fireball
Well-Known Member
In our club, to become a flag officer one has to serve a few years on the committee. Too often I have been in clubs where somebody takes on a job & disappears soon after .
it may well be that the committee were possibly aware of some failing in the " volunteer" that would suggest something similar or make them unsuitable.
normally these " volunteers" need a proposer & seconder but if there was none then that suggests that it was not a deffinate proposal, just an off the cuff comment without substence.
Typically someone ( often a newish member)becomes quite vocal but when placed in such a position they do not meet expectation. I recall one such person who was all up for change. He was voted on the committee, missed lots of meetings, when he was there sat fiddling with his phone, rarely added to debate & when given a job to do performed it so poorly that a major event, normally sold out, was poorly attended
he then resigned from the club full of criticism of it & committee claiming he had been shouted down etc etc which i am told was totally untrue
I have seen this in non yachting clubs & i am certain it happens elswhere. So whilst committees sometimes seem to resist these people perhaps they actually have a point
But that does not mean to say it has happened here
That as may be - but it's not usually difficult to circumnavigate the rules - it's quite normal for the vice_c to move up to the role of commodore once the later has to stand down - the outgoing commodore then either buggers off for a year or so or could (if within the rules) take a lower office.
We don't know the reason for the commodore being re-elected despite being required to standdown - but it doesn't sound normal