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Your
Third Legacy
Will You Accept This
By
Dr. Bob and Bill W., October, 1950
(NOTE:
This is a proposal to form "The General
Service Conference of Alcoholics Anonymous"
a small body of State and Provincial A.A. Delegates meeting
yearly, who could assume direct responsibility for the guidance
of the A.A. General Service Headquarters at New York City
not to be confused with the 1950 Cleveland International
Conference.)
We,
who are old in A.A., bequeath to you who are younger, these
three legaciesthe "12 Steps of Recovery,"
the "12 Traditions" and now the "General
Services of Alcoholics Anonymous." Two of these legacies
have long been in your keeping. By the 12 Steps you have
recovered from alcoholism; by the 12 Traditions you have
achieved a suburb unity.
We
now wish to deliver the members of A.A. their third legacy.
Since 1938 we and our old friends have held it in trust.
This legacy is the General Headquarters Services of Alcoholics
Anonymous, the Alcoholic Foundation, the A.A Book, the A.A.
Grapevine and the A.A. General Office. These are the principal
Service assets which have enabled our Society to function
and to grow.
Dr.
Bob and I ask that you - the members of A.A.now take
these assets, use them, and guard them well. The future
growth, the very survival of Alcoholics Anonymous may heavily
depend on how prudently you administer these Arms of Service
in years to come.
May
we share with you a fragment of history? Twelve years ago,
warmly aided by great friends, Dr. Bob and I established
a Headquarters for our then obscure Fellowship. We named
it the Alcoholic Foundation and it consisted of a simple
Board of Trustees dedicated to serve our cause. The Board
was formed of alcoholics and non-alcoholic friends, who
today number fifteen. When in the spring of 1938 our Foundation
was born, A.A. was three years old. We had only 50 members.
The book Alcoholics Anonymous was just an idea. None could
then guess the magnificence of the gift which Providence
had begun to bestow.
In
the twelve years since, those 50 early members have spawned
120,000 more. A.A. stretches world-wide. Religion and medicine
have approvingly raised us out of that No Mans Land
where we once floundered between them. We have no enemies,
our friends are beyond count. Like gleaming coral islands
our thousands of Groups build themselves upward out of the
alcohol sea. What a God-given, miraculous circumstance!
Through
this glowing, feverish infancy, the Alcoholic Foundation
Board, unseen by many, quietly played a great part in the
formation and spread of our wellloved Society. Acting
through our General Service Office, the book Alcoholics
Anonymous, and latterly the Grapevine, the Foundation became
directly responsible for half our growth and effectivenessboth
in quality and quantity. There can be no question of that.
Suppose
then, all these years, we had been without those fine services.
Where would we be today minus the A.A. book and our standard
literature which now pours out of Headquarters at the rate
of three tons a month? Suppose our public relations had
been left to thoughtless chance. Suppose no one had been
assigned to encourage good publicity and kill the bad. Suppose
no accurate information about A.A. had been available. Imagine
our vital and delicate relations with medicine and religion
left to pot luck. Then, too, where would thousands of A.A.
s be today if the General Office hadnt answered
their frantic letters and referred them to help? (Our New
York Office received and answered 28,000 letters of all
kinds last year.) Or in what shape would hundreds of distant
A.A. Groups now be if that Office hadnt started them
by mail or directed travelers to them? How could we manage
without a world Group Directory? What about those foreign
Groups in 28 countries clamoring for translations, proved
experience and encouragement? Would we be publishing the
A.A. book at Oslo, Norway and London, England? What of those
lone members on high seas or in far corners of the earth,
those prisoners, those asylum inmates, those veterans in
service or in hospitals? Where might we one day be if we
never had the A.A. Grapevine, our mirror of A.A. life and
principal forum of written expression? How grateful we are
for those faithful Secretaries, those painstaking volunteer
Editors and those able Trustees who have stood sentinel
all these years over our principal affairs. Without all
these things, where would we be? You must have guessed it.
Wed be nowhere; thats sure.
So
it is that by the "Steps" we have recovered, by
the "Traditions" we have unified and by our Headquarters
Services we have been able to function as a Society.
Yet
some may still say - "Of course the Foundation should
go on. Certainly the Foundation should go on. Certainly
we 11 pay that small expense. But why cant we
leave its conduct to Dr. Bob and Bill and their friends
the Trustees? We always have. Why do they now bother us
with such business? Let s keep A. A. simple."
Good questions, these. But today the answers are quite different
than they once were.
Lets
face these facts:
First
Dr. Bob and Bill are perishable, they cant
last forever.
Second
- Their friends, the Trustees, are almost unknown to the
A.A. Movement.
Third
- In future years our Trustees couldnt possibly function
without direct guidance from A.A. itself. Somebody must
advise them. Somebody, or something must take the place
of Dr. Bob and Bill.
Fourth
- Alcoholics Anonymous is out of its infancy. Grown up,
adult now, it has full right and the plain duty to take
direct responsibility for its own Headquarters.
Fifth
Clearly then, unless the Foundation is firmly anchored,
through State and Provincial representatives, to the movement
it serves, a Headquarters breakdown will someday be inevitable.
When its old-timers vanish, an isolated Foundation couldnt
survive one grave mistake or serious controversy. Any storm
could blow it down. Its revival wouldnt be simple.
Possibly it could never be revived. Still isolated, there
would be no means of doing that. Like a fine car without
gasoline, it would be helpless.
Sixth
Another serious flaw: As a whole, the A.A. movement
has never faced a grave crisis. But someday it will have
to. Human affairs being what they are, we cant expect
to remain untouched by the hour of serious trouble. With
direct support unavailable, with no reliable cross-section
of A.A. opinion, how could our remote Trustees handle a
hazardous emergency? This gaping "open end" in
our present set-up could positively guarantee a debacle.
Confidence in the Foundation would be lost. A. A. s
everywhere would say: "By whose authority do the Trustees
speak for us? And how do they know they are right? "
With A.A. Service life-lines tangled and severed, what then
might happen to the "Million who dont know."
Thousands would continue to suffer on or die because we
had taken no forethought, because we had forgotten the virtue
of Prudence. This must not come to pass.
That
is why the Trustees, Dr. Bob and I now propose the "General
Service Conference of Alcoholics Anonymous." That is
why we urgently need your direct help. Our principal Services
must go on living. We think the General Service Conference
of Alcoholics Anonymous can be the agency to make that certain.
SECTION
II
Our Proposed Plan
Here
is our over-all plan. To start the General Service Conference,
the Foundation Trustees will invite one Delegate from each
State of the Union and one from each Province of Canada.
States and Provinces having large A.A. populations will
be asked to send additional Delegates. (Subject, of course,
to A.A. s willingness to finance full representation.)
These
Delegates will serve in two rotating panels. Panel No. 1
will be formed by inviting representatives from the 28 States
and Provinces having, by our Group Directory, the largest
A.A. populations. Panel No. 2 (which will start in the second
year) will be created by inviting Delegates from the remaining
28 States and Provinces plus additional representation from
densely populated regions.
Delegates
to the General Service Conference at New York are to be
selected by Group representatives who will usually meet
in the largest A.A. center of each State or Province, on
dates to be set every two years by the Alcoholic Foundation
working with appropriate State or Provincial Committees.
A
non-controversial method has been devised for the selection
of State Committees and Conference Delegates. It will be
seen that this method carefully avoids our usual political
troubles. No Delegate so chosen could possibly consider
himself a political victor. He will feel himself a servant,
but not a senator. (Details in Section III)
Each
Delegate will serve a two-year term, will always be available
for mail or phone consultation with A.A. Headquarters, and
will twice attend the General Service Conference which will
ordinarily be held in New York City to coincide with the
regular April meeting of the Foundation. At the Conference,
these Delegates will sit with our Trustees, General Office
Secretaries and Grapevine Staff Members. Thus, we shall
constitute the "General Service Conference of Alcoholics
Anonymous."
Now
what will our General Service Conference do?
A.
It will here the Annual Reports of the Foundation, General
Office, Grapevine, and Works Publishing (the A.A. Book Company);
also the report of our C.P.A.
B.
It will fully discuss these reports, offering needed suggestions
or resolutions respecting them.
C.
The Trustees will present to the Conference all serious
problems of policy or finance confronting A.A. Headquarters,
or A.A. as a whole. Following discussions of these, the
Conference will offer the Trustees appropriate advice and
resolutions.
D.
Special attention will be given to all violations of our
Tradition liable to seriously affect A.A. as a whole. The
Conference will, if it be deemed wise, publish suitable
resolutions deploring such deviations.
E.
Because Conference activities will extend over a three-day
weekend, Delegates will be able to exchange views on every
conceivable problem. They will become closely acquainted
with each other and with our Headquarters people. They will
visit the premises of the Foundation, Grapevine and General
Office. This should engender mutual confidence. Guesswork
and rumor are to be replaced by first-hand knowledge.
F.
Before the conclusion of each years Conference, a
Committee will be named to render all A.A. members a written
report upon the condition of their Headquarters and the
state of A.A. generally.
On
a Conference Delegates return home, his State or Provincial
Committee will, if practical, call a meeting of Group representatives
and any others who wish to hear his personal report. The
Delegate will get this meetings reaction to his report,
and its suggestions respecting problems to be considered
at future Conference Sessions. The Delegate ought to visit
as many of his constituent Groups as possible. They should
have direct knowledge of their A.A. Headquarters.
How
best to finance our Conference expenses is a moot question.
The General Service Conference will function for the benefit
of A.A. as a whole. Its entire cost ought to be a charge
against those "Group Contributions" now sent to
New York for the support of the General Office. But this
method is quite impossible now. Group Contributions are
not meeting General Office expenses. Nor can the "Reserve"
or the Foundations A.A. "Book Income" carry
the Conference.
We
therefore propose that all A.A. Groups be asked for a gift
of $5. each, yearly, at Christmas. The Foundation Trustees
would deposit these sums in a special account marked "Conference
Funds."
If
even one-half the A.A. Groups made this annual $5. gift
to the Foundation "for the benefit of the million who
dont yet know," we estimate that the resulting
income would absorb the total yearly Conference overhead,
plus all Delegates transportation to New York in
excess of $100. each. (See Section IV for details)
One
more word about money. A.A. Headquarters recently sent out
its semiannual appeal for voluntary contributions, remarking
that of late the Groups had donated much less than the traditional
"$1.. per member a year." The present condition
is only natural. The larger A.A. grows, the less the average
Group is apt to know or care about the Foundation. Its
not surprising that interest lags. But the General Service
Conference should change all that. A brand new channel of
participation and understanding will be wide open. No doubt
hundreds of Groups not now giving to the Foundation will
commence to do so. Meanwhile, our great thanks go out to
all those who have supported Headquarters in past years,
especially to Groups whose gifts have far exceeded the traditional
"$1. per member" yardstick. Without them we
d never have got by; there would be no Foundation Office
or Grapevine today. But it should be noted that foreign,
institutional or quite new A.A. Groups need never feel obligated.
The
A.A. General Service Conference will be an informal gathering.
Resolutions passed by a simple majority will be advisory
only. But the Trustees will traditionally favor all resolutions
passed by a two-thirds vote. When Trustees of the Foundation
retire, the remaining Board members will traditionally consult
the Conference, or a committee thereof, before naming their
successors. Above all, it ought to be understood that the
General Service Conference will never become a government
for Alcoholics Anonymous. Though it may publish resolutions
respecting deviations from A.A. Tradition, it is agreed
that such acts will never be personal, punitive or governmental
in their character.
So
concludes our general outline of the General Service Conference
plan.
The
Trustees, Dr. Bob and I rest in sure confidence that thisyour
third legacywill never be lost; that your new responsibility
will be carried without faltering. By its complete willingness
to serve God in all weather, may the Society of Alcoholics
Anonymous ever merit the worthiness to endure.
SECTION
III
A.A.
State And Provincial Assemblies:
Their Committees And Delegates, How Chosen
Without
great expense or friction, how can States and Provinces
select their General Service Conference Delegates and suitable
State or Provincial Service Committees? This is the
"$100." question. But we believe there is an answer.
On one of Bills western trips, experiments were tried
which proved it possible to do these things. The following
concrete plan is the result. At this stage we urge the need
to be definite to avoid confusion. Later on you may wish
to amend the plan to suit local needs or iron out flaws.
Here we are:
A.
With Foundation help, meetings of A.A. Group representatives
will be organized in each State and Province, these to be
called Assemblies.
B.
Each assembly will cast separate written ballots for
each of its State or Provincial Committeemen; three,
five, seven or more of them.
C.
Committeemen so selected will be automatically placed in
nomination as candidates for the post of Delegate to the
General Service Conference for a twoyear term.
D.
If, on a trial ballot, no one of these Committeemen can
be elected Delegate by a two-thirds vote, they then draw
lots between them to name the Delegate.
E.
Each State or Provincial Assembly naming a Delegate pays
his plane or railroad fare to New York. But not to exceed
$100. yearly per Delegate. Money to defray this expense
will be raised at the Assembly meeting where the Delegate
is chosen. Two years, paid in advance, is preferable. For
the benefit of distant regions, the Foundation "Conference
Fund" will pay any yearly transportation expense in
excess of $100. per Delegate (See Section IV)
For
the clear guidance of those States and Provinces who send
Delegates in 1951 and 1952, we urge this detailed procedure:
By
January 1, 1951 the Foundation will ask the A.A. Group within
each State and Province comprising Panel No. 1 how many
of them wish to participate, as outlined above. Each Group
expecting to help chose a Delegate will immediately select
an experienced A.A. Representative. He (or she) will be
ready to attend the State or Provincial Assembly. A date
(not later than March 15th) will be announced. Much care
ought to be given such selections. Any one of them may become
Committeemen or the Delegate. Old-timers and former Group
or Intergroup Officers ought to be considered possibilities.
Assuming
that a minimum of 10 Groups in each State and Province of
Panel No. 1 has volunteered to participate, the Foundation,
in cooperation with the Groups, (or Intergroups) of the
largest local centers, will arrange suitable State or Provincial
meetings. The Foundation will then advise all participating
Groups of the places and dates of their respective Assemblies.
(In following years State and Provincial Committees will
of course assume this duty.)
By
this process we shall create a series of State and Provincial
Assembly meetings, the Panel No. 1 Assemblies to gather
in early 1951.
Now
a very important question. Just how will State or Provincial
Assemblies be conducted? For these key meetings we urge
this procedure:
Lets
assume that the Foundation, cooperating with a Temporary
Committee* appointed at a typical "host city",
has already named the date, hour and address of a given
Assembly meeting. Group Representatives, "out of town"
and "in town" have arrived. What happens then?
1.
Registration: Each Group Representative registers
his, and his Groups name and address in the Registration
Book provided. He also has brought a copy of this pamphlet
so he can follow the Assembly procedure.
2.
Registration Completed: Chairman of the Temporary
Committee opens the Assembly and reports the number present
from the Registration Book. Those who have not registered
do so.
3.
Tellers Appointed. Local expenses covered: Temporary
Chairman appoints one or more tellers. He names the sum
spent by his Committee in arranging the Assembly meeting
and asks the tellers to pass the hat to cover it.
4.
First Business Determining size of State or Provincial
Committee: The Temporary Chairman then determines the
size of the Committee desired by asking whether Assembly
will have three, five, seven, or more Committeemen. He requests
a show of hands on these figures in succession, until a
majority names the proper number.
*
The temporary "host committee" will only be needed
for the very first meeting, after which State or Provincial
Committees will take over.
5.
Election of State or Provincial Committee: Tellers
pass blank ballots. The Temporary Chairman then points out
that all Committeemen ought to be experienced A.A.s
well known in the area, who would be willing to give close
attention to Conference affairs for a two-year period. Temporary
Chairman then requests a written ballot for Committeeman
No. 1. Tellers count the ballots and report the high man.
Unless he declines to serve, he becomes State Chairman at
once and takes over the meeting. Similarly the next ballot
produces a Treasurer, the next a Secretary, and further
ballots the remainder of the Committee. If there are declinations,
the process continues until there is a full Committee elected
for a two-year term. (Note that this method avoids personal
nominations, hence personal controversy.)
6.
Trial Attempt to Elect a Delegate by 2/3rds Vote:
The Chairman reminds the Assembly, that according to plan,
the election of the State (or Provincial) Committee has
automatically placed all its members in nomination for the
post of Delegate also explains why, to assure unanimity,
the election should be by two-thirds vote. Therefore the
Chairman asks for a show of hands on this question
"Will this assembly, on a single written ballot, attempt
the choice of its Delegate by a two-thirds vote?" Should
more than two-thirds of the meeting indicate a desire to
try this twothirds method, a ballot is cast. If one
of the Committeemen receives two-thirds or more, he becomes
the Delegate for two years. Otherwise the method of election
is discarded.
7.
Delegate Chosen by Lot: The Tellers then place in
a hat the names of each Committeeman willing to serve as
Delegate. The first man (or lady!) out of the hat becomes
State or Provincial Delegate for two years. The remaining
Committeemen become alternates according to the order of
their election. The State Secretary records the result together
with the names and addresses of his Committee.
8.
Duty of Treasurer: The Chairman then directs his
Committees Treasurer to name the sum required from
each Group Representative present to cover the newly chosen
Delegates traveling expenses for two years.
(This is determined by dividing the number present into
the total estimated expense, or $200., whichever is lower.)
The Chairman asks the Assembly for a show of hands whether
it wishes to pay one years traveling expense, or two,
in advance. The Treasurer then receives the agreed payment
from each Group Representative and issues such Representative
a receipt by which he may reimburse himself from his Groups
treasury.
- Secretarys
Report: The Chairman instructs the Secretary to
prepare a brief written report of the meeting, listing
the names and addresses of Committeemen and Delegate,
copy to the Alcoholic Foundation.
- Final
Business: The Chairman then throws the meeting open
to discussion. Questions respecting the Conference,
or instructions to be given the new Delegate, may be
brought to the floor. Finally, the Chairman announces
the date of an Open Meeting to be held after the Delegates
return from New York. There the Delegate is to make
his personal report to all A.A. members who wish to
hear it. Adjournment is then in order.
Such
is our concept of the typical State or Provincial Assembly.
We hope it proves a successful model for future years. We
can only try and see.
Though
it may prove desirable, it will not be absolutely necessary
to hold Assembly meetings in "off-election years."
But returning Delegates in those years ought to make their
usual report to Open Meetings held in large centers and
should visit as many of their constituent Groups as they
can.
Should
travel money be lacking for a Delegate in his second year,
his State Chairman may circularize the constituent Groups,
or his Committee may raise this sum as they deem wise.
When,
in the judgment of a State or Provincial Committee, a Delegate
becomes incapacitated through alcohol, or otherwise, the
Chairman will attend the General Service Conference in his
place. If the Chairman cannot attend, he will offer the
post of Delegate to his fellow Committeemen in the order
of their seniority as determined at the time of their election.
It
is hoped, too, that State Chairmen will keep in close contact
with the Alcoholic Foundation, addressing their correspondence
to the A.A. General Office where one of its secretaries
will be named to look after Conference matters.
A
special word about Panel No. 2. To place the General Service
Conference on a rotating basis, no Delegates can be invited
from Panel No. 2 regions until 1952. These States and Provinces
will then be approached in precisely the same manner as
above described for Panel No. 1.
Since
it is felt that Panel No. 2 may be more thinly represented,
it seems right to invite additional delegates from those
States or Provinces having an A.A. population of more than
2000 to round it out. On Panel List No. 2, attached, a number
of cities which can act as "assembly" points for
such additional representation are suggested. Provided "Conference
Funds" prove adequate, additional cities in heavily
populated regions may make application for representation.
Though
no Panel No. 2 Delegates can be chosen until 1952, we hope
that all States and Provinces will generously contribute
to "Conference Funds" during 1951. For unless
ample funds are in sight, we shall have to limit the total
number of Delegates invited to the Conference. We
much hope that wont happen as ultimate success for
the Conference will depend upon wide-spread representation.
On
the following list, each State, Province or special locality
may discover the Panel in which it belongs. These selections
were based upon the 1950 Group Directory. In suggesting
cities for additional representation, we have been obliged
to consider convenience as well as population.
Naturally
these arrangements are tentative, experimental. Defects
will show up. But we can mend these as we go. We shall begin
thus.
IMPORTANT
We hope and believe that we shall be able to invite
Delegates from every locality listed, but it might not work
out that way at first. Should there be a limited response
from all the A.A. Groups when asked for the $5. Christmas
contributions to the "Conference Fund," we would
have to limit out invitations accordingly. We may have to
start on a smaller basis than we anticipated. So please
dont feel disturbed or disappointed should we have
to limit representation at the start. We 11 do the
best we can.
NOTE
- Where large centers are near State or national boundaries,
there seems no good reason why Groups in adjoining areas
may not cross these lines to elect Delegates. For example,
at Detroit, Kansas City, Missouri, Buffalo, New York, etc.
SECTION
IV
Financing The General Service Conference
How
to finance our General Service Conference is a plain guess.
Well have to make the best estimate we can and try
it out. Theres no other way.
First,
some background. Lacking close contact, the Foundation has
grown remote from the Groups. They have lost the feeling
that our Foundation is really theirs. A.A. General Office
expenses have soared because of inflation, even though that
office isnt half as big, in relation to A.A.s
size, as it used to be. For these reasons the A.A. Groups
havent been meeting their current Headquarters expenses;
2000 Groups who could well give a hand, still abstain. The
entire burden falls on the remaining 1500 Groups; they carry
the load. Nobody is specially to blame for this, its
simply a condition. One important Conference purpose is
to stabilize and correct this very situation. When the A.A.
Groups are given direct participation and know the score,
they will handle the matter. We are sure of that. Then Conference
expenses can be deducted from routine contributions; the
difference will scarcely be felt. But that time hasnt
arrived.
Therefore
Groups who already contribute, plus those who may soon be
interested, are the ones who will make our Conference a
success.
Naturally
we cant place the entire financial responsibility
upon those Groups who happen to take part in choosing Delegates,
either. Many Groups at long distance from State or Provincial
"Assembly" points might not be able to help choose
a Delegate. Nevertheless were positive that hundreds
of them, considering this new set-up, would like to make
a direct contribution to its success.
Bearing
these facts in mind, our tentative financial plan is this:
1.
That we ask every A.A. Group in the United States and Canada
to contribute $5. annually, this special gift to be made
to the Foundation at Christmas for the benefit of "the
millions who dont know." Since the Conference
would insure the continuance of A.A. Headquarters, which
is our principal lifeline to all those yet to come, this
would be the thought.
Such
a Christmas-time appeal would create an annual income somewhere
between $5,000. and $10,000. for Conference purposes. If
interest is small, we can invite but few Delegates. If interest
is large, we can invite all those who are listed in Panels
Nos. 1 and 2. This income will be deposited in a special
Foundation account devoted to Conference purposes only
and titled "Conference Funds."
Just
how would these $5. Christmastime contributions
be used? Save one exception the Foundation would pay the
total expenses of the General Service Conference, the
year round. This would include:
(a)
Full hotel bills and meals for as many as 60 Delegates
for three days.
(b)
The cost of a suitable meeting place.
(c)
The printing of an annual Conference report to be sent
to all A.A. members.
(d)
The cost of secretarial help, correspondence and special
mailings.
(e)
All roundtrip plane and railroad fares exceeding
$100. in any one year to assist distant Groups with transport
of their Delegates.
(f)
Organization expense distribution of 100,000 copies
of this plan, possible travel by Bill, etc.
-
Each
Group Assembly sending a Delegate would pay his round-trip
fare to New York not exceeding $100. per year. Any excess
would be chargeable to the Foundation "Conference
Fund." Eastern Groups would seemingly have an advantage
but its not great. Because of their numbers, the
Easterners would be the principal $5. Contributors to
the "General Funds." Hence theirs would
be the lions share of paying all Western fares
over $100. Therefore approximate justice would be done.
___________________________________
Quite
obviously, full representation at our General Service Conference
is going to depend squarely upon the generosity of some
2000 Groups Contributing $5. each a year for this very special
Conference purpose. It is a responsibility which youthe
members of A.A.will need to take if you are to receive
and guard well your Third Legacy, The General Services of
Alcoholics Anonymous.
Dr.
Bob and I have the deepest faith that you are going to accept
that responsibility.
SECTION
V
Temporary Charter
for the
General Service Conference
"12 Suggested Principles"
We
here present a precise statement of "12 Principles"
upon which the General Service Conference of Alcoholics
Anonymous can be founded; principles upon which it may be
experimentally assembled, financed and operated during a
four-year trial period beginning, if possible, in April
1951.
If
in four years the Conference proves its usefullness and
has gained wide A.A. acceptance, it may then amend these
principles according to the dictates of actual experience.
But any such changes in the Conference Principles should,
of course, conform to the Tradition of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Meanwhile, we only commit ourselves to giving the Conference
- a thorough trial.
On
this basis the Trustees, Dr. Bob and I offer you - the members
of A.A. -this temporary "Charter" for your General
Service Conference:
_________________________________________________
The
General Service Conference
of Alcoholics Anonymous
(North American Section)
1.
Purpose: The General Service Conference of Alcoholics
Anonymous is expected to become the basic guardian of our
A.A. Tradition and World Services. It is especially hoped
the Conference will lend guidance to, and perpetuate the
Alcoholic Foundation and the A.A. General Headquarters at
New York City. The Conference will be a service body only;
never a government.
2.
Composition: - The Conference will be composed of
A.A. State and Provincial Delegates, Trustees of the Alcoholic
Foundation, and Staff members of the General Service Office
and Grapevine.
3.
Conference Relation to A.A.: The Conference will
serve as a vehicle through which the A.A. Movement can effectively
express its views upon all matter of vital A.A. policy and
all hazardous deviations from A.A. Tradition, thus providing
Alcoholics Anonymous with a reliable guide to right thought
and wise action upon these serious subjects.
4.
Conference Relations to A.A. General Headquarters:
The Conference will also be expected to serve as a dependable
guide for The Alcoholic Foundation, whose Trustees are the
Custodians of A.A. general funds, the book "Alcoholics
Anonymous," the General Service Office and the Grapevine.
As such, the Trustees can be expected with favor upon any
Conference resolution relating to vital A.A. policy passed
by a two-thirds vote of the Conference. In filling vacancies
on the Foundation Board the Trustees should be empowered
to consult the Conference or a Committee thereof. It must
be remembered, however, that the Conference will be informal
and unincorporated and that the Alcoholic Foundation is
alone authorized to make contracts, conduct public relations
in the name of Alcoholics Anonymous, and insure the financial
and managerial integrity of the A.A. General Headquarters.
But if the Conference, following a reasonable trial period,
becomes a vital and accepted Service of the A.A. movement
it should then be entitled to shape and mould its own final
form.
5.
State and Provincial Delegates Term of Office:
State and Provincial Delegates will be chosen for terms
of two years each.
6.
Conference Rotation: This will be effected by two
panels of State and Provincial Delegates. First Year,
Panel No. 1: To be composed by inviting one Delegate
from each of those 27 States or Provinces having the largest
A.A. population. Second Year, Panel No. 2: To be
composed by inviting one Delegate each from the 28 remaining
States and Provinces. Panel No. 2 will also invite extra
representatives from those States and Provinces having an
A.A. population of more than 2000. (See Section III)
7.
Conference Delegates - Points at Which Selected:
Conference Delegates will be selected at the largest centers
of A.A. population within their respective States and Provinces.
But Panel No. 2 will ordinarily include Delegates from the
next larger centers of each State and Province having more
than 2000 A.A. population (See Section III)
8.
State and Provincial Delegates - Method of Selection:
State and Provincial Conference Delegates will be chosen
by Assemblies of A.A. Group Representatives meeting at such
dates and places as may be jointly arranged by The Alcoholic
Foundation and suitable State and Provincial Committee according
to the principles of Point No. 7.
Delegates
and alternates will be chosen by election or by lot, or
by a combination of these methods. But if elected, a Delegate
ought to be chosen by a majority of two-thirds because all
Delegates should feel themselves servants of world A.A.
rather than marginal victors of troublesome political contests.
(See Section III for method of choosing Conference Delegates
and State or Provincial Committees.)
9.
- The General Service Conference How Financed:
General Service Conference total costs will be apportioned
as follows:
(a)
Once yearly, each A.A. Group interested will be asked to
make a $5.00 contribution to the Alcoholic Foundation "Conference
Fun"
(b)
Those Groups within each State or Province who actually
participate in naming Delegates will pay their Delegates
traveling expenses to and from New York City, not to exceed,
however, $100.00 a year each. It is estimated that any excess
above this figure can be absorbed by the "Conference
Fund." (See Section IV for detail.)
10.
Conference Meetings: The Conference ought to meet
yearly at New York, or specially if there be an emergency.
And two-thirds of the State, Provincial and A.A. Headquarters
Delegates registered should constitute a quorum.
11.
Ordinary Procedure: The Conference will hear the
reports of The Foundation and its related Headquarters Services.
The Conference will then advise with the Trustees and Headquarters
Staff concerning pending and important matters of finance
or general policy affecting the Headquarters or A.A. as
a whole, making such suggestions or passing such resolutions
as it may deem desirable. The Conference may also discuss
and recommend appropriate action concerning serious deviations
from A.A. Tradition, or harmful misuse of the name "Alcoholics
Anonymous." The Conference will elect its own officers
and pass suitable by-laws. Before adjournment the Conference
will authorize a Committee to draft a full report on its
proceedings and the state of A.A. generally, which will
be furnished the Alcoholics Anonymous Groups throughout
the world.
12.
General Warranties of the Conference: In all its
proceedings the General Service Conference ought to observe
the spirit of our A.A. Tradition, taking great care: that
the Conference never becomes the seat of perilous wealth
or power; that sufficient operating funds plus ample reserves
be its prudent financial principle; that none of the Conference
members ever be placed in a position of unqualified authority
over the others; that all important decisions be reached
by discussion and vote; that no Conference resolution ever
be punitive in character or an incitement to public controversy;
that the Conference never attempts to govern Alcoholics
Anonymous, and that, like the Society of Alcoholics Anonymous
which it serves, the Conference ought always remain democratic
in thought and action. Perhaps, now, certain questions are
coming to mind. For instance:
Q.
Why should our Trustees and Headquarters Staff be voting
members of the Conference.
A.
As the ones most experienced in the conduct of our overall
Services, they are obviously entitled to full Conference
participation.
Q.
Why is a "cross-section of A.A. opinion" so necessary?
A.
Future Trustees must have sound advice and vigorous backing.
Without that they never could speak for A.A. in years to
come. A.A., too, must have a definite means of knowing its
own mind. Otherwise serious issues of the future will certainly
bring us endless controversy and confusion. A Society such
as ours cannot permanently function on emotion, rumor or
guesswork; it cannot be well advised by the clamors of small
or self-appointed minorities.
Q.
Why, on important matters, should a two-thirds vote of the
Conference be needed?
A.
Since the Conference will meet briefly, and but once a year,
our Headquarters Staffs must be given some latitude for
independent judgment. Hence they ought not be too firmly
bound by a bare majority. To be binding, a Conference resolution
ought to be reasonably unanimous.
Q.
Why shouldnt the Conference elect the Foundation Trustees?
A.
This would introduce a difficult and unnecessary political
problem. It seems better that the Trustees continue to name
their own successors, subject to consultation with
the Conference or a Committee thereof. Should circumstances
warrant, the Trustees would unquestionably look with favor
on any advice offered by two-thirds of the Conference respecting
the composition of the Foundation Board.
Q.
What is meant by "two year rotating panels?"
A.
This means that only the Delegates described in Panel No.
1 will attend the 1951 Conference. In 1953 the original
Panel No. 1 will be replaced by a new Panel No. 1 chosen
from the same area. And so on, ad infinitum. This will make
for continuity because only one-half of our out-of-town
Delegates will have to be replaced each year. (See Part
III, Selection of Delegates.)
Q.
Why shouldnt our Conference be a government for Alcoholics
Anonymous?
A.
Each A.A. Group is autonomous; our only "authority"
is a Higher Power. Practically speaking, no A.A. Group will
stand for a personal government anyhow; were built
that way. Though the Conference will guide A.A. Headquarters,
it must never assume to govern A.A. as a whole. While it
can publicly deplore misuse of the A.A. name or departures
from Tradition, it ought never attempt punishment or legal
restraint of non-conformistsin A.A. or out. That is
the road to public controversy and internal disruption.
The Conference will give us an example and a guide, but
not a government. A personal government is something, God
willing, that Alcoholics Anonymous will never have. We shall
authorize servants to act for us, but not rulers.
This
is the basic structure of our Conference to be. Its framework
has long been under study and consultation. We trust that
it will commence to meet our evident need; that it will
be regarded by all A.A.s as a safe and suitable beginning.
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