you are here: > Article 80 
 
VIII. Campus Objects
 
  Article 80-Campus Legislature  
80.1

Campus Legislature

 
  All legislative powers of a Campus shall be vested in an Assembly of Members ("Assembly") which shall consist of all men, women over the age of sixteen (16) who are members of One-Heaven currently residing for three years or more within the bounds of the Campus.  
  A Campus shall be named and defined according to the pre-existing legislative and geographic subdivision of a state or region into individual districts, postcodes or boroughs.
 
  A Member may only belong to one (1) Assembly according to the location of their current primary living location (domicile address).
 
80.2 Power of the Assembly  
  Vested by this Charter, the Assembly shall have the power to review all budgets, expenditure and official planning of the Campus Executive.
 
  The Assembly shall have the power to elect its Mayor and Campus Executive at every second (2nd) Annual Session of the Local Assembly.
 
  The Assembly shall not have the power to block general expenditure and income required for the operation and function of the Campus, except when under the control of a Campus Commission of Financial Review.
 
  The Assembly shall have the power to accept donations from Members and to own assets and keep and maintain bank accounts for the good financial conduct of local services. However, by this Covenant, all bank accounts must be registered with both the regional and national organization. The non disclosure of a bank account shall be considered an offense liable to expulsion and further prosecution.
 
  The Assembly shall have the power and authority to establish local schools for the education of the children of Members and non members. The Assembly shall also have the authority to establish local health and community services where requested and needed.
 
  The Assembly shall have the power to commission a Campus Commission of Investigation with the power to call any registered Member within the Campus and any information held by the Campus Executive to review.
 
  The Assembly also has vested by this Charter the power to commission a Campus Impeachment for the forced removal of any elected official from the Mayor to any position within any branch of government in the Campus.
 
  A Campus Commission of Investigation must be called by the Assembly when a call to expel one or more members is made, excluding cases where the grounds of the charge are based on an automatic expulsion.
 
80.3 Assembly Sessions  
  Every year, there shall be a minimum of three (3) Ordinary Sessions and one (1) Annual Session not less than every ninety (90) days in a building suitable for such a purpose whereby all registered local Assembly Members may attend.
 
  The Agenda of Business ("General Business") of the Assembly shall be according to the rules of this Article, subject to the management of proceedings by the Campus Executive with the length of the Session not less than two (2) hours and not exceeding four (4) hours, including a mandatory break of a minimum of half an hour where the planned session is longer than two hours.
 
  The General Business of an Ordinary Session shall always be considered different to the General Business of an Annual Session. The procedures for General Business shall be defined and recorded in the Legislative Code.
 
80.4 Operation of Assembly  
  (a). Life of Assembly
 
  The Assembly shall exist for a fixed period of two (2) years before being dissolved ahead of Assembly Elections for a new Parliament.
 
  (b). Dissolution of Parliament  
  The instrument of dissolution shall be three writs issued by the Mayor:
 
  (1) To the Speaker of the Assembly ordering their office to be sealed until a new Parliament is elected; and
 
  (2) To the local Campus Board of Directors ordering the government to institute caretaker provisions which forbids the appointment of any new positions, the announcement of any new projects or the commissioning of any new expenditure; and
 
  (3) To the Provincial-General of the Provincial Election Commission requiring the commencement of Campus Election provisions for the conduct of the Campus Assembly to elect a new Executive Government and Parliament.
 
  (c). Date of Campus Assembly Elections  
  The date of a national election shall always occur at the at least fourteen (14) days prior to the commencement of an Annual Session allowing 40 days prior to the date of the election for the official campaign period.
 
  (d). Formation of new Parliament  
  The formation of a new Parliament shall occur within 14 days after the Campus Election day following the count and verification of all votes.
 
  The instrument of formation of a new Campus (Assembly) Parliament shall be two (2) declarations from the State Director of the National Election Commission:
 
  (1) To the successful candidate for election as Mayor confirming their validity as the rightful executive to form government; and
 
  (2) To the caretaker Mayor that the election result has been verified and that writs to summons successful candidates to be sworn into Campus Parliament and form the new Campus Executive must now be issued.
 
  (3)Upon receipt of the declaration, the caretaker Mayor shall be required to issue writs within seven (7) days for the summonsing to Parliament of successful Mayor to form the new Parliament and Executive.
 
  (e). Quorum  
  The minimum number of Members (quorum) required to be present within the chamber of a Campus Assembly to permit the full exercise of its powers shall be half the total number of Members of that Assembly.
 
  The Assembly shall not be permitted to undertake procedures that require a quorum if the total number of Members in that House is not equal or greater to the quorum.
 
  (f). Voting  
  Excluding the election of Office Holders, voting in Campus Assembly shall be by open vote expressed as either Yes or No to the proposition before the chamber.
 
  Voting shall always require a quorum and shall follow the standard procedures listed in this Charter.
 
  Total votes shall be tallied as either Yes, or No to the proposition expressed by the Bill. A higher total number of Yes votes to No votes shall deem the Bill or proposition has been passed. A higher total number of No votes to Yes votes shall deem the Bill or proposition has been defeated.
 
  The record, attendance and vote of all members of Campus Parliament shall be recorded on the public record.
 
  (g). Office of Speaker of Campus Assembly (Assembly Speaker)
 
  Responsibility for good conduct and control of the Assembly and the scheduling of business within the chamber shall be vested in the Office of Speaker of Campus Assembly (Assembly Speaker).
 
  The Speaker of a Campus Assembly shall be an independent role, free from political party preferences. The candidate shall be elected by new college themselves on the first day of sitting of the new parliament after a Campus Election.
 
80.5 Maximum size of Assembly  
  Accordingly, a Campus Assembly shall not be permitted to grow beyond eighty thousand,(80,000 ) households. This is in recognition of the practical limitations placed on the Mayor to be able to properly support a community.
 
  Communities that grow to this limit or beyond must institute within six months of reaching this number a Community sub-division whereby the community is divided into two-equal halves based on the geographic distribution of Members.
 
80.6 Formation of a Probationary Assembly  
  A Probationary Assembly is formed when approval is given to an application to form an Assembly by six (6) or more Members subject to the following conditions: and
 
  (a) That each member on the application is a current and valid Living Member of the Union; and
 
  (b) That each member on the application currently resides in the geographic area belonging to the Assembly currently under Provision Administration; and
 
  (c) That none of the applicants are immediate family related; and
 
  (d) That none of the applicants have previously applied for the formation of an Assembly.
 
  Approval of such an application shall be the responsibility of the appropriate Province Congress, or if no permanent Province Congress yet exists, the University Senate. If no permanent University Senate exists, it shall be the responsibility of the Ucadia temporary administrator.
 
  A Probationary Assembly shall have the right to participate in Province elections but not university elections. Furthermore, a Probationary Assembly shall not have the power to undertake any financial transactions for or on behalf of the Union. However, a Probationary Assembly shall be permitted to trade between members and other Campus within the Province.
 
80.7 Formation of a Permanent Assembly  
  Within one hundred and eighty (180) Days since the formation of a Probationary Assembly, permanency shall be granted to a Probationary Assembly providing the following conditions are met:
 
  (a) That membership of the Assembly now constitutes at least thirty six (36) Living Members; and
 
  (b) That the Assembly has held elections and elected a Board; and
 
  (c) That no action contravening this Covenant has occurred with the original applicants that would warrant an Internal investigation or their expulsion.
 
80.8 Disbandment of a Probationary Assembly  
  If by one hundred and eighty (180) Days since the formation of a Probationary Assembly one or more of the conditions for permanency are not met, the appropriate permanent Province Congress shall have the right to disband the temporary Assembly and revoke its status. If no permanent Province Congress yet exists, the University Senate shall have such right. If no permanent University Senate exists, it shall be the responsibility of the Ucadia temporary administrator.
 
  Upon disbandment, the persons originally making the application for a Probationary Assembly are not permitted to directly re-apply for a new Assembly, nor hold office for a period of not less than six (6) months.
 
80.9 Wind-up of a Permanent Assembly  
  The wind-up of a permanent Assembly is when an order is granted by the University Senate and/or Executive for a permanent Assembly to be wound up, its assets seized, its membership re-allocated or suspended and the Assembly itself deregistered.
 
  Such an order is an order of last resort and must be subject to a Assembly vote based only on one or more of the criteria being in existence:
 
  (a) That the total active living membership of the Assembly has been less than 36 for twelve months or more; or
 
  (b) That the entire Executive has been expelled from the Union and that the majority of remaining members represent members of their former network; or
 
  (c) That the Assembly is bankrupt and unable to continue to pay its financial obligations with no prospect of independent financial income in the future to meet its ongoing obligations.
 
     
     
     
     
     
 
 

Copyright © 2011 Globe-Union.Org. All Rights Preserved.