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NVRA Board Members Resign: “This President Seems to Prefer to Work in the Shadows…”

MEETING BEING HELD TONIGHT. SEE LINK BELOW.

National Verbatim Reporters Association members were recently alerted to three board resignations.

Notice to NVRA members about resignation

Members from the voice writing community came onto social media to discuss the occurrence.

Message posted on Facebook regarding recent resignations

A letter from Amy Armstrong was made public.

Letter related to National Verbatim Reporters Association board resignation by Amy Armstrong CVR-RVR
Letter related to National Verbatim Reporters Association board resignation by Amy Armstrong CVR-RVR
Letter related to National Verbatim Reporters Association board resignation by Amy Armstrong CVR-RVR
Letter related to National Verbatim Reporters Association board resignation by Amy Armstrong CVR-RVR
Letter related to National Verbatim Reporters Association board resignation by Amy Armstrong CVR-RVR

Donald Scott, formerly a board member and president of NCRA, offered his perspective on the event.

Donald Scott’s reply to the post made about NVRA board resignations and Amy Armstrong’s letter. NOTE: These are Mr. Scott’s personal thoughts and not a statement by NVRA.

This culminated in a meeting being called by members of the community.

Meeting called by members of the voice writing community after resignations from the board of NVRA occurred.

The link to the meeting is here.

I don’t know that I can say much. I’m a relatively new member of the National Verbatim Reporters Association and am fairly distant from its politics and leadership. But I can honestly say that as a blogger I’ve now had quite a few people come to me about obfuscatory or suspicious things in various court reporting associations, so it doesn’t surprise me too much that NVRA is also having issues. On the best of days, leadership is tough. Being a leader at a time when some of the biggest names in the business can get together under a shell nonprofit and pump the market with lies, and with impunity, is probably worlds tougher.

For what it’s worth, when I read the bit about digital entry, my mind wandered to that piece I did about the cost of corruption. Again, no direct evidence that NVRA or any association is “corrupted,” but they wouldn’t be particularly hard to corrupt.

Maybe associations need these squabbles to stay competitive. If you don’t run the risk of some of your members breaking off and starting a competing association, what motivation do you have to improve?

Addendum:

11/9/23:

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