Pension Power in the Boardroom

On April 7, 2008, this blogger wrote about unhappy pension campers, seeking to rid troubled companies of certain board members. (See "Three Public Pension Plans Say No Thanks.") At the time, the general consensus seemed to be "good luck but don't count on being able to oust anyone" in part because experts suggest that boards may be limited in their oversight capabilities. In what appears to be a win for protesting pensions, director Mary Pugh has resigned from Washington Mutual. According to The Street.com, CtW Investment Group had asked shareholders to draw support for Pugh (chairwoman of the bank's finance committee) and a second director, James Stever (chairman of the human resources committee). In a slide presentation and on its website, CtW blames this duo for failing "to recognize and act in a timely manner on the risks to shareholder value presented by the housing bubble" and for not reducing executive bonuses as a result of "this risk management failure." Note that she was re-elected with "50.4 percent of the shareholder vote" according to the Associated Press ("WaMu directors narrowly re-elected in shareholder vote, April 16, 2007), notwithstanding a Q1-2008 reported loss of $1.1 billion.
Click to read "WaMu Director Resigns Under Pressure" by Laurie Kulikowski (TheStreet.com, April 15, 2008).

