How did "getting signatures" originate?

How did the scheme of "getting signatures" to become a Voting Member originate?

Some people believed it was too hard to hold an Annual Neighborhood Meeting to determine a legitimate Voting Member. 

Whose brainchild was "getting signatures"? One person has told me. Before I name the person, I'd like to confirm it. Please contact me, if you know.

The "getting signatures" scheme seems to rely on going around a neighborhood with a form (apparently approved by the HOA and obtained from the office (managed by CAMS)), ringing doorbells, and asking the homeowner (not a non-homeowning resident) to sign the form.*

That scheme is not described in the By-Laws.

There is only one way to become a Voting Member. That way is described in the By-Laws in Art. V COMMITTEES, §3 Neighborhood Committees, ¶1-4. 

A Voting Member's term is one year, or until the next Neighborhood Meeting and election. It is not perpetual. It's not a lifetime appointment. It's one year. And the VM shouldn't be able to lay claim to the title by failing to call the next year's Annual Neighborhood Meeting.

Also, Voting Members and Alternates don't just get to swap chairs when they get tired (or bored or sick or move). The Neighborhood Committee should meet and choose who serves for the remainder of the year. 

* A clever solicitor could say, "You don't want to be a Voting Member, do you? Sign here."

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