The Denver Post

Women, minorities capture new board seats

- By Jeff Green

Women and people of color were picked for a majority of open S&P 500 board seats this year for the first time, due in part to pressure from investors to improve gender and racial disparitie­s.

“It’s a step in the right direction, for sure, and it’s the first time we’ve gone over 50 percent,” said Julie Daum, who heads the North American board practice for executive recruiter Spencer Stuart, which did the survey. “Boards are looking for people who are younger and with different skill sets and that does open the boardroom for more women and minorities.”

Of 397 independen­t director slots open in the 2017 proxy season, 36 percent went to women and 20 percent to minorities, according to Spencer Stuart, which has tallied boardroom demographi­cs for 30 years. While the tally includes most board seats, it leaves out executives who are also directors of their companies. Combined, women and minorities made up 50.1 percent of the new board members, compared with 42 percent last year, the data showed.

Investors including BlackRock Inc. and State Street Global Advisors this year pressured boards to add more women and minority candidates by voting against hundreds of directors at companies perceived as not taking sufficient steps to improve diversity. In addition, growing claims of sexual harassment against prominent business leaders have increased the focus on putting more women in positions of power to avoid conditions that lead to a hostile workplace.

Even with the gains, the low rate of turnover on corporate boards makes progress slow. Fewer than one seat on each S&P 500 board, on average, changed hands last year. With so few openings, women overall crept up to 22 percent from 21 percent of board representa­tion in 2016 and minority directors rose to 17 percent from 16 percent, Spencer Stuart said.

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