may also state the
basis for the decision.
• Parliamentary Inquiry. Not a motion,
but a question as to whether an action would be in order.
• Point of Information. A person may rise
to offer information that is considered necessary for the group.
This provision is not used to offer debate.
• Division of Assembly. To require a more
precise method of counting votes than by a voice vote, such as
having persons raise hands, or stand. No second, not debatable, no
vote required.
• Request to Withdraw a Motion. Contrary
to popular misconception, a motion cannot be withdrawn by its
mover. This request requires majority approval.
• Suspension of the Rules. When matters
are to be taken out of order, or a particular task can be better
handled without formal rules in place, this motion can be approved
by a two-thirds vote of the group. However, until the rules are
restored, only discussion can occur; no decisions can be made.
Second required, not debatable, not amendable.
• Object to Consideration of a Question.
When a motion is so outrageous, intended to distract the group from
resolving legitimate business. The motion can be objected to and
ruled out of order without debate. However, if the chair does not
rule the motion out of order, a two-thirds vote of the group can
block further consideration.
Renewal Motions
Once the group has taken action, renewal motions require the
group to further discuss or dispose of a motion. The motions
include:
• Reconsider. When the group needs to
discuss further a motion that has already been defeated at the same
meeting. A majority of the council must approve taking additional
time to debate the motion again. The motion can be made only by a
person who voted on the prevailing side earlier on the question.
Contrary to another popular misconception, the motion may be
brought up again at a subsequent meeting. If the moderator believes
that there is no indication that the group's wishes have changed,
however, the motion can be ruled out of order, subject to an appeal
from the decision of the chair.
• Take from the Table. Unless the
original motion to table directed that the motion be brought back
at a specific date and time, a majority of the group must pass a
motion to take from the table. Such a motion is non-debatable.
• Rescind. When the group wishes to annul
some action, a motion to rescind is in order at any time. If prior
notice has been given to the group that this action will be
considered, the motion to rescind can pass with a simple majority
vote; however, if no prior notice has been given, the vote requires
a two-thirds majority.
Questions of Privilege
Finally, there are a few questions of privilege that are in
order at any time and must be disposed of prior to resuming
discussion on the matter at hand:
- Fix the Time for Next Meeting. This is in
order at any time, including when a motion to adjourn is pending.
Second required, not debatable, amendable.
- Adjourn. To bring the meeting to a halt.
Second required, not debatable, not amendable. Alternatively,
instead of a motion, the chair can ask if there is any further
business. If no response, the chair can say, "since there is no
further business, the meeting is adjourned."
- Recess. A temporary break in the meeting;
should state a time at which the meeting will resume. Second
required, not debatable, not amendable.
- Point of Privilege. A matter that concerns the
welfare of the group. Can be raised even when another person is
speaking. No second, not debatable, no vote required.
- Call for the Orders of the Day. A demand that
the group return to the agenda. Can be taken when another person is
speaking, no second required, not debatable, no vote required.