when it joined, the University Society needed to count their alumni in order to be large-enough to become Representative Members of the Council — PeterScott
a University Society which has a small number of active residential members, who each pay a small annual subscription, and a large number of alumni-members (who are probably active in territorial associations around the country), — PeterScott
in Yorkshire, Life Members who are not required to pay an annual subscription.... If either of these categories are included in the counts of membership, then the effect of the current proposals - the extra cost per paying-member is even greater than the 20p to 40p or 20p to £1 multipliers. — PeterScott
The qualifying membership of a society that doesn't charge an annual subscription is based on the number of its members who are active, ie who take part in a society event during the year. — John Harrison
the number of members paying (or exempted from paying) membership subscriptions in 2024 or your society’s equivalent membership year
Yes, it reflects the age-profile of YACR, and other territorial societies, which takes us full-circle to why we (CCCBR) need to be doing something about it, and hence the 2030-initiative and the need for ringers to contribute the £1/year.[160 life members, 10.8% of membership of 1489] is a lot of free memberships. It means YACR is losing £1920 per annum in subs already, and I assume the membership is getting older so the subscription income will reduce further in future. — John Harrison
If you would like to join in the conversation, please register for an account.
You will only be able to post and/or comment once you have confirmed your email address and been approved by an Admin.