Daily Camera (Boulder)

Report: Women gained fewer 2022 seats

- By Alexandra Olson The Associated Press

U.S. companies have added women to their boards of director at a slower pace this year compared with last year as the pandemic and a difficult economy shift priorities, according to a new report released Thursday.

Women have continued to make gains, now holding a record 28% of board seats on the Russell 3000 index of publicly traded companies, according to an annual report by the advocacy organizati­on 50/50 Women on Boards, which used data from executive data firm Equilar.

That’s a 2.4% jump from the 25.6% of seats held by women in 2021, but the pace was slower than the 3% rise seen the previous year. And during the first half of 2022, the share of new seats going to women declined by 8 percentage points compared to the preceding six months.

Companies have responded in recent years to pressure from politician­s and investors to appoint more women and minorities to their boards, which continue to be overwhelmi­ngly male and white.

Betsy Berkhemer-credaire, chief executive officer of 50/50 Women on Boards, cited California’s landmark law requiring a certain number of women on boards. But that law was ruled unconstitu­tional by a Los Angeles judge in May because it violated the right to equal treatment. Supporters have nonetheles­s credited it with bolstering the ranks of on company boards in California and beyond.

California companies have the biggest representa­tion of women directors in the country, at 34.1% — a 4.8% increase over 2021, according to the report. Companies in Washington state, which now has a similar law, have the second highest at 30%.

When comparing industries, energy and financial services companies had the fewest share of women on boards at 23% and 26%, respective­ly. Utilities had the most at 32%.

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