NATIONAL BOARD REPORT SUMMER 2023
Jackie Zayac, Region 12 Director, ACBL Board of Directors
Below is Jackie’s Report to the D20 Board of Directors:
I was in Chicago from July 9 – July 23, 2023, attending the ACBL Board of Directors meetings and the Chicago NABC. The weather was wonderful in Chicago except for the evening of July 12 when there were several tornado warnings in downtown Chicago.
The ACBL Board meetings were very productive. On the flight home, I kept thinking that we should all adopt this slogan for bridge:
“Ask Not What Bridge Can Do For You, But What You Can Do For Bridge: Help Grow and Maintain Membership”
Membership continues to be a central focus of the board and I am pleased to report that we are beginning to see a slight rise in membership. I applaud all our members who are working to find new members or encouraging others to rejoin or remain an active participant in our great game.
I have attached a copy of the official minutes from the Chicago Board of Directors meetings, but I wanted to highlight a few of the motions that were passed as well as items discussed that will impact Units.
I’ve been appointed to the new Membership Task Force to help develop ideas to increase and retain membership. On behalf of the Task Force, I submitted a motion to the Board of Directors to add new requirements to the Cooperative Advertising Program (CAP). The CAP provides 50% of the funding up to a maximum of $500 to offset the cost of advertising classes and events held by clubs, teachers, and Units throughout the ACBL. Effective January 1, 2024, we will begin documenting all advertising methods, identifying successful advertising campaigns, and documenting best practices to share with clubs, teachers and Units utilizing the program. I hope you will take advantage of this ACBL cost-sharing program to offset your membership building and retention costs.
In March 2022, the board removed the requirement for a unit to hold a sectional every two years. That motion also contained a provision that the 11% of membership dues returned to each unit from the ACBL be utilized for membership building and retention. If you have any input for the Membership Task Force regarding this topic, please email me.
I would encourage everyone to make sure all F2F beginning bridge teachers are aware of the ACBL and Education Foundation joint venture project, BOOST. It is a new tool to help build membership. Read all about it in the attached Board minutes. Further information is available on the ACBL website at: https://www.acbl.org/boost-application/
ACBL Management has decided to increase the masterpoint limit for all regionally rated mid-flight events at NABC’s. Beginning with the fall 2023 Atlanta NABC, all regionally rated mid-flight events will be for players between 0-4000 masterpoints. Prior to this NABC, the maximum was 3000 masterpoints for a regionally rated mid-flight event. I would appreciate hearing from anyone who has an opinion (either for or against) this change to the mid-flight masterpoint limit.
The ACBL Board of Directors selected a new site for the 2027 Fall NABC. It will be held in Seattle, Washington instead of Phoenix, Arizona.
I hope you enjoy receiving the official Chicago ACBL Board of Directors meeting minutes. Please email me with any questions, comments or concerns you may have on any topic at: jackiezayac@gmail.com.
I look forward to seeing all of you in Seaside.
Best Regards,
Jackie Zayac
Region 12 Director
—
Jackie Zayac
NATIONAL BOARD REPORT SUMMER 2023
Official Notes from 2023 Summer Meeting follow:
ACBL Board of Directors held its summer meetings face-to-face (F2F) Monday, July 10 through Thursday, July 13 in Chicago. The Board, working groups, task forces and committees continue to meet regularly through Zoom.
FINANCE
The change in net assets from January 1, 2023 to May 31, 2023 was $627K. $364K of this amount was income from operations, largely due to increased NABC income, and $263K reflects the change in the market value of investments. These numbers are $209K better than the 2023 budget and $624K better than the same time period in 2022.
There is a continued investment in technology that was capitalized in the first five months of 2023. $147K was spent on the development of the new Masterpoint Engine and $139K was spent on the AS400 modernization.
Management proposed fee increases in all areas that will go into effect January 1, 2024. Member dues, club sanction fees, special game fees and tournament fees will increase along with cruise and land cruise sanction fees and NABC entry fees. Many of these fees have not been increased in several years, since before the pandemic. Communications to follow.
Planning is underway for tiered regular and social memberships. The new social memberships will have an annual cost of $29 per year or $2.99 a month and will allow players to accumulate up to 100 masterpoints.
Management also proposed a plan for tiered patron memberships that will range from patron to silver and gold patron memberships with varying benefits associated with each level.
Item 232-FN01 moved to clarify the language and specific procedures and tools used by ACBL as referenced in the Codification, Appendix 2-A Accounts Payable and Check Cashing Policies: Chapter II – Business Management, A. Finance.
Carried: 17-0-0-1. One representative absent at the time the vote was taken.
Effective: Immediate.
MEMBERSHIP
As of June 2023, ACBL membership totaled 132,247. New member recruitment is up 32.9% from 2022. Guest memberships continue to increase. To date, 2,576 guest members have converted to regular memberships. As of June 30, there were 1,897 active guest members.
MEMBERSHIP BUILDING TASK FORCE
The Membership Building Task Force is actively reviewing ACBL Codification relating to membership building and retention to determine synergies and whether improvements to processes, and redistribution of funding, are warranted.
Additional initiatives for consideration by management include the implementation of a Member Referral Program, and an initiative to expand ACBL presence digitally as well as F2F within organizations and associations that appeal to youth and to the 50 to 65 age demographic.
In Chicago, the Task Force brought forth the following motion and fostered a discussion on the utilization of the 11% of full dues payments and life master service fees paid to Units by their members.
Item 232-ME01 moved to redefine the requirements for the Cooperative Advertising Program (CAP) reimbursements. This includes providing ACBL with program plans and evaluations and offering guest memberships to program participants. ACBL will garner best practices to support future planning efforts.
Carried: 18-0-0.
Effective: January 1, 2024.
A discussion (DI232-MEO) regarding the utilization of the 11% of full dues payments and life master service fees paid to units by their members occurred in the Finance Committee meeting and in Full Board.
In March 2022, the Board unanimously passed (Item 221-GV02) which eliminated the requirement for Units to hold at least one sectional every two years, and clarified that the 11% of full dues payments and life master service fees paid by their members is intended to supplement Unit funds for activities related to membership building and retention. Based on this clarification, discussions focused on building awareness of the intended use of funds, determining how Units are using the funds and providing Units with collaborative materials, including best practices. Management and the Board agreed that a reporting component should be added to ensure compliance with the intended purpose of funds usage.
The Task Force will compile feedback provided by the Board, management and stakeholders, collaborate with management to communicate with Units and provide fund distribution and usage scenarios for presentation in fall 2023.
BOOST F2F BRIDGE
Boost F2F Bridge, a joint pilot initiative with ACBL and the ACBL Educational Foundation, is aimed at building membership by providing support for F2F beginning bridge teachers and F2F bridge clubs. ACBL uses social ad campaigns to identify individuals interested in learning bridge. Leads generated from these campaigns are then funneled to participating teachers. Selected teachers must offer guest memberships to students and have access to F2F clubs where students can take lessons and advance to in-person supervised play.
For summer 2023, 21 campaigns generated 1,406 leads and 131 students. An additional 166 individuals expressed interest in taking classes in the near future. ACBL is accepting submissions for third quarter. Currently, over 22 campaigns are scheduled.
BYLAWS
The second reading (Item 231-BY01) to amend Bylaws Article III, Section 3.5 to include an expanded list of who is subject to binding arbitration, and to add Article XII detailing how arbitration will work, passed the Board by the required two-thirds majority vote. The first reading was passed by the Board in March 2023.
Effective: Immediate upon ratification by the Advisory Council which occurred during its July 25 meeting.
GOVERNANCE
In keeping with the fast pace of our new Executive Director and thinking ahead as to how Board operations can accommodate the downsizing in 2024 to a smaller Board of 13, the Governance Committee developed streamlined procedures that were presented at the summer meeting. These “Interim Guidelines” meet the requirements of our ACBL bylaws, but provide a more flexible way of doing business in advance of and during “Regular” and “Special” meetings. These Interim Guidelines will be in effect on a trial basis through our fall meeting in Atlanta and can be adapted as needed for meetings after that. Ultimately, the procedures the Board adopts will drive a new version of its regulations (the Codification) that will facilitate better communication, cooperation and coordination among working groups, task forces and committees across the organization (management, the Advisory Council, other volunteer groups and the Board) to address the bridge business functions that are critical to ACBL.
As part of its routine work, and in addition to the development of the Interim Guidelines that were based on Discussion (Item DI232-GV01) the Governance Committee reviewed five motions:
The first (232-GV01) was submitted through its Regional Director by a District concerned with expanding the criteria that would define a Member Not in Good Standing to include not serving “in any club administrative capacity.” Currently, a Member Not in Good Standing is not permitted to serve as a club manager or club director (among other non-allowed positions and responsibilities as detailed in the Codification, Chapter I – Membership, Section 2 – Definitions and Rights of ACBL Membership, 2.3.2, a. through j.). This motion was debated in Committee and brought to the Full Board with a narrow margin of approval. After considerable discussion by all Board members, the motion failed by a vote of 6-12-0-0. The concern was that as much as the Board wanted to honor the District’s request to ensure integrity at the Unit and club level, there is already the ability for a club to make its own rules in this regard. To codify this across all clubs would be difficult, given the ambiguity about what “administrative capacity” would mean to each club.
Item 232-GV02 was unanimous in Committee and submitted to the Board as part of the Consent Calendar. This motion deleted many of the administrative requirements for the monthly ACBL Bridge Bulletin as had been listed in the Codification ,Chapter II – Business Management – D. ACBL Bulletin. The Bulletin functions should be the responsibility of the Editor and editorial staff as part of the editorial decision-making process and therefore, do not need to be included in the Codification. The changes to this section of the Codification reflect that and are effective immediately. There are several additional references to ACBL Bridge Bulletin throughout other sections of the Codification, and the Governance Committee will be reviewing these to ensure they are deleted or changed to be consistent with the policy approved at this meeting.
Item 232-GV03 revised procedures dealing with requirements for the individuals the ACBL Board recommends to the United States Bridge Federation (USBF) to represent the ACBL on the World Bridge Federation (WBF) Executive Council and on the North American Bridge Federation Board; and clarified how and for what purpose the ACBL makes payments to the National Bridge Organizations (NBOs)—in the case of the WBF Zone 2, this includes the USBF and the national Canadian and Mexican bridge organizations. These procedures are detailed in the Codification, Chapter VII – International Bridge A. Zone 2 National Bridge Organizations (NBOs), Chapter VII – International Bridge B. WBF Representatives and NABF Board Members, Chapter VII – International Bridge C. International Fund and to Chapter VII – International Funds D. World Junior Championships.
Carried: 15-0-1-2. Two representatives were absent at the time the vote was taken.
Effective: Immediate.
At the spring meeting in New Orleans, three motions were tabled, all having to do with ACBL Hall of Fame (HOF) Operating Procedures—ensuring that nominees are appropriately vetted for their “ethics, deportment and sportsmanship” by the ACBL disciplinary bodies responsible for conducting such investigations; proposing consistency across the number of years before deceased individuals could be nominated for both the von Zedtwitz and Blackwood Awards; and other minor cleanup changes to the procedures. The semantic and procedural differences in the changes proposed by these three motions were subsequently discussed at length among the HOF Chair, the Board Liaison to the HOF, the Governance Chair and the motion makers. There was no disagreement that it is a privilege to be nominated for any ACBL honorary award, that the standards for nomination must be high and that proposed candidates should be vetted by ACBL—how to accomplish these goals was the issue to be resolved. This was done in Item 232-GV04, which proposes the Executive Director as the appropriate person to make this determination, with the confidentiality of players maintained. Vetting includes candidates not only for the HOF, including the Von Zedtwitz, Blackwood and Sydney Lazard, Jr. Sportsmanship Awards, but also the ACBL Honorary Member of the Year, the Aileen Osofsky ACBL Goodwill Member of the Year and the Nadine Wood Honorary Member of the Year.
These changes to the Codification, Chapter I – Membership Operating Guidelines F. Discipline and the ACBL Code of Disciplinary Regulations, Section 3 – Disciplinary Administrative Policies were approved.
Carried: 17-0-0-1. One representative was absent at the time the vote was taken.
Effective: Immediate.
Item 232-GV05 reflects these approved requirements that the HOF Committee will follow per its revised Operating Procedures before publishing the nomination of its candidates.
Carried: 17-0-0-1. One representative was absent at the time the vote was taken.
Effective: Immediate.
APPEALS & CHARGES
The Appeals & Charges Committee reported on hearings it held since its last report to the Board: One Automatic Review of an Online Ethical Oversight Committee matter and two reviews of Negotiated Resolutions. Hearing reports are available at the Ethics & Discipline area of the ACBL website: Https://www.acbl.org/ethics/ ltem 232-AC03 moved to delete references to American Arbitration Association (AAA) from the CDR, bringing the CDR into alignment with the Institute for Bridge Arbitration’s (IBA) actual implementation.
Carried: 18-0-0.
Effective: Immediate.
Item 232-AC04 moved that CDR 403(d)(3) Suspension, maximum of six months be revised to maximum of twenty-four months.
Carried: 18-0-0.
Effective: Immediate.
BRIDGE
The Board engaged in several bridge-related discussions and considered the following motions:
Item 232-BR01 clarifies and provides consistency to the information presented in the Codification, Chapter X: Sectionals, and introduces bridge camps, a special instance of a local sectional, where a residential program of bridge instruction incorporates games similar to tournaments-at-sea where silver points are awarded.
Carried: 18-0-0.
Effective: September 1, 2023.
Item 232-BR02 moved to approve the 2023-2024 GNT Conditions of Contest and to change the contact for members seeking exceptions to residency requirements from the District President to the District Director found in the Codification, Chapter XI – Special Events, A. Residency Requirements, Section 1 – Grand National Teams and North American Pairs.
Substantive changes to the GNT Conditions of Contest are: Flight C to use the Basic+ Convention Chart instead of the Basic Chart and to permit unproctored online play. Most COVID-specific provisions were removed.
Carried: 18-0-0.
Effective: September 1, 2023.
ACBL maintains a list of top lifetime masterpoint holders which is published annually in the ACBL Bridge Bulletin. A discussion (DI232-BR01) resulted in the decision to review current criteria established for inclusion or removal from the list, ensuring consistency and transparency moving forward. This review, to be conducted by management and the Bridge Committee, may result in policy and/or modifications to the Codification.
In 2021, a strength of field motion (202-21 first reading and 20S6-03 second reading) was unanimously passed by the Board. This discussion (DI232-BR02) focused on concerns over the cost, the timeframe for implementation and how the implementation ranks in terms of organizational priorities. Rather than relying on an outside vendor, the IT team, headed by Jay Whipple, determined a cost effective and simplified solution for implementation to occur before year-end.
A discussion (DI232-BR04) centered on whether a change to the grass roots funding structure will invigorate these prestigious events. This resulted in an action item to management to review the financial spreadsheet as well as past motions/regulations affecting Grass Roots. Management will work with the Bridge Committee to propose a potential solution that will be considered at the fall meeting.
A discussion (DI232-BR05) resulted in approval for virtual clubs to run a week of Club Appreciation games in October 2023 and a week of Charity games in November and in December 2023 with funds allocated to the ACBL Charity Foundation. Upon further investigation, management is unable to implement the extra charity games in 2023 due to additional programming requirements.
NABC SITE SELECTION
The NABC Site Selection Committee recommended Seattle, WA as the location for the fall 2027 NABC. The site visit to the Summit Convention Center and Hyatt Regency (host hotel) was conducted on June 21-22, 2023. The committee reported the financial projection and the benefits of the space, e.g., many nearby restaurants, bars and attractions, a high walkability rating and an affordable room rate of $189.
The Board unanimously supported Seattle, WA for the fall 2027 NABC.
ACBL CHARITY FOUNDATION UPDATE
The dual challenges of declining membership and the effects of the pandemic have prompted the ACBL Charity Foundation Trustees to propose a revised giving strategy communicated to the Board by Foundation President Jackie Zayac. It includes resuming the grant rotation to Districts on a two-year rather than a four-year rotation, awarding each District $10,000. The rotation will begin in 2023 with Districts within Regions 2-6 and in 2024 with Districts within Regions 7-13. Region 1 (Districts 1 and 2) receive charity funds from the Canadian Bridge Federation and are not included in the rotation. Region 13 (Districts 18 and 19) share one grant because its membership is split between Canada and the U.S.
The Foundation will continue grants in the amount of $5,000 to a qualified 501(c)3 organization at each NABC, but will suspend individual grants. The Foundation also proposed the establishment of a catastrophic relief fund, maintaining a minimum balance of $50,000.
An election to fill two Trustee positions will occur at the Foundation Membership Meeting in November. Declarations are due by October 15, 2023. For details, contact ACBL Election Secretary: elections@acbl.org .
COMMITTEE APPOINTMENTS
Jon Brissman, Jan Martel, Karen Allison and Marjorie Michelin were each appointed to the Online Ethical Oversight Committee for a three-year term from the end of the Summer 2023 NABC through the end of the Summer 2026 NABC.