NM Freemason
← Petitions, Investigations, and Ballot Paperwork

Chapter 80 · Study

Petitions, Investigations, and Ballot Paperwork

Print study sheet Read first, then practise.

Vocabulary · 5

Petition file
The organized set of documents and notes tied to one petitioner's progress through receipt, investigation, ballot, and later action.
Referral
The act of sending the petition to the proper investigating or officer process instead of letting it linger as informal conversation.
Investigation record
The written output or report that shows the investigation happened and what the Lodge is being asked to consider before the ballot.
Ballot readiness
The point at which the petition file, investigation work, notice, and timing are in order and the Lodge can vote cleanly.
Paper trail
The written path that lets a later officer reconstruct what was received, referred, reported, and voted on.

Sequences · 2

Petition paperwork flow

The orderly sequence that supports the Lodge's actual discernment.

  1. Receive and log the petition
  2. Refer it into the proper investigation process
  3. Preserve the written investigation record
  4. Confirm notice, timing, and ballot readiness
  5. Record the outcome and preserve the file

Ballot file review

A quick review before the ballot reaches the floor.

  1. Check that the petition file is complete
  2. Confirm the investigation result is actually in hand
  3. Verify timing and notice requirements
  4. Make sure the minutes will be able to reflect the action
  5. Bring the file to the point of clean ballot readiness

Practice questions · 4

  1. What is the Secretary mainly protecting in petition and ballot paperwork?

    • a. His personal authority over the candidate
    • b. A written process the Lodge can trust and later prove ✓
    • c. The petitioner's ability to skip investigation
    • d. The Master's freedom from procedure
  2. What should happen after a petition is received?

    • a. It should remain an informal conversation until the next year
    • b. It should be referred into the proper process ✓
    • c. It should go straight to ballot without inquiry
    • d. It should be kept only in the proposer's files
  3. What helps make a Lodge ballot-ready?

    • a. Good guesses about what the committee probably found
    • b. A complete petition file, investigation record, and proper timing ✓
    • c. The candidate's confidence alone
    • d. Skipping the written record so no one hesitates
  4. Why preserve the petition file after action is taken?

    • a. Because paper is decorative
    • b. Because a later officer may need to reconstruct what happened ✓
    • c. Because it replaces the ballot itself
    • d. Because it removes the need for minutes