The current NESFA By-Laws were originally adopted at a special meeting on 31 March 1971. They replaced the original Constitution and By-Laws (adopted in October 1967) by a single document. While there was considerable difference in the arrangement of material (the old Constitution and By-Laws were often described as hopelessly confusing), there was little difference in substance.
Annotations in square brackets and italics [like this] give the dates of amendments to the By-Laws and other pertinent historical information. These annotations are of course not themselves part of the By-Laws. (The annotations up to 5/94 are written by George Flynn, who takes sole responsibility for their content. Thereafter they are written by the Rules Committee.) Sections with no annotations may be assumed to be part of the original 1971 text, and to derive in substance from the previous Constitution or By-Laws (in general no attempt will be made to distinguish which provisions were in each); sections dated "3/71" were introduced with the 1971 By-Laws.
As appendices to the By-Laws are included the following additional important documents: the NESFA Articles of Organization (July 1968), with all amendments thereto; the IRS letter approving NESFA's tax-exempt status (October 1971); and the Somerville letter recognizing the tax exemption of the NESFA Clubhouse (September 1991). [It is hoped to later include excerpts from some laws affecting NESFA; after all, some benighted Members have never even read Section 501(c)(3).]
The last printed edition of the By-Laws was dated July 1991, and was followed by five printed updates which brought it current to May 1994. In December 1998 a very slightly updated (to about August 1994) version was added to the NESFA website and declared to be the official version. In November 2002 the web version was brought fully up-to-date.
[In addition to those provisions noted elsewhere, the 1967 Constitution included articles defining the name and purpose of NESFA, which were incorporated essentially verbatim into the Articles of Organization (q.v.). There was also an Article whose complete text read: "The Association is to have perpetual existence." The 1967 By-Laws began with "The informal name of the Association shall be 'The Eddoreans'"; this term soon fell into disuse, and was quietly forgotten.]
1.1 The classes of membership in this Corporation
are:
[Nearly all instances of the term "Corporation" in the
current By-Laws correspond to "Association" in the 1967 Constitution
and By-Laws, which were written before NESFA's incorporation (with a proviso
that all references to a corporate form were inoperative until incorporation):
see Articles of Organization.]
(a) Regular, which, except as
otherwise provided, entitles its holders to all rights, privileges, and duties
of active membership in the Corporation, and which constitutes the only class of
voting membership.
[The "except as otherwise provided" in (a), (d), and
(e) was added in 1/87: cf. Section 1.10.]
(b) Inactive, which, except as otherwise provided, entitles its holders to all rights and privileges of membership in the Corporation except voting rights. Inactive Membership is reserved for former Regular Members in accordance with Section 1.8. [Added 9/75: cf. Section 1.8.]
(c) General, which, except as
otherwise provided, entitles its holders to all rights and privileges of
membership in the Corporation except voting rights.
[Name originally "Associate"; changed 9/75. The
1967-71 By-Laws referred to "rights, privileges, and duties"
here.]
(d) Subscribing, which,
except as otherwise provided, entitles its holders to receive the generally
distributed publications and notices of the Corporation, and to such other
rights and privileges as may be specified by the Corporation.
[Name originally "Corresponding"; changed 11/75. Under
the 1967-71 By-Laws "persons residing within the metropolitan area of
Boston" were not eligible for Corresponding Membership, local people then
being admitted directly to Regular or Associate Membership. The entitlement was
to "publications of the Corporation" in 1967-71, to "the
newsletter and journal" (also in the next subsection) from 3/71 to 3/75,
and to "the newsletter" in both subsections from then until 1/87.
Until 8/82 this section included a cross-reference to Section 1.4 (q.v.).]
(e) Affiliate, which is
limited to organizations and, except as otherwise provided, entitles its holders
to receive the generally distributed publications and notices of the Corporation
and to such other rights and privileges as may be specified by the
Corporation.
[The right to receive publications was added in 3/71.]
(f) Family-Dependency, which
entitles its holders to the same rights and privileges as General Membership,
except the right to receive, independently, the publications, notices, and other
mailings sent to the sponsoring Member. Any Regular, Inactive, General, or
Subscribing Member may sponsor their cohabitants and immediate relatives for
Family-Dependency Membership.
[Originally Family-Dependency Membership was reserved for the
dependents of Regular Members; Inactive and General Members were added in 9/75,
and Subscribing Members in 8/82. The reference to "cohabitants" was
added in 3/71.]
[The 1967-71 By-Laws also provided for "such other classes of non-voting membership as shall be specified by the Association."]
[In the last sentence of (f) above, "their" was originally "his". This is the first of numerous such changes (mostly not noted separately), nearly all made by a global "sex change" amendment in 12/79.]
1.2 (a)
Eligibility to any class of membership depends on the payment of
dues and the satisfaction of any other
requirements that the Corporation may specify for that class of membership.
[The 1967-71 By-Laws also referred to "the exercise of such
other duties as may be specified for that class".]
(b) Except as otherwise provided in this section, whenever Members have failed to pay their dues, their memberships automatically expire at the end of the period when the dues are payable. [3/71]
(c) The Clerk shall notify all Members in writing at least one month before the deadline for payment of their dues. Whenever such notice is not given to any Member, the deadline for payment of dues by that Member is extended until one month after written notice is actually given. [3/71]
1.2A Admission to membership, or transfer
from one class of membership to another, is accomplished by vote of the
Membership, except as provided in Sections
1.8 and 1.9. One week's
written notice of such a vote will be given.
[First sentence added 9/75 (the "vote of the
Membership" requirement was previously in an introductory clause to Section
1.3), revised 4/82 (passage of Section 1.9).
A requirement of two weeks' written notice was added in 9/82, reduced to one
week in 4/83. In 4/06, the Membership ruled
that posting to the Nesfa Regular List to which all
Regular Members subscribe to constitute adequate notice.]
1.3 (a)
Application for membership or for a change of class can be made to the
Membership Committee or by petition. A
petition must be sponsored by no fewer than three
Members of any class, must be signed
by the person whose membership class it is proposed to change indicating
their consent, and must be submitted to the Clerk.
[Change of "less" to "fewer", 6/81. The
signature requirement for petitions was added in 8/86. In the 1967-71 By-Laws
the term "application" was used for both routes described here; a
proviso exempted "charter members" from these procedures.]
(b) Upon receiving an application for
membership or for a change of class, the Membership
Committee shall review the eligibility and qualifications of the applicant
within two months and may either report favorably on the application or return
it to the applicant without prejudice against resubmission. Transfers to
Regular and Inactive Membership which require a vote of the
Membership shall be decided by secret ballot
as questions separate from the remainder of the report of the
Membership Committee.
[Second sentence in its present form passed 12/82; previously it
said that "Acceptance ... of the report ... constitutes acceptance of the
applications contained therein," and some argued that this forbade dividing
the question. The two-month time limit was added 3/71.]
(c) Upon receiving an application by petition, the Clerk shall report it to the Membership at the next meeting. The Membership may then accept, reject, or table the application.
(d) The Clerk shall return to the applicant, without prejudice against resubmission, any application by petition which has remained on the table for more than one month.
1.4 [Repealed 6/81: said that "Non-members (and Subscribing Members) may not attend more than half the meetings within any six-month period," with the Membership Committee charged with monitoring attendance. (In the 1967-71 By-Laws the Rules Committee was charged with enforcing this provision.) Prior to 2/72 the limit was three meetings in three months (there were then usually two meetings a month).]
1.5 The Membership
Committee shall, from time to time, review the classification of
Members in view of their attendance,
interest, and activity, and may recommend the transfer of any
Member to a more appropriate class of
membership. Upon recommendation of the Membership
Committee, the Membership may waive any
or all of the membership or attendance requirements in any specific case.
[The clause authorizing recommendation of transfers was added in
9/75. See Standing Rules, Sections 1.7(5) and
(6), on the criteria for the various
membership classes, and Section 1.7(7) on
involuntary transfers. In the 1967-71 By-Laws the review of a Member's
classification was "upon the request of the Executive Committee or of the
particular individual."]
1.6 Dues
for each class of membership shall be determined by vote of the
Membership.
Written notice of any proposal to change
the amount of dues shall be given to all
Members at least seven (7) days before
any action is taken on the proposal.
[Cf. Standing Rules, Sections 2.1(1) for the amounts of dues and 2.1(2) for the interpretation of the notice
requirement. 1967-71 By-Laws: "by the Membership upon the recommendation
of the Executive Committee"; the initial dues were specified in a proviso
to the By-Laws.]
1.7 Except in cases of nonpayment of
dues (in accordance with Section
1.2), a Member
can be suspended or expelled from the Corporation only by vote of the
Membership on recommendation of the
Rules Committee, in accordance with
Section 8.2. Changes in the class of any
Member can only be made by vote of the
Membership in accordance with the provisions
of Sections 1.2A, 1.3, and
1.5, or in accordance with the provisions of Section
1.8.
[3/71. References to Sections 1.2A
and 1.8 added 9/75.]
1.8 (a) Any
Regular Member who so requests, or who, immediately prior to either the
Annual Meeting or the first meeting in November,
has attended meetings in fewer
than two (2) of the last six (6) calendar months in which there were
meetings, shall automatically be
transferred to Inactive Membership. The Chairman of the
Membership Committee shall notify each
Member so transferred.
[Subsections (a) through (c) were added in 9/75, as a solution to
the long-standing problem of many "Regular Members" who seldom
attended meetings (often having moved out of the area), making attainment of a
quorum difficult. Originally inactivity could be invoked at any time, and some
Members went back and forth between Regular and Inactive at frequent intervals;
the restriction of the calculation to May and November was added in 5/78 to
simplify matters (at the same time, the Membership Committee rather than the
Clerk was made responsible for notification). In 9/90 a ruling by the President
was upheld that "the last six calendar months in which there were
meetings" meant that a month could be counted twice: e.g., if there was no
meeting in August, then April would be counted in "the last six
months" in both May and November.]
(b) Any Inactive Member who has been an
Inactive Member for less than three (3) years and who has attended
meetings in two (2) or more of the last three
(3) calendar months in which there were meetings
shall be retransferred to Regular Membership upon the Member's request to the
Chairman of the Membership Committee.
[Again, the Membership Chairman replaced the Clerk in
5/78. Limitation to 3 years added 8/2000.]
(c) In determining meeting attendance for purposes of this section, no meeting shall be counted until it has been adjourned.
(d) No adjustments of
dues shall be made for transfers under this
Section unless so requested by the Member.
Each Regular and Inactive Member shall pay dues
for the class of membership which the Member
holds at the time the dues become due.
[Added 5/78: previously transfer from Inactive to Regular could
not take place until any dues increment was paid. It seems to have been the
general impression that the above subsection applied to all transfers; this
interpretation was regularized in 9/83 by Standing Rule 2.1(6).]
1.9 A non-member shall become a Subscribing or
Family-Dependency Member upon payment of dues and
receipt by the Membership Committee or its designee
of written application for membership. A non-member may also become a Subscribing
or Family-Dependency Member by vote of the Membership.
[Added 4/82, for Subscribing Members; previously the Membership
had to vote on all new Members. Family-Dependency Members added 4/83.]
1.10 All Members
other than Family-Dependency Members shall receive the generally distributed
publications and notices of the Corporation, except that certain groups of
Members may elect to have such items sent to
one member only of the group. This election shall be made in writing to the
Membership Committee or its designee and must be
signed by each member of the group. All Members
so electing shall be reminded that any notice published in these items will
nonetheless satisfy the requirements for giving notice to them. This election
may be made by any group of Members residing at the same address.
[1/87. Much the same effect could previously be achieved by the
holding of joint memberships (Standing Rules 1.7(8) and (9)), but this method allows the publications to
be combined while retaining separate memberships.]
[This section of the 1967-71 By-Laws had one additional financial provision, requiring the Treasurer to "maintain a petty cash fund as specified by the Executive Committee."]
[The original Constitution and By-Laws contained no such emergency provisions. After an emergency purchase (of a mimeo and an electrostenciller) had been made without authorization, various proposals were made to protect the Executive Board in future situations of the same type. The original version (more general, and not limited to expenditures) was defeated in 9/70, but the present Section 5.5 was adopted in 1/71.]
[The original Article VII dealt with the
Board of Trustees, an honorary body elected by the Membership at the Annual
Meeting for two-year terms. In 4/74 the text was simplified (eliminating
provisions for filling vacancies), and the election procedure clarified (5 votes
for each Member, majority of Members voting required for election). Since the
Trustees served no function, Article VII was repealed in 12/75, and all
references to the Trustees elsewhere in the By-Laws (except the retroactive Section
10.1(a)) were removed. However, the
Fellowship of NESFA was instituted in 1976 as an alternative (and permanent)
method for honoring people, and all persons who had been Directors/Trustees were
automatically made Fellows. Between 12/75 and 12/79 there was no Article
VII.]
[The Board of Trustees in turn replaced the Board of Directors,
who under the 1967-71 Constitution were almost but not quite powerless; a Board
of Directors was at that time required by Massachusetts law. Both boards (until
4/74) could have anywhere from 5 to 13 members (however many got a majority of
the votes cast). The only required meeting of the Board of Directors was
immediately after the Annual Meeting; the Trustees never had to meet at all.
There were elaborate provisions for filling vacancies in the Board of Directors;
it was up to the Membership whether to fill Trustee vacancies. Most general
provisions referring to Officers (elections, removal, notice of meetings) also
applied to Directors/Trustees until 12/75.]
[The 3/71-8/75 text of Section 8.2 read simply: "Upon receiving a complaint of misconduct or breach of discipline against any person, the Rules Committee shall investigate the matter and, after having provided reasonable opportunity for the accused person to be heard, may take any action to discipline or correct such misconduct, subject to appeal and review of the Membership. In connection with such a complaint, the Rules Committee may, after having followed the procedures set forth in this Section, recommend to the Membership the suspension or expulsion of any Member." On suspension or expulsion, see also Section 1.7. The 1967-71 By-Laws had much the same provisions, except that investigation was at the committee's discretion, and suspension was not mentioned.]
[Sections 8.3 through 8.5 have never been invoked.]
[All 3/71, except for later changes as noted.]
![[The NESFA Seal]](old/seal.gif)
[Seal adopted by Executive Board, 5/74; transferred to By-Laws, 11/79.]
The Edward E. Smith Memorial Award for Imaginative Fiction, or
"Skylark", shall be presented from time to time by NESFA to some
person who, in the opinion of the
Membership,
has contributed significantly to
science fiction, both through work in the field and by exemplifying the personal
qualities which made the late "Doc" Smith well-loved by those who knew
him. Doc was so well thought of that he was invited to be Guest of Honor at the
Second World Science Fiction Convention in Chicago, 1940 (Chicon I). Only two
years before his death, Doc was given the First Fandom Hall of Fame Award at the
Twenty-First World Science Fiction Convention in Washington, 1963 (Discon I).
Doc Smith attended many conventions and participated in them as a pro and as a
fan. He was one of the earliest enthusiasts in what are now called hall
costumes and often dressed as characters from his stories -- the good guys, of
course. Smith was one of the old breed of SF writers who did not distinguish
between pro and fan. He talked on panels; he talked informally; he never
thought himself too important. He was, in a word, a mensch. It is
fitting that this convention's name was, is, and always will be Boskone
and that the Skylark Award was, is, and always will be given out to someone who
exemplifies Doc's qualities both as a professional contributor to the field and
as a human being.
[All but first sentence added in 5/89: originally written by
Tony Lewis for Boskone program book.]
The Award and the choice of the recipient shall be administered according to the following procedures: