NAFA Wants Your Opinion On Membership Qualifications, Board Structure
NAFA recently announced it is seeking input on changes being considered
to the Association’s membership qualifications and board structure that
would enable a wider audience to join and become leaders of the
Association. Chief among the changes being discussed by NAFA is a broadening of the
definition of who qualifies to be a member of the Association, which is
already the largest fleet-related association in the world.
Be informed about these proposed changes! You may view a recording of the April 8 webinar by visiting http://www.nafa.org/bylaws-2016/ and see if your questions are answered within a posted Frequently Asked Questions document found at: http://www.nafa.org/download.php?f=791. You may provide input to NAFA by sending an email to bylaws@nafa.org.
NAFA Chief Executive Officer Phillip E. Russo, CAE, explained the
changes being discussed would require a change in NAFA’s bylaws, which
would require a vote by NAFA Members. "We are starting this
conversation now so NAFA Members have ample time to ask questions, voice
concerns, and provide input to the Board. That is going to take time.
If there is going to be a vote to change the NAFA bylaws, it likely
would not be until later this year, at the earliest."
Russo also explained some of the rationale behind the idea of expanding
membership qualifications, stating, "Back in 2008, NAFA began using
‘NAFA Fleet Management Association’ as its doing-business-as (dba) name
because we knew we were more than a national association of fleet
administrators; we were an association for the entire fleet management
profession. Expanding membership qualifications to include everyone
that practices fleet management, regardless of their employer, is a
natural progression of that realization."
NAFA leaders are also discussing changing the structure of the
Association’s governing Board to increase leadership opportunities and
decrease the length of time required to serve on the Board.
NAFA President Alfson explained that today the NAFA Board of Trustees
has only one Affiliate seat, out of 13, representing all of NAFA’s
supplier community. She also noted that the typical NAFA Board member
has logged more than five years of service to NAFA before they serve on
the Board, after which they typically serve on the Board from five to
ten years.
"The demands of today’s work and home environment no longer permit
someone to commit 10 to 15 years of his or her life to be a volunteer
leader of NAFA, or any organization," Alfson stated. "And, the next
generation of fleet professionals is not interested in making that long
of a commitment. NAFA must re-engineer itself now to be ready for the
future, which is not far away."
Alfson also pointed out the Board has discussed adding more seats for
Affiliates, to give them greater representation, but also instituting
safeguards to ensure the association is always an organization dedicated
to fleet management professionals.
"We have talked about allowing up to five Affiliates on the Board, from
the current single seat, which would still give fleet managers an eight
to five majority. We have also discussed limiting Board representation
to one person from any single company or related company."
The Board has also discussed creating new eligibility criteria for Board
members that would enlarge the pool of candidates from which national
leaders were selected.
"I encourage everyone to become informed about this important issue,"
Russo stated. "Please watch the webinar. Please ask questions. Please
give us your input. This is, after all, your association and you
should help shape its future."
NAFA Fleet Management Association
http://www.nafa.org/