Important AGM for FFA
Football Federation
Australia (FFA) has given notice to its Members of an Annual General
Meeting on 30 November at which a resolution to expand the sport’s
representative Congress will be put.
The changes to FFA’s
constitution respond to a request from FIFA. FFA believes they will expand the
size of the Congress and deliver greater diversity, significantly
increase representation of the professional game and women’s
football.
Throughout this long
process, the FFA Board has continued to be guided by two principles:
the expansion of the Congress to make it more representative of
Australian football and the preservation of the independence of the
Board to ensure decisions are made in the best interests of the game
as a whole.
The resolution would
increase the Congress membership from 10 to 21. The 21 Members would
include the nine Member Federations, the nine Australian Hyundai
A-League clubs (sharing four votes between them, up from one vote)
and for the first time, Professional Footballers Australia (one
vote), a representative of professional women’s football (one vote)
and a representative for women’s football at the community level
(one vote).
FFA Chairman Steven
Lowy said the current Congress arrangements had served football very
well for more than 10 years, creating unprecedented success and
stability for the game. These significant and progressive changes
were now proposed to reflect the evolution of the sport in Australia
and provide a platform for growth.
Mr Lowy said these
changes will be an important first step on a journey the FFA Board
believes will see even further expansion of the Congress as the game
evolves.