> * 5 Points - Based on Computer Society having a minimum of 5 core committee members: Chairperson, Secretary, Treasurer, PRO, and Health & Safety Officer (this will be checked online so be sure that your Committee details are up-to-date)
> Societies are deemed to be low risk and therefore they can double up their H&S officer responsibilities with another core committe members, i.e. they must have a minimum of 4 core committee members
> * 2 Points - For uploading good quality handover documents to the HANDOVER DOCUMENTS page (each core committee person must submit their own handover document, 1 per position)
> * 2 Points - For uploding all committee meeting minutes for the past academic year to the COMMITTEE MINUTES page
> * 3 Points - For evidence of managing your Financial affairs (for Bank Statements use the BANK BALANCES page)
> * 1 Point - For providing information to the C&S Office if required or asked to do so throughout the Academic Year
> * 2 Points - If Computer Society have no creditors outstanding (any outstanding debts have been cleared prior to budget submission)
> * 3 Points - If Computer Society has had no grievances throughout the year (if you have had a grievance and have dealt with it in a a good and fair manner the office will deliberate on points to be awarded)
> * 4 Points - Overall and General Track Record of Computer Society
> * 3 Points - Attendance at Council over a 3 year period as a percentage of total meetings (assessed based on sign-in records)
> * 5 Points - Collective Platform: Regular updates on ulwolves.ie (NEWS / EVENTS / ACTIVITIES / FIXTURES - these must have been entered at the time and can't be backdated)
> * 4 Points - Computer Society Individual Publicity (Computer Society's own social media, text groups, email groups, posters)
* Its an important reason to add the event on time to Wolves on a weekly basis.
* Have links to posters (can link to this repo by using ``https://gitlab.skynet.ie/compsoc1/compsoc/open-goverance/-/tree/main/Events/2023-2024`` as a base),
> Computer Society events are those that involve a level of organisation above a normal weekly meeting/training/class session
>
> An event involves at least two of more of the following logistics: organising a venue, speaker, accommodation, reception, transport, special advertising, special pre-training, entry fee, etc
#### Notes
* See [Last years section][1] for guidelines
#### Details
See [the separate file](12._Events.md) for the full details.
> A Showcase Event is assessed to be "SHOWCASE" if it will bring with it an increased workload and planning beyond the normal levels of the Society
>
> If the event has been held before, the effort involved shall be on par or greater than the previous attempt
>
> * Pre-Planning – possible Computer Society sub committee
> * Higher associated costs
> * Successful Sponsorship
> * Attempt to involve the broader campus community beyond their own membership and/or external involvement via wider community or other third level institutes
> * Visible Profile on campus including a media profile
> * Prestigious speakers-politicians and personalities