summary of changes
Some checks failed
CI - Docs build check / build-check (push) Has been cancelled
Build & publish docs (rc + release) / publish (push) Has been cancelled

This commit is contained in:
2026-04-26 08:35:16 -05:00
parent b692725a28
commit f90ec3622e
2 changed files with 38 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@@ -32,3 +32,7 @@ For on-field administration, the Playing Rules also incorporate the Official Bas
## About the CMBA
The Chicago Metropolitan Baseball Association exists to provide strong amateur baseball competition in Illinois and the Midwest, with an emphasis on competitive play, sportsmanship, and league continuity.
## Additional Resources
- [Summary of High Level Changes for 2026](summary-of-changes.md)

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
# High-Level Summary of Changes
### Governance
- The League has moved from a President-centered governance model to a Board-led nonprofit governance model.
- The old life-term President structure has been replaced by annually elected Directors and annually appointed Officers.
- The Board now has formal authority over corporate governance, League Policy, officer appointments, budgets, membership status, and oversight of the Commissioner.
- The Commissioner remains responsible for day-to-day League administration, but now operates under Board oversight and an approved budget.
- Member Franchises retain an important voice: they elect Directors, vote on Playing Rules amendments, give advisory votes on operations, and participate in confidence votes on Officers.
- The current draft clarifies that Bylaws, League Policy, and Playing Rules are separate documents with different amendment processes.
- The League's legal/corporate framework has been modernized to include nonprofit powers, limitations, records, deposits, registered office/agent, and dissolution provisions.
### League Policy
- Operational rules have been moved into a dedicated League Policy document instead of being mixed throughout the old Constitution, By-Laws, and Playing Rules.
- Member Franchises, Managers, Players, Good Standing, suspension, discipline, appeals, annual meetings, rosters, postseason eligibility, field administration, uniforms, forfeits, and standings are now organized in one policy document.
- The Manager is now clearly identified as the sole authorized representative of a Member Franchise unless the Commissioner approves otherwise.
- Good Standing is more clearly tied to financial obligations, compliance, voting rights, postseason eligibility, and League awards.
- Discipline is more structured: the Commissioner may impose discipline, the Board provides oversight, committees are advisory unless specifically given authority, and appeals/Board review are defined.
- Conduct rules have been strengthened around professionalism, fighting, umpire abuse, dangerous play, alcohol, facility rules, false reporting, and repeated noncompliance.
- Roster administration remains familiar but has been cleaned up. The latest draft removes the face-photo roster requirement and allows roster submission through Excel, Google Sheets, or similar formats.
- Forfeits, technical forfeits, standings points, postseason eligibility, field status, rescheduling, protests, and reporting obligations are now more clearly separated from Playing Rules.
### Playing Rules
- Playing Rules now focus on on-field competition only, with administrative topics moved into League Policy.
- The Playing Rules expressly incorporate the Official Baseball Rules unless a League exception applies.
- The draft clarifies which modern MLB rules are not adopted by description, including limits on position-player pitching, shift restrictions, extra-inning automatic runners, pitch clocks, disengagement limits, the three-batter minimum, per-game mound visit limits, mandatory 18-inch bases, and replay/specialized-equipment rules.
- The League now has a clear rule hierarchy: League Policy controls first, then Playing Rules, then incorporated MLB rules.
- Regular-season and postseason lineup rules are now organized as two formats: Expanded Lineup Format and Restricted Lineup Format.
- Regular-season flexibility is preserved through the Expanded Lineup Format, allowing unlimited Extra Hitters, shared batting positions, free defensive substitution, Designated Runners, and Courtesy Runners.
- Postseason play is treated more formally through the Restricted Lineup Format, which excludes shared batting positions and uses stricter substitution rules.
- Minimum-player rules have been clarified: teams must start when both have one fewer than the required batting positions, short spots are outs, and teams falling below the minimum forfeit.
- Collision, injury substitution, Designated Runner, Courtesy Runner, and umpire-dispute rules have been rewritten for clarity and consistency with incorporated baseball rules.