Did Verizon Violate Securities Rules?
CWA Verizon Investor Information and
Resources
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CWA and IBEW recommend votes
FOR proposals 4, 5, 6, and 7.
We recommend votes AGAINST the
following directors, who are members of the compensation
committee, which sets executive pay levels: Carrión,
Lane, Neubauer, Otis, Shipley, Stafford.
The reasons for these recommendations are stated on the
CWA Verizon Investor Information and Resources website: http://investor.cwa-union.org/verizon/positions |
On April 12, 2007, Verizon sent an e-mail communication to
its employees. In response, the AFL-CIO filed a complaint on
April 19, 2007, with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
accusing Verizon of false and misleading statements. According
to the AFL-CIO's letter:
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Verizon "impugns the character and integrity of the AFL-CIO"
by making several claims with "questionable factual foundation."
In particular, it accused the AFL-CIO of questioning Verizon's
investment strategy in "the best wireline and wireless
networks." The AFL-CIO contended there were no statements that
would lead an objective observer to draw such a
conclusion.
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The Company dismisses the AFL-CIO's computation of CEO Ivan
Seidenberg's pay – $110 million over 5 years according to
calculations made from Verizon's own proxy statements – by
suggesting it was "nearly twice what Seidenberg actually
received." Yet, the e-mail fails to offer a basis for such a
claim (curious since the AFL-CIO used the Company's data).
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The Company e-mail compares Mr. Seidenberg's pay favorably to
a group of companies who have recently filed proxy statements.
Unfortunately, these are not the peer companies that are listed
in this year's proxy statement and used by the Human Resources
Committee to set pay. A comparison of Mr. Seidenberg's pay and
the CEO pay in the 46 companies of the two peer groups listed in
the proxy showed 2005 pay 75% above the median of "industry"
companies and 94% above the "market" peers. Yet, the proxy
claims to target in the 50th to 75th percentile.
The AFL-CIO's letter notes that this e-mail communication may
have been sent to as many as 242,000 employees, the vast
majority of whom are shareholders. Communications with
shareholders cannot contain false or misleading statements in
connection with a proxy solicitation.
The AFL-CIO letter to the SEC is a publicly available
document. Read a copy here.
Read a copy of the Verizon Letter to employees/shareholders
(Appendix A of the AFL-CIO letter) here. |
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