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Pacific Palisades Community Council Document Library
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GovernanceBylaws
This document presents the revised bylaws of the Pacific Palisades Community Council, establishing its mission to protect and improve quality of life in Pacific Palisades, defining its organizational structure with a 23-member Board of Governors, and outlining the roles and responsibilities of officers, committees, and members.
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GovernanceBylaws
The Pacific Palisades Community Council Bylaws document outlines the organization's structure, mission, and governance procedures. The PPCC is composed of 23 voting board members including elected representatives, officers, and organizational representatives, with the primary mission to protect and improve quality of life in Pacific Palisades through advocacy and community forums.
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GovernanceBylaws
This document is a comprehensive summary of Pacific Palisades Community Council activities from 1972 to 1985, compiled by Robert R. Gabor. It details the Council's formation on March 11, 1972, and documents its work on community issues including environmental protection, civic development, roads and traffic, oil drilling opposition, and public safety.
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GovernanceBylaws
This is a collection of Pacific Palisades Community Council historical documents spanning from 1974 to 2023, including bylaws, amendments, incorporation articles, meeting minutes, IRS tax-exempt status confirmation, and a 50-year activity summary. The materials document the organization's governance structure, major decisions, and community initiatives over five decades.
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GovernanceBylaws
The Pacific Palisades Community Council Foundation was incorporated as a nonprofit charitable organization on July 31, 1974, with purposes including promoting local educational, literary, scientific, artistic and charitable activities, and receiving and distributing funds for such purposes. The foundation received state tax exemption approval from the California Franchise Tax Board on the same date.
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GovernanceBylaws
These are the by-laws for the Pacific Palisades Community Council, establishing its structure as a forum for community discussion with 13 representatives from various organizational categories plus 4 members-at-large, along with procedures for elections, meetings, voting, and committees. The document includes a list of organizations represented in the Council across categories such as homeowners associations, civic groups, education, youth services, environment, and culture.
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GovernanceBylaws
This document contains the by-laws of the Pacific Palisades Community Council, establishing its structure, governance, membership categories, meeting procedures, and voting requirements. The by-laws outline the organization's purpose as a community forum and advocate, with provisions for a Board of Governors composed of officers and representatives from various community organizations.
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GovernanceBylaws
The Pacific Palisades Community Council By-Laws Committee proposed amendments to restructure the Council's membership and governance, including dividing the community into 8 geographical areas with elected representatives, establishing 9 organizational categories, and clarifying the roles of officers, voting members, and non-voting advisors. The initial Council would consist of 21 members, reducing to 17 after the first year, with representatives serving one-year terms limited to 3 consecutive years, except officers who could serve up to 5 years total.
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GovernanceBylaws
The Pacific Palisades Community Council held a town hall meeting where the Bylaws Committee presented three proposals for reorganizing the Council's structure to include elected representatives and geographical seats alongside organizational representation. The meeting also addressed local issues including the Village School bus turn-in lane project, the Westridge development, and the departure of planning expert Cindy Miscikowski from Councilman Braude's office.
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GovernanceBylaws
The PPCC Bylaws Committee proposes nine amendments to the organization's bylaws, including adding a Parliamentarian position, splitting the Secretary role into Recording and Corresponding Secretary positions, adjusting Treasurer reporting frequency, allowing remote meetings, establishing procedures for removing organizations, reorganizing Appendix A categories, and permitting electronic voting methods. The Board will vote on these amendments at the September 22, 2022 meeting, with a 2/3 majority required for adoption.