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Workers, Shareholders Demand Reform at Verizon

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Bernard Pollock of the AFL-CIO field staff reports on yesterday’s union actions at Verizon’s  annual shareholders’ meeting.
 
Workers and shareholders let Verizon know they want a major shift in the way the company operates as more than 1,250 people rallied outside the Verizon meeting yesterday. The rally included hundreds from the Communications Workers of America (CWA), Electrical Workers (IBEW), United Steelworkers (USW) and scores more from nearly 30 international unions. Union members scored a victory when a shareholder vote on top executive’s pay packages was determined too close to call.

AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Richard Trumka, IBEW President Edwin Hill, USW Secretary-Treasurer Jim English, USW District 10 Director John DeFazio and CWA District 13 Administrative Assistant Marge Krueger addressed the crowd, along with Pennsylvania AFL-CIO President Bill George and Allegheny County CLC President Jack Shea.  Union workers at the company own approximately $3 billion in Verizon stock.
  
At the meeting, shareholders voted in the largest numbers ever for three proposals submitted by the AFL-CIO:

  • 46 percent voted for the “Golden Parachutes” proposal, which would close substantial loopholes in Verizon’s policy on retirement packages. Verizon’s current policy allows shareholders to vote on severance agreements that exceed 2.99 times base salary plus bonus, but does not include retirement benefits, stock awards or tax reimbursements in the calculation.  The proposal would encourage Verizon to eliminate the perverse incentive created when executives look forward to a windfall if they fail to provide good leadership for the company.
  • 47 percent voted in favor of the “Compensation Consultants” proposal, which  would safeguard the independence of pay consultants by requiring Verizon  to disclose information to shareholders necessary for a full assessment of its consultants’ independence. This proposal is especially important at Verizon, whose former compensation consultant also performed hundreds of millions of dollars of business in other areas for the company.
  • More than 49 percent voted in favor of “Say on Pay,” which would require Verizon to submit executive compensation packages to a nonbinding shareholder vote.

The strong votes on the shareholder proposals indicate that shareholders will continue to demand for reform at Verizon, Trumka said. 

The record votes at today’s meeting send a strong and powerful message to Verizon that shareholders will not stand for excessive CEO compensation. The question remains: Will Verizon listen, respond and reach out to investors, or will it continue to ignore the strong message that was sent today to clean up its corporate governance? 

 

 

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3 Comments

  1. Gabe Falsetta on 04.05.2007 at 16:53 (Reply)

    I just bought my first cell phone. My friend and I choose Cingular because the workers are union. When Verizon begins to act in an upright decent human way, perhaps will will consider a change at the end of our contract….but until then we try to buy union!

    solidarity forever!!

  2. David Hurlburt on 04.05.2007 at 17:13 (Reply)

    New words to an old Hank Williams song “Melt your cold, cold heart”

    Melt Verizon’s cold, cold Heart

    Tear down the wall at Verizon, We make this our solemn vow!
    Union members at Verizon Shout, Ivan can you hear us now!
    We proved a union majority, now bargaining must start!
    Recognize our union now and melt your cold, cold heart!

    From Long Beach California and on the East coast too,
    We have seen union busting and employee coercion too.
    We proved a union majority, now bargaining must start!
    Recognize our union now and melt your cold, cold heart!

    As Workers and Shareholders, We demand our“Say on Pay”
    Not to mention our pension that you would take away!
    We proved a union majority, now bargaining must start!
    Recognize our union now and melt your cold, cold heart!

    We will never give up; we will never ever give in.
    Greed must be overcome and bargaining must begin.
    We proved a union majority, now bargaining must start!
    Recognize our union now and melt your cold, cold heart!

    David Hurlburt CWA local 9410

  3. Laura Unger CWA on 04.05.2007 at 17:52 (Reply)

    This was a terrific effort by the Verizon workers. Last week I attened the AT&T shareholders meeting and there too the shareholders got good results# A proposal calling for an advisory vote by stockholders to approve compensation for named executive officers, which was defeated by a vote of 56.2 percent against to 43.8 percent in favor# A proposal amending the bylaws to allow holders of 10 percent to 25 percent of outstanding common shares to call a special stockholder meeting, which was approved by a vote of 65.6 percent in favor to 34.4 percent against.
    When I first started going to these meetings we were lucky to get 3% on shareholder resolutions.
    People are getting very tired of outrageous compensation and pension packages.
    Verizon, and companies like them, can no longer take these meetings for granted. They are no longer rubber stamps for croney Boards of Directors.

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