The Standard (St. Catharines)

California moves to mandate female board directors

Bill passes requiring publicly traded firms to have at least one woman on board

- VANESSA FUHRMANS AND ALEJANDRO LAZO

California legislator­s on Wednesday passed a bill that requires major companies based in the state to put female directors on their boards.

If the bill is signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown, a Democrat, publicly traded companies based in the state will need to have at least one woman on their boards by the end of next year and, on boards of five or more directors, two or three women by the end of 2021, depending on the board’s size. Those that don’t would face financial penalties.

The bill passed the state Assembly in a 41-21 vote. It is now headed to the state Senate, which approved an earlier version of the bill and is expected to approve the measure again there before it heads to Mr. Brown, who hasn’t indicated his position.

“One-fourth of California’s publicly traded companies still do not have a single woman on their board, despite numerous independen­t studies that show companies with women on their board are more profitable and productive,” said state Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson, a Democrat representi­ng Santa Barbara. “With women comprising over half the population and making over 70% of purchasing decisions, their insight is critical to discussion­s and decisions that affect corporate culture, actions and profitabil­ity.”

The measure, which was opposed by several business groups, could accelerate the diversific­ation of boardrooms around the country. The U.S. has no federal requiremen­t for female representa­tion on company boards and no other state has successful­ly pushed such a mandate. California’s move follows similar legally binding quotas that have been set in several European countries.

Opponents of the mandate, led by California’s Chamber of Commerce, argued that while they agree with the legislatio­n’s intent, a quota based solely on gender takes into account only one element of diversity and would violate the U.S. and California constituti­ons because it could conceivabl­y put companies in the position of turning down a male board candidate or displacing a male board member based on his sex.

The legislatio­n itself provides for creating an extra board seat to accommodat­e a new female member instead of removing a man already on the board.

Countries including France, Germany and Italy have enacted more stringent mandates for women on corporate boards in recent years. In the U.S., even some staunch advocates of boosting the numbers of female directors have been reluctant to endorse board quotas.

Among firms in the Russell 3000 Index, which includes most public companies on major U.S. stock exchanges, 485, or 17%, had all-male boards in the second quarter, according to Equilar, a research firm that gathers data on executives and boards.

California is home to 86 companies in the Russell 3000 that don’t have any women on their boards, including shoe-maker Skechers USA Inc., entertainm­ent technology firm TiVo Corp. and Stamps.com Inc., which sells printable postage.

TiVo said it takes diversity seriously but because it is undergoing a publicly announced review of strategic alternativ­es, the company isn’t actively looking for new board members. Skechers declined to comment, and Stamps.com didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Many large corporatio­ns based in California, including Chevron Corp., Netflix Inc. and Alphabet

Inc.—the parent company of Google and YouTube—already have multiple female directors. Though the proposed law immediatel­y affects a limited number of companies, its passage would put further pressure on Silicon Valley’s startups to bring gender diversific­ation to their boards before going public.

Last week, San Franciscob­ased Airbnb Inc. appointed its first female director—Ann Mather, a former Pixar Animation Studios finance chief who serves on several other boards—making good on a pledge made earlier this year to add at least one woman to its board in the near term. The company has been making preparatio­ns to go public as early as mid-2019.

If signed into law, the California mandate will likely help fuel similar movements elsewhere. Massachuse­tts and Illinois have passed nonbinding resolution­s that push companies to improve the gender balance of their boards. A number of big investors, including State Street Global Advisors and BlackRock Inc., have pressed firms with all-male boards to change, in some cases withholdin­g proxy votes.

More women are joining boards, spurred in part by pressure from investors. Women accounted for 35% of all new director appointmen­ts at Russell 3000 companies during the second quarter, up from 32% in the first quarter and 29% in 2017, according to Equilar. The share of companies in the index with all-male boards fell below 20% for the first time this year, down from nearly a quarter in 2016.

Despite the increase, the overall share of women on boards has ticked up only slightly, to 17.7% in the second quarter from 16.2% in the year-earlier period. Board recruiters say the lack of turnover is slowing change. The average director at an S&P 500 company stays on more than eight years and the majority of boards have no term limits, according to Spencer Stuart, an executive recruitmen­t firm.

By contrast, the number of women on big-company boards in Italy, Germany and several other European nations has tripled and, in some cases, quadrupled in recent years as mandates have forced corporatio­ns to boost the share of female directors to as much as 40%.

In the U.S., some diversity advocates have cautioned that legal mandates could undercut more organic, economics-driven efforts to spur change. Rakhi Kumar, a senior managing director at State Street who oversees its board-diversity efforts, has said that on average, large European companies continue to have fewer women in senior executive roles than their U.S. counterpar­ts. All public companies are required to have a board of directors that represents shareholde­rs and oversees company management.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? California state Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson, a Democrat, says women’s insights are “critical to discussion­s and decisions that affect corporate culture, actions and profitabil­ity.”
RICH PEDRONCELL­I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS California state Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson, a Democrat, says women’s insights are “critical to discussion­s and decisions that affect corporate culture, actions and profitabil­ity.”

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