Corporate
Governance Highlights
Vol. 15, No.
42 |
October 22,
2004 |
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Annual NACD Conference Examines
Recent Dramatic Changes in Boardroom
The National Association of Corporate
Directors’ annual corporate governance conference in Washington,
D.C., on October 17-19, featured
numerous sessions on how boards are performing their oversight functions in
the new corporate environment. The following are highlights from the
conference entitled, “Board Leadership: Evolution or Revolution.”
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CULTURE SETS THE TONE.
At a workshop on “Tone at the Top: The
Essential Ingredient in Building and Maintaining an Ethical Culture,”
retired Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court Norman Veasey summed it
up when he said, “It’s all about culture.”
Veasey, along with panelists Keith Darcy,
president of the Center for Integrity and chairman of the Better Business
Bureau Foundation, and Peggy Foran, vice president of corporate governance
and secretary for Pfizer, discussed how boards can lead the
way in setting a tone of corporate integrity and ethics. They stressed the
importance of a board and CEO who firmly believe in ethics, fair play and
integrity. Culture, said Darcy, “is how thing get done.”
Foran said that when evaluating the tone
at the top, it is important to look closely at the patterns and signals that
employees see coming from leadership. Boards should take the opportunity to
talk with second- and third-tier employees and should live the values of
integrity and transparency. She also stressed the importance of having a
culture of doing the right thing. “Don’t do what’s required,” she said, “do
the right thing.”
James Comey, Deputy U.S. Attorney General
and Chair of the President’s Corporate Fraud Task Force, said in a keynote
speech, that when determining whether to charge a company with fraud, the
task force considers if the company has a fundamentally sick culture or one
that can be saved, how the company reacted to the reporting of wrongdoing
and whether the company’s management is willing to work with the task force
to catch the wrongdoers. At Computer Associates, he explained, the task
force gave the company an 18-month deferral. If, in that time, CA turns
itself around, the task force will drop all of the charges, but if it does
not, the task force will prosecute. Comey explained that it is important to
take such steps because, “You can’t prosecute your way to a healthy
corporate culture.”
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Investor
Responsibility
Research Center
1350 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 700
Washington,
DC
20036
Tel: (202)
833-0700
Fax: (202)
833-3555
cgs@irrc.org |
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Editor:
Rosemary Lally |
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Contributors: Michael Anderson,
Jamie Carroll, Robin Cowles, Sarah Diehl, Erin Engle, Jolene
Pierro, Mark Saltzburg and Rosanna Landis Weaver |
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