QUESTION:
I recently started taking minutes at Medical Executive Committee meetings, and the Chair told me that it’s very important to record who made a motion, and who seconded it. It makes me nervous because I’m new and don’t know the names of everyone, and sometimes two or three members second a motion. Help!
OUR ANSWER FROM HORTYSPRINGER ATTORNEY NICHOLAS CALABRESE:
There’s no reason to record who made a motion and who seconded it – that’s too much detail. The reason to keep minutes is to record the actions taken at a meeting. A lot of hospitals we work with don’t want to put anything in the minutes, and other hospitals want to put everything in the minutes – both make it hard to figure out what happened at the meeting. Minutes aren’t supposed to fit on a 5 by 7-inch index card, but they aren’t supposed to be a transcript of a meeting either. The most important thing that minutes should do is to record the actions taken at a meeting. So, for motions, what is important is that a motion was made, and that it was seconded – who made it and who seconded it are just too much detail.