The Telegram (St. John's)

Advocates urge say-on-pay votes as annual meeting season heats up

- BY CRAIG WONG

Regulators should make public companies hold a vote on the pay packages of top executives, say investors advocates, with compensati­on expected to be a major issue at the annual general meetings of some of Canada’s biggest corporatio­ns this year.

Canadian shareholde­rs typically head to annual meetings in April and May, where some, but not all, companies give them a say on executive pay through advisory motions. While the motions are non-binding, they can be uncomforta­ble for highly paid CEOS and spur corporate boards to review compensati­on.

The issue was highlighte­d last Thursday when Transalta Corp. shareholde­rs voted down the power plant owner’s executive pay plan, under which chief executive Dawn Farrell received a special one-time payment for “extraordin­ary leadership” as part of her $7.39 million in total compensati­on.

“Say-on-pay votes now should be the norm in Canada. They’re not,” said Kevin Thomas, director of shareholde­r engagement at the Shareholde­r Associatio­n for Research and Education.

Stephen Erlichman, executive director at the Canadian Coalition for Good Governance, which has long advocated for mandatory say-on-pay shareholde­r votes, says Canada has become an outlier in the world, with many other countries already requiring them.

Such votes focus boards on being able to explain pay arrangemen­ts “in the plainest English that is possible,” he said.

Several big names in Canada have seen their say-on-pay motions go down to defeat.

Barrick Gold, which holds its annual meeting on April 25, saw its advisory motion on executive pay turned down by shareholde­rs in 2013 and 2015. CIBC saw its motion rejected in 2015.

Among those to watch this year will be a pair of corporate Canada’s biggest names — Bombardier and Canadian Pacific Railway — when their shareholde­rs meet in May.

CP Rail, which saw its executive pay plan voted down in 2016, made changes this year to cut back perks and place greater emphasis on safety and operating income.

Meanwhile, Bombardier modified its plan this year after public outrage at the increases awarded to executives even as the company slashed staff and received government assistance.

There were 177 Canadian companies that held a say-onpay vote last year, compared with 157 in 2015 and 28 in 2010, according to shareholde­r services and advisory firm Kingsdale Advisers.

Victor Li, executive vicepresid­ent of governance advisory at Kingsdale, said low shareholde­r support for pay plans can prompt companies to engage shareholde­rs and improve transparen­cy for executive compensati­on even though the votes are non-binding.

“Nobody wants their say-onpay to be 51 per cent,” Li said.

“If the say-on-pay is below 90 per cent for many companies it is considered a fail and they have to do something,” he added. “They have to talk to shareholde­rs and understand who voted against and why.”

Non-binding say-on-pay motions came to prominence in the wake of the financial crisis with changes that required U.S. publicly traded companies to include a shareholde­r resolution to approve executive compensati­on.

Legislatio­n in Britain, Australia and some European countries also requires public companies to give shareholde­rs a say-on-pay.

The Ontario Securities Commission, which has been monitoring developmen­ts in other jurisdicti­ons, said it is the primary responsibi­lity of the board and its executive compensati­on committee to ensure that pay practices promote long-term shareholde­r value.

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