Mississippi Minutes and Resolutions of the Board of Trustees of a Non-Profit Corporation Authorizing to the Refinancing of a Loan

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US-04520BG
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Minutes are a permanent, formal, and detailed (although not verbatim) record of business transacted, and resolutions adopted, at a firm's official meetings such as board of directors of a corporation or members of a limited liability company. Once written up (or typed) in a minute book and approved at the next meeting, the minutes are accepted as a true representation of the proceedings they record and can be used as prima facie evidence in legal matters.

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FAQ

Plain and simple, Robert's Rules says that the secretary of an organization has to (1) keep minutes and (2) make them available to members that ask for them. Yes, this means that if Ms. Archives-Lover wants copies of the minutes from every meeting for the last 26 years, she gets them.

Generally, the D role is held by one person. But a board of directors in which each member has voting power can be a collective D as well.

The Board of Directors is the collective boss of the CEO/Executive Director of a non-profit corporation.

Most states require that corporations take board meeting minutes, but the exact format is left up to the company. Minutes don't need to be filed with the state, but they must be kept on file for at least seven years.

Meeting minutes are important because they provide legal protection for the organization. Often due diligence is captured in companies' meeting minutes as well as any legal conversations which can then be officiated and documented to confirm the ethical, fair practices of the organization.

Yes, your organization must keep copies of all meeting minutes. The IRS and most state laws (section 3.151 of the Texas Business Organizations Code) require that corporations, including nonprofit corporations, keep copies of their meeting minutes.

Appropriate board minutes should contain the following:The names of those members who are present and who are absent.The time the board meeting begins and ends.The existence or absence of a quorum.A concise summary of the action taken by the board.The names of the persons making and seconding motions.More items...

A D stakeholder has final authority and is the only stakeholder who can commit the organization to action, such as hiring someone, spending money, or making a legally binding agreement. Generally, the D role is held by one person.

The executive committee is often officially responsible for making a company's big decisions while another, unofficial group, led by the CEO, seems to hold the real decision-making power.

IRS forms are public information, so the public can obtain certain pieces of information about nonprofit organizations from them. Nonprofit boards don't have to share their meeting minutes, policies or audit results with the public. They don't have to share the contact information for board directors either.

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Mississippi Minutes and Resolutions of the Board of Trustees of a Non-Profit Corporation Authorizing to the Refinancing of a Loan