fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 04 October 2016 10:55

Governance changes expected to pass

Written by  Sudesh Kissun
John Wilson. John Wilson.

Fonterra chairman John Wilson is confident farmers will next week approve changes to the co-op’s governance structure.

A special meeting in Palmerston North on Wednesday will require at least 75% support; Fonterra’s attempt late last year to pass the reforms received only 64% farmer support.

The key change proposed to the governance structure is that farmers would directly nominate their own choice for selection to the board. A reduced 11-director board and first-past-the-post voting rather than the current single-transferable-vote model have been retained from the original proposal.

Fonterra directors, led by chairman John Wilson, discussed the latest governance proposal at 45 farmer meetings last week.

Wilson says 64% accepted the last proposal and the board listened “very carefully” to those who did not.

“We have tweaked the proposal and addressed the question of choice; now any farmer shareholder can stand in his or her own right,” he told Rural News.

Wilson says feedback from early meetings last week indicated strong support for the revised proposal.

“We’ve had this conversation for eight months with our shareholders; it’s great for the co-op and gives our farmer shareholders a greater understanding, but farmers believe it’s time to move forward. From the feedback it sounds as if we have the support required to pass the reforms.”

Former Fonterra directors Colin Armer and Greg Gent prompted Fonterra to restart the review after filing a remit to reduce the board to nine at the 2015 annual meeting; the remit, though supported by a majority of farmers, did not get the 75% needed to pass.

Armer told Rural News he still has questions about the revised proposal and will comment later.

Fonterra currently has 13 directors; under the proposed new structure the board would be reduced to 11 directors – seven farmer-elected and four appointed.

Farmers supported the proposed size and composition of the board. They also liked the proposal for an attributes and skills matrix.

Wilson says the review committee thought carefully about having an independent selection panel recommend a shortlist of candidates for farmers to vote on, but farmers did not support this.

“A vote off a shortlist does not answer farmers’ calls for choice; it just gives farmers more of the same – candidates by the same process, measured against the same criteria by the same people.

“The best way to give voting farmers a real choice and achieve the outcome we are looking for is to enable farmer candidates to stand outside the nomination process.”

The review also included a revamp of Fonterra Shareholders Council and a re-focus on its core constitutional role as a cornerstone shareholder.

The special meeting will start 10.30am at the Palmerston North Convention Centre on October 12.

More like this

"Our" business?

OPINION: One particular bone the Hound has been gnawing on for years now is how the chattering classes want it both ways when it comes to the success of NZ's dairy industry.

Farmers' call

OPINION: Fonterra's $4.22 billion consumer business sale to Lactalis is ruffling a few feathers outside the dairy industry.

Wasted energy

OPINION: Finance Minister Nicola Willis could have saved her staff and MBIE time and effort over ‘buttergate’ recently by not playing politics with butter prices in the first place.

Featured

Rural contractors call for overhaul of ag vehicle rules

Following a recent overweight incursion that saw a Mid-Canterbury contractor cop a $12,150 fine, the rural contracting industry is calling time on what they consider to be outdated and unworkable regulations regarding weight and dimensions that they say are impeding their businesses.

NZ seeks certainty on US tariff, says McClay

Trade Minister Todd McClay says his officials plan to meet their US counterparts every month from now on to better understand how the 15% tariff issue there will play out, and try and get some certainty there for our exporters about the future.

Trial shows benefits of spring nitrogen use

A landmark New Zealand trial has confirmed what many farmers have long suspected - that strategic spring nitrogen use not only boosts pasture growth but delivers measurable gains in lamb growth and ewe condition.

Eric Roy: Championing the pork industry

It was recently announced that former MP and Southland farmer Eric Roy has stepped down of New Zealand Pork after seven years. Leo Argent talks with Eric about his time at the organisation and what the future may hold.

National

Machinery & Products