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Church Representation and Ministers Measure 2019
United Kingdom legislation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Church Representation and Ministers Measure 2019, No. 1 is a Church of England measure passed by the General Synod of the Church of England simplifying bureaucracy of the Church of England and simplifying the electoral system of the General Synod of the Church of England.
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Provision
The Church of England adopted simplified representation rules, amending the Synodical Government Measure 1969:[2][3][4]
- the age of voting for the General Synod was reduced from 17 to 16
- communication can now take place under updated data protection legislation: Data Protection Act 2018
- various procedural requirements relating to parish governance were eliminated
- names are only removed from the electoral roll annually, but continue to be added whenever is appropriate
- parochial church councils can now meet as "joint councils"
- the proportion of members appointed to the General Synod no longer has to be 70:30 if the General Synod passes a resolution approving some other proportion
The Church now requires a simple form for being put on the electoral roll - the requirement to be baptised remains.[6]
Before the passage of this legislation, the requirements of the electoral roll were significantly vaguer.[7]
The Church in Wales had adopted a similar rule change letting 16 and 17 year olds vote in 2014.[8]
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Commencement
Unlike most measures, which are commenced with a Church of England instrument, the measure was commenced using a statutory instrument.[1]
References
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