UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. )
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Soliciting Material under §240.14a‑12 |
Comfort Systems USA, Inc. |
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COMFORT SYSTEMS USA, INC.
675 Bering Drive, Suite 400
Houston, Texas 77057
April 13, 2018
To Our Stockholders:
You are cordially invited to attend the Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of Comfort Systems USA, Inc., which will be held on Tuesday, May 22, 2018 at The Houstonian, 111 North Post Oak Lane, Houston, Texas 77024 at 11:00 a.m. local time.
Information about the meeting is presented on the following pages. At this meeting you are being asked to elect the nine directors nominated by the board to serve until the next annual meeting; to ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP, independent auditors, as the Company’s auditors for 2018; and to approve, by stockholder non-binding advisory vote, the compensation paid by the Company to its named executive officers, commonly referred to as a “Say on Pay” proposal.
Please read the proxy statement, which presents important information about the Company and each of the items being presented for stockholder vote. Whether or not you intend to be present in person, when you have finished reading the statement, please submit your vote promptly by telephone or internet, which saves the Company money, or by marking, signing, and returning your proxy card in the enclosed envelope so that your shares will be represented.
We hope that many of you will be able to attend the meeting in person. We look forward to seeing you there.
Sincerely yours,
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FRANKLIN MYERS |
BRIAN E. LANE |
Chairman of the Board |
President and Chief Executive Officer |
COMFORT SYSTEMS USA, INC.
675 Bering Drive, Suite 400
Houston, Texas 77057
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
TO BE HELD MAY 22, 2018
Notice is hereby given that the 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”) of Comfort Systems USA, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the “Company”), will be held at The Houstonian, 111 North Post Oak Lane, Houston, Texas 77024, at 11:00 a.m. local time on Tuesday, May 22, 2018 for the following purposes:
1.To elect nine (9) directors nominated by the board of directors to serve until the 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders;
2.To ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP, independent auditors, as the Company’s auditors for 2018;
3.To approve, by a stockholder non‑binding advisory vote, the compensation paid by the Company to its named executive officers, commonly referred to as a “Say on Pay” proposal; and
4.To transact any other business that may properly come before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.
We are not aware of any other business to come before the Annual Meeting. Any action may be taken on any one of the foregoing proposals at the Annual Meeting on the date specified above, or on any date or dates to which the Annual Meeting may be adjourned or postponed. Stockholders of record at the close of business on March 23, 2018 are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting. In the event there are not enough votes for a quorum or to approve or ratify any of the foregoing proposals at the time of the Annual Meeting, the Annual Meeting may be adjourned or postponed in order to permit our further solicitation of proxies.
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By Order of the Board of Directors, |
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TRENT T. MCKENNA |
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Corporate Secretary |
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Houston, Texas |
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April 13, 2018 |
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TO ASSURE YOUR REPRESENTATION AT THE MEETING, PLEASE EITHER FOLLOW THE DIRECTIONS FOR PHONE OR INTERNET VOTING ON YOUR PROXY CARD OR SIGN, DATE AND RETURN YOUR PROXY AS PROMPTLY AS POSSIBLE. AN ENVELOPE, WHICH REQUIRES NO POSTAGE IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES, IS ENCLOSED FOR THIS PURPOSE.
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COMFORT SYSTEMS USA, INC.
Annual Meeting of Stockholders
May 22, 2018
PROXY STATEMENT
Why am I receiving this proxy statement?
The enclosed proxy is solicited by the Board of Directors (the “Board”) of Comfort Systems USA, Inc. (the “Company”) for the 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”), to be voted at the Annual Meeting. This proxy statement and the enclosed proxy are first being provided to stockholders on or about April 13, 2018.
When and where is the 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders?
The Annual Meeting will be held at The Houstonian, 111 North Post Oak Lane, Houston, Texas 77024, at 11:00 a.m. local time on Tuesday, May 22, 2018, and at any reconvened meetings after any adjournments or postponements thereof.
Who can vote?
The holders of record of shares of the Company’s common stock, $.01 par value per share (the “Common Stock”), at the close of business on March 23, 2018 (the “Record Date”) are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting.
How do I vote?
If you are a record stockholder, you may vote in person at the Annual Meeting or by proxy. You may submit your vote by proxy by providing your voting instructions by internet or telephone or by signing, dating and returning a proxy card. The instructions for each method of voting are on the proxy card. If you wish to vote in person at the meeting, be sure to bring a form of personal picture identification with you.
If your stock is held by a broker, bank or other nominee (in “street name”) and you wish to vote in person at the meeting, in addition to picture identification, you should bring both (i) an account statement or a letter from the record holder indicating that you owned the shares as of the record date, and (ii) a proxy issued in your name, which you must obtain from the record holder.
What are the voting rights of holders of Common Stock?
Each share of Common Stock is entitled to one vote on each matter before the Annual Meeting.
What are my voting choices and what is the required vote?
By giving us your proxy, you authorize the persons named on the proxy card to vote your shares in the manner you indicate at the Annual Meeting or at any adjournments or postponements thereof.
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Proposal 1: Election of Directors
In the vote on the election of director nominees nominated by the board of directors to serve until the 2019 Annual Meeting, stockholders may:
(a)vote for all nominees;
(b)withhold authority from the proxy holders to vote for all nominees; or
(c)vote for all nominees except those specified.
The Board recommends a vote FOR all nominees. If a quorum is present, the nine nominees for election as directors receiving the greatest number of votes properly cast at the Annual Meeting or at any adjournments or postponements thereof will be elected. The Company has a policy to address the resignation of an incumbent director who receives more votes “withheld” than votes “for” his or her election. See “Proposal Number 1: Election of Directors – Director Resignation Policy” below. Votes withheld from any director are counted for purposes of determining the presence or absence of a quorum for the transaction of business. Broker non‑votes will be counted toward a quorum, but will not be taken into account in determining the outcome of the election.
Proposal 2: Ratification of Auditors
In the vote on whether to ratify the selection of Ernst & Young LLP as independent auditors for the Company for the year ending December 31, 2018, stockholders may:
(a)vote for ratification;
(b)vote against ratification; or
(c)abstain from voting on ratification.
The Board recommends a vote FOR ratification. If the stockholders do not ratify the selection, the Audit Committee will reconsider whether to retain Ernst & Young LLP, but still may retain them. Even if the selection is ratified, the Audit Committee, in its discretion, may change the appointment at any time during the year if it determines that such a change would be in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders. The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by stockholders represented at the Annual Meeting and entitled to vote on this proposal will be required to ratify the appointment of the independent auditors. Abstentions will be counted toward a quorum, but will not be taken into account in determining the outcome of this vote.
Proposal 3: Non‑Binding Advisory “Say on Pay” Vote
In the non‑binding advisory vote on whether to approve the compensation paid by the Company to its named executive officers, stockholders may:
(a)vote for approval;
(b)vote against approval; or
(c)abstain from voting on the approval.
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The Board recommends a vote FOR approval. The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast by stockholders represented at the Annual Meeting and entitled to vote on this proposal will constitute the stockholders’ non‑binding approval with respect to the Company’s executive compensation programs. The Board and the Compensation Committee will review the voting results and take them into consideration when making future decisions regarding executive compensation. Abstentions and broker non‑votes will be counted toward a quorum, but will not be taken into account in determining the outcome of this vote.
What constitutes a quorum?
A quorum is the minimum number of shares required to hold a meeting. Consistent with Delaware law and the Company’s Bylaws, the holders of a majority in number of the total outstanding shares of stock of the Company entitled to vote at the meeting, present in person or represented by proxy, constitutes a quorum as to that matter. As of the Record Date, 37,134,435 shares of Common Stock, representing the same number of votes, were outstanding. Therefore, the presence of holders of Common Stock representing at least 18,567,218 votes will be required to establish a quorum.
What is the difference between holding shares as a stockholder of record and as a beneficial owner of shares held in street name?
If your shares are registered directly in your name with our transfer agent, American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, you are considered the stockholder of record with respect to those shares, and the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting was sent directly to you by the Company.
If your shares are held in an account at a brokerage firm, bank, broker‑ dealer, or other similar organization, then you are the beneficial owner of shares held in “street name,” and the Notice of Annual Meeting was forwarded to you by your bank, broker, or other intermediary. The organization holding your account is considered the stockholder of record for purposes of voting at the Annual Meeting. As a beneficial owner, you have the right to direct that organization on how to vote the shares held in your account.
What happens if I do not give specific voting instructions?
If you are a stockholder of record and you sign and return a proxy card without giving specific voting instructions, then the proxy holders will vote your shares FOR the nominees listed in Proposal 1, FOR the ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the Company’s auditors for 2018 in Proposal 2, and FOR approval with respect to the Company’s executive compensation programs in Proposal 3.
If you are a beneficial owner of shares held in street name and do not provide the organization that holds your shares with specific voting instructions, under New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) rules, the organization that holds your shares may generally vote on routine matters but cannot vote on non‑routine matters (including uncontested director elections and “Say on Pay”). If the organization that holds your shares does not receive instructions from you on how to vote your shares on a non‑routine matter (including uncontested director elections and “Say on Pay”), the organization that holds your shares will inform our election inspectors that it does not have the authority to vote on this matter with respect to your shares and your shares will not be voted. This is generally referred to as a “broker non‑vote.” When our election inspectors tabulate the votes for any particular matter, broker non‑votes will be counted for purposes of determining whether a quorum is present, but will not otherwise be counted. We encourage you to provide voting instructions to the organization that holds your shares.
Can I change my vote after I return my proxy card?
Yes. A proxy may be revoked by a record stockholder at any time before it is voted by (i) returning to the Company another properly signed proxy bearing a later date, (ii) delivering a written revocation to the Secretary of the Company no later than the close of business on May 21, 2018, or (iii) attending the Annual Meeting or any adjourned session thereof and voting the shares covered by the proxy in person. If your stock is held in street name, you must follow the instructions of the broker, bank, or nominee as to how to change your vote.
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Who pays to prepare, mail, and solicit the proxies?
The Company will pay the expense of soliciting proxies. In addition to the solicitation of proxies by use of the mails, the Company may use the services of its officers, directors, and regular employees as well as brokerage houses and other stockholders to solicit proxies personally and by mail, telephone, or email communication. The Company will reimburse brokers and other persons for their reasonable charges and expenses in forwarding soliciting materials to their principals. Officers and employees of the Company will receive no compensation in addition to their regular salaries to solicit proxies.
Who tabulates the votes?
Votes cast by proxy or in person at the Annual Meeting will be counted by two people appointed by the Company to act as election inspectors for the Annual Meeting.
Could other matters be decided at the Annual Meeting?
We do not know of any matters that may be properly presented for action at the Annual Meeting other than Proposals 1, 2, and 3. If other business does properly come before the Annual Meeting, the persons named in the proxy intend to act on those matters as they deem advisable. With respect to shares held in street name, the nominee may vote on those matters, subject to the NYSE’s rules on the exercise of discretionary authority.
What happens if the Annual Meeting is postponed or adjourned?
Your proxy may be voted at the postponed or adjourned Annual Meeting. You will still be able to change your proxy until it is voted.
How can I find the Company’s governance documents, such as its corporate Governance Standards, director Independence Guidelines, Corporate Compliance Policy, and Board committee charters?
All these documents can be found on our website at http://investors.comfortsystemsusa.com under the “Governance” tab. Please note that documents and information on our website are not incorporated into this proxy statement by reference. These documents are also available in print by writing to the Office of the General Counsel, 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77057.
How can I receive a copy of the Annual Report?
The Annual Report to Stockholders, which includes the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10‑K for the year ended December 31, 2017, accompanies this proxy statement and may also be accessed through our website—http://investors.comfortsystemsusa.com.
Where can I find the voting results of the Annual Meeting?
We plan to announce the preliminary voting results at the Annual Meeting and to publish the final results in a current report on Form 8‑K, which we will file with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) and make available on our website—http://investors.comfortsystemsusa.com.
When and where will a list of stockholders be available?
A list of stockholders of record will be available for examination at the Company’s headquarters during ordinary business hours for the ten days prior to the Annual Meeting.
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ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
Nine directors will be elected at the Annual Meeting to serve for a one-year term expiring at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders expected to be held in May 2019. Mr. Giardinelli will not stand for reelection at the Annual Meeting and his term will expire at the conclusion of the Annual Meeting.
Information with Respect to Nominees for Director
The nominees for election at the Annual Meeting are Darcy G. Anderson, Herman E. Bulls, Alan P. Krusi, Brian E. Lane, Franklin Myers, William J. Sandbrook, James H. Schultz, Constance E. Skidmore, and Vance W. Tang (collectively the “Nominees”).
If elected, each Nominee has agreed to serve for a term of one year expiring at the 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. It is expected that all of the Nominees will be able to serve, but if any Nominee is unable to serve, the proxies reserve discretion to vote, or refrain from voting, for a substitute nominee.
Nominees
Set forth below are the names, ages as of March 31, 2018 and principal occupations for at least the past five years of each of the Nominees and the names of any other public companies on which each is currently serving, or has served in the past five years, as a director:
DARCY G. ANDERSON, 61
Director
Darcy G. Anderson has served as a Director of the Company since March 2008. Since April 2009, Mr. Anderson has served as Vice Chairman of Hillwood, a real estate, oil and gas, and investments company. From November 2000 until April 2009, Mr. Anderson served as Chief People Officer and Vice President for Perot Systems Corporation, an information technology services and consulting firm. Prior to joining Perot Systems, Mr. Anderson held various positions at Hillwood Development Corporation beginning in 1987, including Senior Vice President for Corporate Affairs and Chief Operating Officer. Mr. Anderson also served as president of Hillwood Urban, overseeing all of the operations and development for the company’s Victory project and the new American Airlines Center in downtown Dallas. He also served in various leadership roles for the Perot ‘92 Presidential Campaign. Mr. Anderson joined Electronic Data Systems (EDS) in 1983 working in recruiting management. Prior to his employment with EDS, Mr. Anderson completed five years of active duty in the United States Army Corp of Engineers. He is a Member of the Executive Committee of the Board of Directors of the Dallas World Affairs Council. Mr. Anderson is a graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point.
Mr. Anderson has significant experience and knowledge of real estate development, human resources and leadership development practices, energy efficiency, corporate facilities management, and information technology services.
HERMAN E. BULLS, 62
Director
Herman E. Bulls has served as a Director of the Company since February 2001. Mr. Bulls serves as Vice Chairman, Americas and International Director of JLL, an international full-service real estate firm. He is the founder of JLL’s Public Institutions and served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer from January 2002 until January 2014. From September 2000 until August 2001, Mr. Bulls served as Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of one of the nation’s largest Fannie Mae multifamily lenders. From March 1998 to September 2000, Mr. Bulls was a Managing Director for JLL. From 1989 until 1998, he held several positions with the predecessor organization,
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LaSalle Partners. Prior to his employment with JLL, he served over eleven years of active duty service with the United States Army. Mr. Bulls was the Co-Founder, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Bulls Capital Partners, a commercial mortgage firm. He sold the firm to a Wall Street entity in 2010. Mr. Bulls retired as a Colonel from the Army Reserve. Mr. Bulls is a member of the Board of Directors of the West Point Association of Graduates, serves as a member of the Real Estate Advisory Committee for New York State Teachers’ Retirement System, and serves on the Board of Directors of Rasmussen College and USAA. Mr. Bulls also currently serves on the Board of Governors for the American Red Cross and the Military Bowl. Mr. Bulls previously served on the Board of Directors of Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC) from 2015 to 2017, Exelis Inc., from 2011 until its 2015 merger with Harris Corporation, and Tyco International from 2014 until its 2016 merger with Johnson Controls International PLC. Mr. Bulls is a graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point and of the Harvard Business School.
Mr. Bulls has decades of real estate and finance experience with a particular knowledge of team-building, marketing, and strategic development.
ALAN P. KRUSI, 63
Director
Alan P. Krusi has served as a Director of the Company since March 2008. Mr. Krusi was President, Strategic Development of AECOM Technology Corporation, a global provider of professional technical and management support services, from October 2011 until his retirement in March 2015. He served as Executive Vice President for Corporate Development of AECOM Technology Corporation from August 2008 until October 2011. From 2003 until 2008 Mr. Krusi served as President of Earth Tech, Inc., an engineering, consulting, and construction services firm owned by Tyco International. From 2002 to 2003, Mr. Krusi served as CEO of RealEnergy, Inc., a company providing onsite cogeneration to commercial and industrial customers. From 1999 to 2002, Mr. Krusi served as President of the Construction Services division of URS Corporation, where he oversaw an international construction services business specializing in construction management and program management. Prior to his employment with URS, and over a period of twenty‑two years, Mr. Krusi held a number of technical and management positions within the engineering and construction industries. Mr. Krusi currently also serves on the Board of Directors of Alacer Gold Corp, Layne Christensen Company and Lithko Contracting, LLC. Mr. Krusi served on the Board of Directors of Blue Earth, Inc. from September 2014 to June 2016. Mr. Krusi is a graduate of the University of California at Santa Barbara and is a Registered Geologist, Certified Engineering Geologist, and Licensed General Contractor in the State of California.
Mr. Krusi has nearly forty years of experience in the construction and engineering industries, including experience in executive management positions for public companies.
BRIAN E. LANE, 61
Director, President, and Chief Executive Officer
Brian E. Lane has served as Chief Executive Officer and President of Comfort Systems since December 2011 and as a director since November 2010. Mr. Lane served as Comfort Systems’ President and Chief Operating Officer from March 2010 until December 2011. Mr. Lane joined Comfort Systems in October 2003 and served as Vice President and then Senior Vice President for Region One of the Company until he was named Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer in January 2009. Prior to joining Comfort Systems, Mr. Lane spent fifteen years at Halliburton, the global service and equipment company devoted to energy, industrial, and government customers. During his tenure at Halliburton, he held various positions in business development, strategy, and project initiatives. He departed as the Regional Director of Europe and Africa. Mr. Lane’s additional experience included serving as a Regional Director of Capstone Turbine Corporation, a distributed power manufacturer. He also was a Vice President of Kvaerner, an international engineering and construction company where he focused on the chemical industry. Mr. Lane is a member of the Board of Directors of Griffen Dewatering Corporation and Main Street Capital Corporation. Mr. Lane earned a Bachelor of Science in Chemistry from the University of Notre Dame and his MBA from Boston College.
Mr. Lane has more than thirty years of experience in the construction and engineering industries. As the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and President, Mr. Lane provides the Board a valuable perspective on the Company’s day‑to‑day operations and on current trends and developments in the industry.
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FRANKLIN MYERS, 65
Director and Chairman of the Board
Franklin Myers has served as a Director of the Company since May 2005 and as Chairman of the Board since May 2014. Mr. Myers has been a Senior Advisor and advisory director of Quantum Energy Partners, a private equity firm, since February 2013 and was an operating advisor to Paine and Partners, a private equity firm, from October 2009 until December 2012. From April 2008 until March 2009, Mr. Myers served as Senior Advisor to Cameron International Corporation, a global provider to the oil & gas and process industries. Mr. Myers served as the Senior Vice President of Finance and Chief Financial Officer of Cameron International Corporation from 2003 to 2008. From 1995 to 2003, Mr. Myers served at various times as Senior Vice President and President of a division within Cooper Cameron Corporation as well as General Counsel and Secretary. Prior to joining Cooper Cameron Corporation in 1995, Mr. Myers served as Senior Vice President and General Counsel of Baker Hughes Incorporated, and an attorney and partner at the law firm of Fulbright & Jaworski, now known as Norton Rose Fulbright. Mr. Myers currently serves on the Board of Directors of Ion Geophysical Corporation, HollyFrontier Corporation, and NCS Multistage, and Mr. Myers also serves on the boards of the following privately-owned companies: WireCo WorldGroup and EPIC Industrial. Mr. Myers served on the Board of Directors of Seahawk Drilling Company from 2009 until 2011, Frontier Oil Corporation—a predecessor of HollyFrontier Corporation—from 2009 until its 2011 merger with Holly Corporation, and Forum Energy Technologies from 2011 until March 2018. Mr. Myers holds a Bachelor of Science, Industrial Engineering, from Mississippi State University and a J.D. degree, with honors, from the University of Mississippi.
Mr. Myers has several decades of public company experience, with a particular knowledge of operations, financial management, and legal affairs. Additionally, Mr. Myers has significant experience serving on other public company boards and has served as an adjunct professor at the University of Texas School of Law where he taught a course on mergers and acquisitions.
WILLIAM J. SANDBROOK, 60
Director
Mr. Sandbrook has served as a Director of the Company since April 2018. Since August 2011, Mr. Sandbrook has served as President and Chief Executive Officer of U.S. Concrete, Inc. From June 2008 until August 2011, Mr. Sandbrook was Chief Executive Officer of Oldcastle Inc.’s Products and Distribution Group. From 2006 to June 2008, Mr. Sandbrook was Chief Executive Officer of Oldcastle Architectural Product’s Group responsible for Oldcastle’s U.S. and Canadian Operations, as well as CRH plc’s business in South America. From 1996 to 2006, Mr. Sandbrook served in various roles at Oldcastle Materials, including most recently as President of Oldcastle Materials West Division. From 1995 to 1996, Mr. Sandbrook served as President and Chief Executive Officer of Tilcon New York, and as Vice President from 1992 to 1995. Prior to 1992, Mr. Sandbrook spent thirteen years in the U.S. Army. Mr. Sandbrook currently serves on the Board of Directors of U.S. Concrete, Inc. In recognition of his efforts at Ground Zero after the September 11th bombing of the World Trade Center, Mr. Sandbrook was named the Rockland County, New York 2002 Business Leader of the Year, the Dominican College 2002 Man of the Year and the American Red Cross 2003 Man of the Year for Southern New York. Mr. Sandbrook holds an MBA from Wharton, a Master of Science in Systems Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania, a Master in Public Policy from the Naval War College, a Master of Arts in International Relations from Salve Regina University, and a Bachelor of Science from the United States Military Academy.
Mr. Sandbrook has over twenty-five years of operations experience in the building materials and construction industries, including significant experience as a Chief Executive Officer and experience as a public company board member.
JAMES H. SCHULTZ, 69
Director
James H. Schultz has served as a Director of the Company since November 2002. He retired from the American Standard Companies in 2001, where he had worked for thirty‑one years. Mr. Schultz served as President of the Trane Commercial Air Conditioning Group, a division of the American Standard Companies, from 1998 to 2001. Prior to that
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time he served in various other capacities, including Executive Vice President. Mr. Schultz served on the Board of Directors of Goodman Global, Inc. from 2006 to 2008. Mr. Schultz has been Chair and a Board member of the Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute, and serves on The Iowa State University Foundation Board of Governors. Mr. Schultz is a graduate of Iowa State University.
Mr. Schultz has extensive experience related to the manufacture, sale, service, and installation of HVAC equipment and performance contracting and building energy management. As President of the Trane Commercial Air Conditioning Group, Mr. Schultz was responsible for the division’s profit and loss statements. As a result of his experience, Mr. Schultz is very knowledgeable about the Company’s industry.
CONSTANCE E. SKIDMORE, 66
Director
Constance E. Skidmore has served as a Director of the Company since December 2012. Ms. Skidmore retired from PricewaterhouseCoopers, a public accounting firm, in 2009, after serving for more than two decades as a partner, including a term on its governing board. Ms. Skidmore serves on the Board of Directors and chairs the Audit Committee of Sensata Technologies (NYSE: ST) and on the boards of other privately-held and non-profit companies: The V Foundation for Cancer Research and Viz Kinect. Ms. Skidmore previously served on the Board of Directors and Audit Committee of Shortel, Inc. (NASDAQ: SHOR) from 2014 until 2017 when it was acquired by Mitel Networks Corporation. Ms. Skidmore is a graduate of Florida State University and earned a Master of Science in Taxation from Golden Gate University.
Ms. Skidmore has more than thirty years of experience in accounting and finance, including in the construction industry, and significant experience and knowledge in talent management and strategic planning.
VANCE W. TANG, 51
Director
Vance W. Tang has served as a Director of the Company since December 2012. Mr. Tang has been President and Owner of VanTegrity Consulting, a strategy and leadership consulting services and executive coaching provider, since August 2012. Mr. Tang previously owned a wealth management business, VanTegrity Financial, LLC, from February 2012 to December 2016. He served as President and Chief Executive Officer of the U.S. subsidiary of KONE OY, a public company and a leading global provider of elevators and escalators, and Executive Vice President of KONE Corporation from February 2007 until August 2012. In this role he led the organization through a major transformation around customer focus and profitable growth. Prior to joining KONE, he was Vice President and General Manager at Honeywell Building Control Systems. Previously, he spent over fourteen years at Trane, a supplier of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems to both the residential and commercial markets. He serves on the Board of Directors of American Woodmark Corporation (NASDAQ:AMWD) and previously on the Board of Governors of the Center for Creative Leadership. Mr. Tang has a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering and an MBA degree from the University of Wisconsin.
Mr. Tang has deep operations experience in the construction and service industries, including experience as a Chief Executive Officer, and he also has experience serving on other public company boards. Additionally, Mr. Tang is currently serving as our Board Liaison for Cybersecurity, leveraging his engineering background and business leadership experience.
The Board of Directors recommends that stockholders vote FOR
the Directors listed above in Proposal Number 1.
Meetings of the Board and Committees
During the year ended December 31, 2017, the Board held five regular meetings and five special meetings. At each regularly scheduled meeting of the Board, the non-employee directors, each of whom is independent, met separately from management in executive session under the direction of Mr. Myers, the Chairman of the Board.
8
Members of the Board are encouraged to attend the Annual Meeting and all members of the Board attended the Annual Meeting in 2017. Additional information regarding the determination of director independence is set forth below under “Corporate Governance—Independence.” Each director has attended at least 75% of the aggregate number of meetings of the Board and the Board committees of which he or she was or is a member that took place during his or her term of office.
The Board has several committees. Each of these committees and their members are described below. The Board has adopted a written charter for each of these committees which, together with the Board’s Governance Standards and Independence Guidelines, are available on the Company’s website at http://investors.comfortsystemsusa.com under the “Governance” tab, or by writing to Comfort Systems USA, Inc., Office of the General Counsel, 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77057.
Audit Committee
The Audit Committee, which held eight regular meetings during 2017, reviews with management and the independent auditors the Company’s quarterly and annual financial statements, the scope of the audit, any comments made by the independent auditors and such other matters as the committee deems appropriate. In addition, the Audit Committee reviews the performance and retention of the Company’s independent auditors and reviews with management those matters relating to compliance with corporate policies, as the committee deems appropriate. The Audit Committee reviews and reassesses the adequacy of its charter every year and has done so for 2018.
The current members of the Audit Committee are Ms. Skidmore and Messrs. Krusi, Schultz and Tang, none of whom is or has been an executive officer or employee of the Company at any time. The Board has determined that the committee consists entirely of directors who meet the independence requirements of the NYSE’s listing standards, the Board’s Independence Guidelines (discussed below at “Corporate Governance—Independence”) and the rules and regulations under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”). In addition, the Board has determined that each member of the Audit Committee is financially literate, and based on accounting or related financial management expertise, that each of Ms. Skidmore and Messrs. Krusi, Schultz and Tang are audit committee financial experts.
Compensation Committee
The Compensation Committee, which held five regular meetings and one special meeting during 2017, establishes and administers the Company’s executive compensation program and reviews and advises the Board with respect to major organizational changes, leadership development and leadership succession, other than the succession of the Chief Executive Officer, which is overseen by the Governance and Nominating Committee. The Compensation Committee establishes and regularly reviews the compensation levels of executive officers and other key managers, and also reviews incentive awards. The members of the committee are Messrs. Anderson, Bulls, Krusi, Myers, and Tang, none of whom is or has been an executive officer or employee of the Company at any time. The committee may delegate any of its responsibilities to a subcommittee thereof. The committee has the authority to hire a professional consultant to review and analyze the Company’s compensation programs. In 2017, the committee retained Pearl Meyer & Partners to advise the committee during its review of the Company’s short-term incentive compensation program and to provide a comprehensive analysis of executive compensation survey data and market trends for each named executive officer of the Company. The committee’s work with Pearl Meyer & Partners is described in greater detail below in the subsection titled “Independent Compensation Consultant.” Further, as discussed below in the section titled “Compensation Discussion and Analysis,” the Compensation Committee consults with management in developing compensation plans for the Company. The Board has determined that the Compensation Committee consists entirely of directors who meet the independence requirements of the NYSE listing standards, the Board’s Independence Guidelines, and the rules and regulations under the Exchange Act.
Governance and Nominating Committee
The Governance and Nominating Committee, which held two regular meetings and three special meetings during 2017, evaluates the structure and membership of the Board, evaluates candidates for nomination to the Board as
9
appropriate with an emphasis on diversity of viewpoint and professional experience, reviews the compensation structure for the non-employee directors and the frequency and content of meetings, establishes and reviews the Company’s succession plan for its Chief Executive Officer, and makes recommendations to the Board on all such matters. The committee’s diversity policy values diversity in its broadest sense, reflecting, but not limited to, an individual’s profession, geography, gender, ethnicity, race, skills, background and experience, and endeavors to include candidates who are diverse, including in terms of race and gender, in the qualified pool from which Board candidates are chosen. The committee periodically examines the composition of the Board to ensure that the Board, taken as a whole, has the necessary skills and experience to steer the Company toward its stated objectives, as well as the necessary skills and experience to set the Company’s future strategies. Directors are nominated or elected by the Board, and stockholders may nominate directors as described further in “Corporate Governance—Director Nomination by Stockholders.” The committee identifies Board candidates through a variety of formal and informal channels. The committee has the authority to hire a professional search firm to help identify candidates with specific qualifications; although it has no current engagement with any such firm, the committee worked with a third party search firm in 2017 and early 2018 to identify a potential new director. The third party search firm retained by the committee recommended William J. Sandbrook as a new director based on criteria established by the Committee. The current members of the committee are Messrs. Tang, Anderson, Bulls, and Schultz and Ms. Skidmore, each of whom the Board has determined to meet the independence requirements of the NYSE listing standards, the Board’s Independence Guidelines, and the rules and regulations under the Exchange Act.
The Board believes the purpose of corporate governance is to maximize stockholder value in a manner consistent with legal requirements and the highest standards of integrity. The Board has adopted and adheres to corporate governance practices that the Board believes promote this purpose, are sound practices, and represent best practices. The Board continually reviews these governance practices, Delaware law (the state in which the Company is incorporated), the rules and listing standards of the NYSE and SEC regulations, and best practices suggested by recognized governance authorities. The corporate Governance Standards are posted on the Company’s website at http://investors.comfortsystemsusa.com under the “Governance” tab and are also available upon request to Comfort Systems USA, Inc., Office of the General Counsel, 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77057.
Code of Ethics
The Company adopted the Compliance Policy in 1997, the year the Company was founded. That policy, with subsequent amendments discussed, approved and adopted by the Board, remains in effect and applies to the Company’s directors, officers and employees who are subject to disciplinary action, including termination, for violations of the policy. The policy forms the basis of the Company’s ethics and compliance program and covers a wide range of areas. Many Company policies are summarized in the Compliance Policy including conflict of interest, insider trading, confidentiality, and compliance with all laws and regulations applicable to the conduct of the Company’s business. The Compliance Policy is regularly reinforced to the Company’s employees and management through periodic ethics, equal opportunity employment and anti-corruption trainings. Any amendments to the Compliance Policy or the grant of a waiver from a provision of the policy requiring disclosure under applicable SEC rules will be disclosed to the public. The Compliance Policy is posted under the “Governance” tab of the Company’s website at http://investors.comfortsystemsusa.com and is also available upon request to Comfort Systems USA, Inc., Office of the General Counsel, 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77057.
Independence
The Board has adopted Independence Guidelines to assist the Board in making independence determinations relating to members of the Board. The criteria are consistent with the NYSE listing standards regarding director independence. For a director to be considered independent, the Board must determine that the director does not have a material relationship, directly or indirectly, with the Company. The Independence Guidelines are published on our website, http://investors.comfortsystemsusa.com under the “Governance” tab, and are also available by written request to Comfort Systems USA, Inc., Office of the General Counsel, 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, TX 77057.
10
The Board has considered the independence of its members in light of the Independence Guidelines and the rules and regulations under the Exchange Act and NYSE, including each director’s affiliations and relationships, and has determined that Ms. Skidmore and Messrs. Anderson, Bulls, Krusi, Myers, Sandbrook, Schultz and Tang, who together constitute a majority of the Board, qualify as independent directors of the Company.
Director Nomination by Stockholders
The Board will consider director candidates recommended by stockholders for inclusion on the slate of directors nominated by the Board. Any stockholder may submit a candidate or candidates for consideration in conformity with the Bylaws and as set forth hereafter under the caption “Stockholder Proposals.” Stockholders desiring to recommend a candidate must submit the recommendation to the Governance and Nominating Committee c/o the Corporate Secretary, Comfort Systems USA, Inc., 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77057. If a nominating stockholder is not a record holder, the stockholder must provide the same evidence of eligibility as set forth in Exchange Act Rule 14a‑ 8(b)(2).
At the time the nominating stockholder submits the recommendation, the candidate must submit all personal information that the Company would be required to disclose in a proxy statement in accordance with Exchange Act rules. In addition, at that time the candidate must:
· |
Certify that he or she meets the requirements to be: (a) independent under the NYSE’s listing standards and the Board’s Independence Guidelines, (b) a non‑employee director under Rule 16b‑3 of the Exchange Act, and (c) to the extent applicable, an outside director under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to time, and pertinent regulations promulgated thereunder by the Internal Revenue Service (collectively, the “Code”); |
· |
Consent to serve on the Board, if nominated and elected; and |
· |
Agree to complete, upon request, a customary director’s questionnaire. |
The Governance and Nominating Committee will evaluate any candidate recommended by a stockholder to determine whether he or she is highly qualified. The committee evaluates candidates recommended by stockholders in the same way it evaluates candidates proposed from other sources. In selecting nominees, particular consideration is given to those individuals who have substantial achievement in their personal and professional pursuits and whose talents, experience, and integrity would be expected to contribute to the best interests of the Company and to long‑term stockholder value. In evaluating candidates, the committee considers various qualities and skills that it believes will benefit the Board and the stockholders, including without limitation general management experience, specialization in the Company’s principal business activities or finance, significant experience in issues encountered by public companies, and contribution to the diversity of the Board.
Retirement Policy
Under the Company’s corporate Governance Standards, a director shall not be a candidate for reelection after his or her seventy-second birthday.
Communications with the Board
Stockholders and other interested parties may communicate directly with the Board by writing to Comfort Systems USA, Inc., Board of Directors, 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77057. The Chairman of the Board will review these communications and will determine appropriate steps to address them. A stockholder wishing to communicate directly with the non-employee members of the Board may address the communication to “Non-Employee Directors, c/o Board of Directors” at the address listed above. These communications will be handled by the Chairman of the Board, who is currently designated to preside at meetings of non-employee directors. Finally, communications can be sent directly to individual directors by addressing letters to their individual name, c/o the Board of Directors, at the address listed above. All communications received by the Company are sent directly to the Board or appropriate director.
11
Board Leadership Structure and Self‑Evaluation Process
The Board does not have a formal policy regarding whether the position of Chairman of the Board may be filled by the Company’s Chief Executive Officer. Instead, the Board has adopted a fluid approach to the Board’s leadership structure that allows for variations depending on the circumstances and changing needs of the Company over time.
Mr. Myers has served as a director since 2005 and has served as the Company’s Chairman of the Board since May 2014. The Board has determined that Mr. Myers meets the independence requirements of the NYSE listing standards, the Board’s Independence Guidelines, and the rules and regulations under the Exchange Act. The Board has carefully considered its leadership structure and determined that currently it is in the best interest of the Company and its stockholders for the roles of Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer to be filled by different individuals. This structure allows the Chief Executive Officer to focus on the Company’s day‑to‑day operations.
Since the Company has an independent, non‑executive Chairman of the Board, the Company has determined that the role of a Lead Director is not currently necessary. The Board may appoint a Lead Director to coordinate the activities of the independent directors in the future at its discretion.
Pursuant to the Board’s policy, the Board conducts an annual self-evaluation process as follows: (i) each director evaluates the Board as a whole; (ii) each member of the Audit Committee, the Compensation Committee and the Governance and Nominating Committee evaluates the respective committee(s) on which he or she serves; and (iii) each director prepares an individual performance-related self-evaluation of himself or herself. In connection with this annual self-evaluation, the Board considers whether the current leadership structure continues to be appropriate for the Company. The Board believes that directors should be responsive to the Company’s evolving circumstances and objectives, and that the Board’s leadership structure should adapt when necessary.
The Board’s Role in Risk Oversight
The Company’s full Board is actively involved in overseeing the Company’s risk management process and the Company’s risk appetite. These activities are aligned with the Company’s strategy. Additionally, the Audit Committee, Compensation Committee, and Governance and Nominating Committee consider risks that fall within their respective areas of responsibilities. A group of the Company’s executive officers serve on a committee (the “Risk Committee”) that is directly responsible for the Company’s risk management process. The Company’s President and Chief Executive Officer, a member of the Board, serves on the Risk Committee; however, the Risk Committee is a committee of management, not of the Board. The Risk Committee meets at least annually to define and improve the risk-mapping process and considers any appropriate updates at least quarterly. All members of the Risk Committee attended each of the quarterly meetings held in 2017. Any risks that are identified through the Company’s compliance and ethics program are included in the Risk Committee’s processes, along with operational, financial, and strategic risks. The Risk Committee presents comprehensive reports directly to the Board at least annually.
Effective March 8, 2017, the Board adopted a Director Resignation Policy to address the situation in which a nominee for director in an uncontested election to the Board receives more votes “withheld” than votes “for” his or her election. The policy provides that any incumbent nominee for director in an uncontested election who receives a greater number of votes affirmatively “withheld” with respect to his or her election than votes “for” such election (a “majority withhold vote”) shall promptly tender his or her resignation to the Chairman of the Board following certification of the stockholder vote. The Governance and Nominating Committee will promptly consider the tendered resignation and recommend to the Board whether to accept or reject the resignation or take other action, such as rejecting the tendered resignation and addressing the apparent underlying causes of the majority withheld vote. In making its recommendation, the committee will consider all relevant factors, including, but not limited to, (i) the underlying reasons why stockholders withheld their votes (if ascertainable), (ii) the length of service and qualifications of the director whose resignation has been tendered, (iii) the director’s contributions to the Board and the Company, (iv) the overall composition of the Board and compliance with applicable laws, regulations, governing documents, and stock exchange listing standards, (v) the availability of other qualified candidates, and (vi) whether accepting the resignation is in the
12
best interests of stockholders and the Company. The Board will act on the committee’s recommendation no later than its first regularly scheduled meeting following certification of the stockholder vote, but in no case, later than 120 days following the vote certification. Following the committee’s recommendation and the Board’s decision, the Company will promptly publicly disclose its decision whether to accept or reject such tendered resignation in a periodic or current report filed or furnished in accordance with SEC rules.
Any director who tenders his or her resignation under the Director Resignation Policy will not participate in the committee recommendation or Board consideration of the resignation. However, such director will otherwise remain as an active Board member unless and until the resignation becomes effective. If a majority of the Governance and Nominating Committee members receive a majority withhold vote at the same election, then the independent directors who did not receive a majority withhold vote will appoint a committee amongst themselves to consider the tendered resignations. If the only directors who did not receive a majority withhold vote in the same election constitute fewer directors than a majority of the Board, then all the independent directors may participate in the Board consideration of the tendered resignations, except that no director will participate in the vote on his or her own resignation.
While this summary reflects the current terms of the Director Resignation Policy, the Board retains the power to amend and administer the policy as the Board, in its sole discretion, determines is appropriate. The Director Resignation Policy is published under the “Governance” tab on our website, http://investors.comfortsystemsusa.com, and is also available by written request to Comfort Systems USA, Inc., Office of the General Counsel, 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, TX 77057.
Director Compensation for 2017
In 2017, each director who was not an employee of the Company or one of its subsidiaries received, in equal quarterly installments, an annual cash fee based on service as follows: $60,000 for service on the Board; $30,000 to serve as the chair of the Audit Committee; $20,000 to serve as the chair of the Compensation Committee or the Governance and Nominating Committee; and $50,000 to serve as the chairman of the Board, in each case, prorated for partial years of service.
Each non-employee director who continues in office or is elected at an annual stockholder meeting receives an award of fully-vested shares of Common Stock having a fair market value on the grant date equal to $140,000. Pursuant to the Company’s 2017 Omnibus Incentive Plan, the maximum grant date fair value of awards granted to each individual non-employee director in any calendar year may not exceed $400,000. The Board has adopted stock ownership guidelines that require each non-employee director to own an amount of shares of Common Stock equal to ten times the director’s annual cash fees for service on the Board (excluding any additional fees for service as the chair of the Board or any committee of the Board and any other compensation or expense reimbursement received by the director) within five years of being elected or appointed to the Board. The Governance and Nominating Committee evaluates each director’s stock ownership on an annual basis. At the time of such evaluation, the value of the stock ownership is determined by reference to the higher of: (i) the original share (or share equivalent) purchase or issuance price, and (ii) the value of the share (or share equivalent) price at the time of determining compliance with these stock ownership guidelines. The Governance and Nominating Committee may modify these stock ownership guidelines in its reasonable discretion and is
13
authorized to make exceptions to these stock ownership guidelines when special circumstances arise. All non-employee directors currently comply with these ownership guidelines.
Directors who are employees of the Company or one of its subsidiaries receive no additional compensation for serving as directors. The following table discloses the compensation earned, paid or awarded, as the case may be, to each of the Company’s non‑employee directors during 2017.
Name(1) |
|
Director Fees |
|
Stock |
|
All Other |
|
Total ($) |
|
||||
Darcy G. Anderson |
|
$ |
60,000 |
|
$ |
139,977 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
199,977 |
|
Herman E Bulls |
|
$ |
60,000 |
|
$ |
139,977 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
199,977 |
|
Alan P. Krusi |
|
$ |
80,000 |
|
$ |
139,977 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
219,977 |
|
Franklin Myers |
|
$ |
110,000 |
|
$ |
139,977 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
249,977 |
|
James H. Schultz |
|
$ |
67,912 |
(4) |
$ |
139,977 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
207,889 |
|
Constance E. Skidmore |
|
$ |
90,000 |
|
$ |
139,977 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
229,977 |
|
Vance W. Tang |
|
$ |
72,088 |
(4) |
$ |
139,977 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
212,065 |
|
(1) |
Messrs. Lane and Giardinelli also served as members of the Board during 2017, but were employees of the Company or one of its subsidiaries in 2017, and received no additional compensation for their service on the Board. Mr. Lane’s compensation is included in the “Summary Compensation Table” included elsewhere in this proxy statement. |
(2) |
Represents grants of 4,018 fully-vested shares of Common Stock. The aggregate grant date fair value of the shares was computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 and is based on the number of shares granted multiplied by the fair market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant. |
(3) |
The Company maintains a visiting director’s office for all members of the Board at its headquarters in Houston, Texas. The office is available on a first‑come‑first‑served basis for all directors. In accordance with SEC regulations, perquisites that in the aggregate total less than $10,000 are not required to be disclosed. |
(4) |
Mr. Schultz served as the chair of the Governance and Nominating Committee from January 1, 2017 to May 23, 2017, and Mr. Tang served as the chair of the Governance and Nominating Committee from May 23, 2017 to December 31, 2017. Consequently, Mr. Schultz and Mr. Tang received a pro rata payment for each director’s period of service as chair of the Governance and Nominating Committee in 2017. |
In March 2018, upon the recommendation of the Governance and Nominating Committee, which was based on an analysis of several factors, including survey data from the National Association of Corporate Directors and the Board’s historical non-employee director compensation practices, the Board approved the following increases to non-employee director compensation. These changes will take effect following the Annual Meeting:
· |
The annual fee for service as the chairman of the Board will increase from $50,000 to $60,000. |
· |
Each non-employee director who continues in office or is elected at an annual stockholder meeting will receive an award of fully-vested shares of Common Stock having a fair market value on the grant date equal to $160,000. |
· |
All other fees for service on the Board will remain unchanged. |
14
RATIFICATION OF THE SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
The Audit Committee has re‑appointed Ernst & Young LLP as the Company’s independent auditors for the year ending December 31, 2018. Ernst & Young LLP was the Company’s independent auditor for the year ended December 31, 2017.
We expect that representatives of Ernst & Young LLP will be present at the Annual Meeting to respond to appropriate questions, and they will have the opportunity to make a statement if they desire.
The affirmative vote of holders of a majority of the shares of Common Stock voted at the Annual Meeting is required to ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as the Company’s independent auditors for 2018. If the stockholders fail to ratify the appointment, the Audit Committee will reconsider its selection, but it still may decide to retain Ernst & Young LLP. Even if the appointment is ratified, the Audit Committee, in its discretion, may direct the appointment of a different independent accounting firm at any time during the year if the committee determines that such a change would be in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders.
Relationship with Independent Auditors
The Audit Committee has selected Ernst & Young LLP as independent auditors for the Company for the year ending December 31, 2018. Ernst & Young LLP acted as independent auditors for the Company for the year ended December 31, 2017. Fees to the Company and its subsidiaries for professional services rendered by Ernst & Young LLP during 2017 and 2016 were as follows:
Description |
|
2017 |
|
2016 |
|
||
Audit Fees |
|
$ |
2,149,640 |
|
$ |
1,921,287 |
|
Audit‑Related Fees |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
Tax Fees |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
All Other Fees |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
The amount of audit fees for 2017 is based on a fees estimate determined with input from Ernst & Young LLP for audit services provided to us by Ernst & Young in connection with the audit of our 2017 financial statements. The final audit fees for those services may be more or less than the amount reflected on this table.
The Audit Committee has established pre‑approval policies and procedures applicable to all services provided by the Company’s independent auditors to the Company, pursuant to which the committee reviews for approval each service expected to be provided by the independent auditors, and is provided with sufficient detailed information so that it can make well‑reasoned assessments of the impact of the services on the independence of the auditors. In 2017, all of the fees paid to the Company’s auditors were approved by the Audit Committee. Pre‑approvals include pre‑approved cost levels or budgeted amounts (or a range of cost levels or budgeted amounts). Any proposed service that would exceed pre‑approved cost levels or budgeted amounts also requires pre‑approval. Substantive changes in terms, conditions, or fees resulting from changes in the scope, structure or other items regarding pre‑approved services will also be pre‑approved if necessary. The pre‑approvals may include services in categories of audit services (including consultation to support such audits), audit‑related services (items reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of the financial statements), tax services (tax compliance, tax planning, and tax advice), and other services (services permissible under the SEC’s auditor independence rules, typically routine and recurring type services that would not impair the independence of the auditor).
15
The Board of Directors recommends that
stockholders vote FOR Proposal Number 2.
ADVISORY VOTE TO APPROVE THE COMPENSATION OF THE NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
The Board recognizes that executive compensation is an important matter for our stockholders. As described in detail in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” (the “CD&A”) section elsewhere in this proxy statement, the Compensation Committee is tasked with the implementation of our executive compensation philosophy, and the core of that philosophy has been and continues to be to pay the Company’s named executive officers (the “Named Executive Officers”) based on Company performance. In particular, the Compensation Committee strives to attract, retain and motivate exceptional executive officers, to reward past performance as measured against established goals, to provide incentives for future performance, and to align executive officers’ long-term interests with the interests of our stockholders. To do so, the Compensation Committee uses a combination of short- and long-term incentive compensation to reward near-term performance and to encourage executive officers’ commitment to our long-range strategic business goals. It is the intention of the Compensation Committee that our executive officers be compensated competitively and consistently with our business goals and strategy, sound corporate governance principles, and stockholder interests and concerns. As discussed further in the CD&A, the Compensation Committee retains compensation consultants and reviews survey and peer group data, provided by Equilar, to ensure that compensation for key positions is properly aligned with market practices. Further, the Company’s commitment to aligning pay with performance is evidenced by the compensation paid to or earned by the Named Executive Officers.
As described in the CD&A, we believe our compensation program is effective, appropriate, and strongly aligned with the long‑term interests of our stockholders and that the total compensation packages provided to the Named Executive Officers (including potential payouts upon a termination of employment or change in control) are reasonable and not excessive. As you consider this Proposal Number 3, we urge you to read the CD&A section of this proxy statement for additional details on our executive compensation program, including the more detailed information about our compensation philosophy and objectives and the past compensation of the Named Executive Officers, and to review the tabular disclosures regarding Named Executive Officer compensation together with the accompanying narrative disclosures in the “Summary of Executive Compensation” section of this proxy statement.
Congress has enacted the Dodd‑Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (“Dodd‑Frank”), which requires a non‑binding advisory “Say on Pay” vote and gives our stockholders the opportunity to express their views on the compensation of the Named Executive Officers. We value the opportunity to give our stockholders an opportunity to provide us with such a vote on executive compensation at the Annual Meeting.
As an advisory vote and as prescribed by Dodd-Frank, Proposal Number 3 is not binding on the Board or the Compensation Committee, will not overrule any decisions made by the Board or the Compensation Committee, and will not require the Board or the Compensation Committee to take any action. Although the vote is non-binding, the Board and the Compensation Committee value the opinions of our stockholders, and will carefully consider the outcome of the vote when making future compensation decisions for the Named Executive Officers. In particular, if there is are a significant number of votes against the Named Executive Officers’ compensation as disclosed in this proxy statement, we will consider our stockholders’ concerns and the Board and the Compensation Committee will evaluate whether any actions are necessary to address those concerns. Unless the Board modifies its policy on the frequency of “Say on Pay” votes, the next “Say on Pay” vote will be held in 2019.
The Board of Directors is asking that stockholders cast a non‑binding, advisory vote FOR the following resolution:
“RESOLVED, that the compensation paid to the Company’s named executive officers, as disclosed pursuant to Item 402 of Regulation S‑K, including the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, compensation tables and narrative discussion, is hereby APPROVED on an advisory basis.”
16
The Board of Directors recommends that
stockholders vote FOR Proposal Number 3.
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
The following table sets forth information about the beneficial ownership of shares of Common Stock as of March 1, 2018: (i) individually by the Chief Executive Officer, each of the other Named Executive Officers, and current directors and nominees for director of the Company, (ii) by all executive officers and directors of the Company as a group, and (iii) each person known to the Company as reported on schedules filed with the SEC to be the beneficial owner of more than 5% of the outstanding Common Stock of the Company.
Except as noted below, each of the persons listed has sole investment and voting power with respect to the shares indicated.
|
|
Common Stock Beneficially Owned |
|
||||||
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner(s)(1) |
|
Shares Owned |
|
Shares Subject to |
|
Total |
|
% of Class(2) |
|
Brian E. Lane |
|
183,632 |
(3) |
240,310 |
(4) |
423,942 |
|
1.14 |
% |
Franklin Myers |
|
212,500 |
|
0 |
|
212,500 |
|
* |
|
William George |
|
35,853 |
(5) |
142,934 |
(6) |
178,787 |
|
* |
|
Trent T. McKenna |
|
40,660 |
(7) |
68,783 |
(8) |
109,443 |
|
* |
|
James H. Schultz |
|
77,411 |
|
0 |
|
77,411 |
|
* |
|
Julie S. Shaeff |
|
30,267 |
(9) |
28,507 |
(10) |
58,774 |
|
* |
|
Herman E. Bulls |
|
56,620 |
|
0 |
|
56,620 |
|
* |
|
Alan P. Krusi |
|
43,411 |
(11) |
0 |
|
43,411 |
|
* |
|
Darcy G. Anderson |
|
42,352 |
|
0 |
|
42,352 |
|
* |
|
Constance E. Skidmore |
|
27,411 |
|
0 |
|
27,411 |
|
* |
|
Vance W. Tang |
|
26,827 |
(12) |
0 |
|
26,827 |
|
* |
|
Alfred J. Giardinelli, Jr. |
|
23,516 |
|
0 |
|
23,516 |
|
* |
|
James Mylett(13) |
|
0 |
|
0 |
|
0 |
|
* |
|
All executive officers and directors as a group (13 persons) |
|
800,460 |
|
480,534 |
|
1,280,994 |
|
3.45 |
% |
BlackRock Inc. |
|
|
|
|
|
5,285,746 |
(14) |
14.22 |
% |
55 East 52nd Street |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New York, New York 10022 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Vanguard Group, Inc. |
|
|
|
|
|
3,504,027 |
(15) |
9.43 |
% |
100 Vanguard Blvd. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Malvern, Pennsylvania 19355 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* Less than 1%.
(1) |
Except as noted, the address of each person is c/o Comfort Systems USA, Inc., 675 Bering Drive, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77057. |
(2) |
Calculated using total outstanding shares as of March 1, 2018, which was 37,160,924 (excluding 3,962,441 shares held in treasury). |
(3) |
Includes 18,955 shares of Common Stock issued pursuant to restricted stock grants that remain subject to tenure vesting. |
17
(4) |
Includes 19,124 options with an exercise price of $12.46; 21,122 options with an exercise price of $13.87; 54,247 options with an exercise price of $11.21; 44,476 options with an exercise price of $13.86; 39,861 options with an exercise price of $16.15; 11,518 options with an exercise price of $19.67; 9,135 options with an exercise price of $30.36; and 8,663 options with an exercise price of $36.25. |
(5) |
Includes 11,344 shares of Common Stock issued pursuant to restricted stock grants that remain subject to tenure vesting. |
(6) |
Includes 10,000 options with an exercise price of $12.46; 19,151 options with an exercise price of $13.87; 20,000 options with an exercise price of $11.21; 29,888 options with an exercise price of $13.86; 26,786 options with an exercise price of $16.15; 7,020 options with an exercise price of $19.67; 5,457 options with an exercise price of $30.36; and 5,141 options with an exercise price of $36.25. |
(7) |
Includes 6,785 shares of Common Stock issued pursuant to restricted stock grants that remain subject to tenure vesting. |
(8) |
Includes 3,754 options with an exercise price of $13.87; 15,614 options with an exercise price of $11.21; 11,901 options with an exercise price of $13.86; 15,147 options with an exercise price of $16.15; 4,240 options with an exercise price of $19.67; 3,312 options with an exercise price of $30.36; and 3,025 options with an exercise price of $36.25. |
(9) |
Includes 4,032 shares of Common Stock issued pursuant to restricted stock grants that remain subject to tenure vesting. |
(10) |
Includes 1,008 options with an exercise price of $11.00; 1,799 options with an exercise price of $12.46; 1,666 options with an exercise price of $13.87; 2,019 options with an exercise price of $11.21; 4,674 options with an exercise price of $13.86; 5,567 options with an exercise price of $16.15; 2,511 options with an exercise price of $19.67; 1,973 options with an exercise price of $30.36; and 1,798 options with an exercise price of $36.25. |
(11) |
Includes 43,411 shares of Common Stock held in The Krusi Family Trust for which Mr. Krusi and his spouse are trustees. |
(12) |
Includes 26,827 shares of Common Stock held in The Tang Living Trust, dated October 3, 2014, for which Mr. Tang and his spouse are trustees. |
(13) |
Mr. Mylett resigned from the Company effective on February 1, 2017. |
(14) |
The nature of share ownership as of December 31, 2017 is reported in a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on January 19, 2018. |
(15) |
The nature of share ownership as of December 31, 2017 is reported in a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on February 9, 2018. |
RATIO OF CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION TO MEDIAN COMPANY EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION
As required by Section 953(b) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, and Item 402(u) of Regulation S-K, we are providing the following information about the relationship of the annual total compensation of our employees and the annual total compensation of our Chief Executive Officer. This pay ratio is a reasonable estimate calculated in a manner consistent with Item 402(u) of Regulation S-K. Because the SEC rules for identifying the median compensated employee and calculating the pay ratio based on that employee’s annual total compensation allow companies to adopt a variety of methodologies, to apply certain exclusions, and to make reasonable estimates and assumptions that reflect their compensation practices, the pay ratio reported by other companies may not be comparable to the pay ratio reported below.
18
For 2017, our last completed fiscal year:
· |
The median of the annual total compensation of all employees of the Company (other than our Chief Executive Officer) was $50,164; and |
· |
The annual total compensation of our Chief Executive Officer, as reported in the Summary Compensation Table included elsewhere in this proxy statement, was $2,463,023. |
Based on this information, for 2017, the ratio of annual total compensation of our Chief Executive officer to the median of the annual total compensation of all other employees is estimated to be 49.1 to 1. |
|
To identify the median of the annual total compensation of all our employees, as well as to determine the annual total compensation of our median employee, we took the following steps:
· |
We determined that, as of December 31, 2017, our employee population consisted of approximately 7,816 individuals, all of whom were located in the United States. This population consisted of all of our full-time, part-time, and seasonal employees. This population does not include independent contractors or leased workers who were engaged through an unaffiliated third-party staffing agency. We also excluded approximately 739 employees of BCH Holdings, Inc. and each of its wholly-owned subsidiaries, Century Mechanical Solutions, Inc. and KTU of Spokane, Inc., which are companies that we acquired during 2017 in transactions that closed on April 1, 2017 and July 1, 2017. |
· |
To identify the “median employee” from our employee population, we used the amount of salary, wages, bonuses, commissions and overtime pay of our employees as reflected in our payroll records as reported to the Internal Revenue Service on Form W-2 for 2017. Because only a small portion of Company employees receive grants of equity awards, when identifying the median employee we did not take into account any amounts reported on the employees’ Forms W-2 for 2017 with respect to stock option exercises or the vesting of equity awards. We also did not annualize the compensation of any individuals who were employed for less than the full calendar year. |
· |
We identified our median employee using this compensation measure, which was consistently applied to all of our employees who were included in the calculation. Since all of our employees are located in the United States, as is our Chief Executive Officer, we did not make any cost-of-living adjustments in identifying the “median employee.” |
· |
Once we identified our median employee, we combined all of the elements of such employee’s compensation for 2017 in accordance with the requirements of Item 402(c)(2)(x) of Regulation S-K, resulting in annual total compensation of $50,164. The difference between such employee’s salary, wages, bonuses, commissions and overtime pay reflected in such employee’s Form W-2 and the employee’s annual total compensation represents matching contributions by the Company to such employee’s account under the Company’s 401(k) Plan. |
With respect to the annual total compensation of our Chief Executive Officer, we used the amount reported in the “Total” column of our 2017 Summary Compensation Table included in this proxy statement.
The Company recognizes that employees are a key asset and are vital to the Company’s continued success. In addition to the Company’s commitment to provide fair and equitable wages and benefits to employees, the Company also periodically conducts formal and informal surveys at all levels of the organization to gauge employee satisfaction and engagement.
19
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
This Compensation Discussion and Analysis (the “CD&A”) provides an overview and analysis of the Company’s executive compensation program and policies, the material compensation decisions made with respect to 2017 compensation, and the material factors considered in making those decisions. The CD&A focuses on the compensation paid to the Named Executive Officers unless noted otherwise. For 2017, the Named Executive Officers are:
Brian E. Lane, President and Chief Executive Officer
William George, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Trent T. McKenna, Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
Julie S. Shaeff, Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer
James Mylett, Former Senior Vice President—Service*
*Mr. Mylett provided notice to the Company on January 9, 2017 of his decision to resign from the Company and terminated employment effective on February 1, 2017. For more information regarding the compensation that Mr. Mylett received in connection with his termination of employment, see “Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control” below.
The Board has delegated to the Compensation Committee (referred to in this CD&A simply as the “Committee”) the duty of designing and overseeing the Company’s executive compensation program. The Committee is comprised entirely of independent (pursuant to NYSE, SEC and Internal Revenue Service rules, and the Company’s own Independence Guidelines) members of the Board. The Company’s executive compensation program is designed to:
· |
attract, motivate, and retain talented executive officers so that the Company can achieve its best results and maximize long‑term stockholder return; |
· |
align the long‑term interests of Company executive officers with the interests of stockholders; and |
· |
pay compensation that is directly tied to the performance of the Company and the Common Stock. |
To put the Company’s 2017 compensation decisions in context, the following summarizes the Company’s key financial and business results for 2017, a year in which the Company continued to experience strong performance:
· |
Revenue increased to $1.79 billion in 2017 as compared to $1.63 billion in 2016. |
· |
Gross profit increased by $22.3 million to $366.3 million in 2017 as compared to $344.0 million in 2016. |
· |
Free cash flow (“FCF”) increased to $80.0 million in 2017 as compared to $69.0 million in 2016. |
· |
Backlog as of December 31, 2017 was $948.4 million as compared to $763.4 million as of December 31, 2016. |
· |
For purposes of our 2017 annual incentive plan and dollar-denominated performance-vesting restricted stock unit (“PSU”) performance, our non‑GAAP earnings per share (“EPS”) was $1.74, as further described below, as compared to $1.72 in 2016. |
20
As a result of this performance, the currently employed Named Executive Officers each received 91.2% of their respective EPS target award and 136.6% of their respective FCF target award under the corporate financial incentive portion of the Company’s 2017 annual incentive plan, as further described below. For a description of how EPS and FCF are determined under this plan, please see “Annual Incentive Plan” below. We use the terms EPS and FCF in this CD&A to refer to those metrics as determined under our annual incentive plan.
Compensation and Governance Practices
Below we highlight certain of our practices that we consider good governance features of our executive compensation program.
· |
A majority of each Named Executive Officer’s compensation is at-risk (i.e., variable and not fixed).* |
· |
A majority of each Named Executive Officer’s compensation is tied to the Company’s financial performance and growth in stockholder value.* |
· |
Forty percent of each Named Executive Officer’s equity awards are subject to the Company achieving specific performance criteria over a three‑year time horizon.* |
· |
Executive officers and directors are subject to stock ownership guidelines. |
· |
The Company has adopted a compensation clawback policy and an anti‑hedging/pledging policy that applies to all executive officers. |
· |
The Committee engages an independent compensation consultant to advise on executive compensation. |
*Assuming target performance is achieved, when applicable, and based on grant date values of equity-based awards.
Consideration of Stockholder Advisory Vote
In designing the overall executive compensation program, the Committee also values and considers stockholder input. While evaluating the Company’s 2017 executive compensation program, the Committee considered the stockholder advisory vote on the compensation paid to the Named Executive Officers that was taken in 2017. The Committee viewed the outcome of that advisory vote—approval by more than 94% of the shares voted—as indicating that the Company’s stockholders generally support the Company’s overall approach to executive compensation and made no changes to our executive compensation program as a result of the vote.
Compensation Philosophy and Objectives
The Committee evaluates each element of the overall executive compensation program to ensure that it helps meet the Committee’s objectives of:
· |
providing competitive base pay consistent with job scope, experience and related skills; |
· |
linking bonus opportunities to the Company’s performance; |
· |
granting equity compensation at competitive levels, a significant portion of which is performance‑based; |
· |
avoiding unnecessary and imprudent risks; and |
21
· |
attracting and motivating talented executive officers and minimizing turnover of senior‑level Company employees, which contributes to the stability and continuity of senior leadership. |
Against that backdrop, the Company’s executive compensation program is designed to:
· |
pay competitive levels of salary and total compensation; |
· |
link executive pay to Company performance by making a significant portion of pay variable and not fixed; |
· |
align the interests of management with the long‑term interests of stockholders; and |
· |
reward long‑term results. |
To achieve these objectives, the Committee implements a “pay‑for‑performance” philosophy using the guiding principles that: (i) compensation should be incentive‑driven, with a balanced short‑term and long‑term focus; (ii) a significant portion of pay for executive officers should be “at-risk”; (iii) a significant portion of annual incentive compensation should be tied to the overall performance of the Company; and (iv) a portion of annual incentive compensation should be tied to individual performance criteria.
Role of the Chief Executive Officer
Management, led by the Chief Executive Officer, at least annually makes recommendations to the Committee regarding the establishment and modification of compensation packages for the Company’s senior management (except that no member of management makes a recommendation with respect to his or her own compensation package). The Committee considers management’s recommendations during its regularly-scheduled meetings, and may choose to adopt the recommendations or not adopt or modify them at the Committee’s sole discretion. The Committee is responsible for making all decisions regarding executive compensation.
Independent Compensation Consultant; Use of Market Data
In 2017, the Committee retained Pearl Meyer & Partners (“Pearl Meyer”) to advise the Committee on the design and administration of the Company’s annual incentive plan and to provide a comprehensive analysis of executive compensation survey data and market trends. The Committee regularly reviews the services provided by its outside consultants and believes that Pearl Meyer is independent in providing executive compensation consulting services. In making this determination, the Committee noted that during 2017:
· |
Pearl Meyer did not provide any services to the Company or management other than services requested by or with the approval of the Committee, and its services were limited to executive and director compensation consulting. Specifically, Pearl Meyer does not provide, directly or indirectly through affiliates, any non‑executive compensation services, such as pension consulting or human resource outsourcing; |
· |
Pearl Meyer maintains a conflicts policy, which was provided to the Committee with specific policies and procedures designed to ensure independence; |
· |
Fees paid to Pearl Meyer by the Company during 2017 were less than 1% of Pearl Meyer’s total revenue; |
· |
None of the Pearl Meyer consultants working on Company matters had any business or personal relationship with Committee members; |
22
· |
None of the Pearl Meyer consultants working on Company matters had any business or personal relationship with any executive officer of the Company; and |
· |
None of the Pearl Meyer consultants working on Company matters own Company stock. |
The Committee monitors the independence of its compensation consultant on a periodic basis.
During 2017 the Committee consulted with Pearl Meyer regarding the Company’s annual incentive plan design and administration, which included a comprehensive analysis regarding market trends and executive compensation survey data provided by Equilar, as described below. Following the Committee’s initial engagement of Pearl Meyer in 2013 to provide the Committee with detailed analysis and recommendations on the structure of the Company’s annual incentive plan in terms of design, metrics, and payout opportunities, the Committee has continued to periodically refine the annual incentive plan based on a number of factors, including Pearl Meyer’s recommendations, market trends in the Company’s industry and general economic conditions.
Peer Group and the Benchmarking Process
Since 2010, the Committee has also reviewed executive compensation levels annually based on competitive compensation data provided by Equilar, an information services firm with products focusing on analyzing and benchmarking executive and director compensation information. The Committee does not attempt to set executive compensation at a pre-defined percentile of the market, but the Committee does use the comparative data in an effort to be better informed in its compensation-related decisions.
The Committee believes that, due to the Company’s unique position in its industry, there are no directly comparable companies in the broader market for the purpose of determining appropriate compensation for the Named Executive Officers and, for this reason, does not depend solely on a “peer group” to determine Named Executive Officer compensation. It does, however, review executive compensation against compensation paid to executive officers holding similar positions in the companies contained in the peer group established for the Company by Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), which includes the companies listed in the table below.
|
ISS Peer Group |
|
|
Actuant Corporation |
|
|
Cubic Corporation |
|
|
GATX Corporation |
|
|
Chart Industries, Inc. |
|
|
Esterline Technologies Corporation |
|
|
Valmont Industries, Inc. |
|
|
Aegion Corporation |
|
|
Granite Construction Incorporated |
|
|
Barnes Group Inc. |
|
|
Dycom Industries, Inc. |
|
|
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corporation |
|
|
MYR Group Inc. |
|
|
Primoris Services Corporation |
|
|
Wabash National Corporation |
|
The Committee uses Equilar data from companies included in the ISS peer group to provide a general market review of the reasonableness of Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer total compensation levels, and the Committee uses a combination of the ISS peer group and Equilar survey data from certain other industry companies to provide a general market review of the reasonableness of total compensation levels for the General Counsel and Chief Accounting Officer; however, the Committee does not use the ISS peer group for any other purpose or otherwise formally benchmark the compensation of the Named Executive Officers.
23
The Committee routinely uses tally sheets to assist it in analyzing the Named Executive Officers’ total compensation. Tally sheets provide the Committee with information about the following components of compensation paid over the preceding three-year period: cash compensation, including salary and annual incentive compensation, and long-term incentive compensation. These tally sheets also provide an estimate of amounts payable in the event of a voluntary or involuntary separation from service, death or disability, or a change in control resulting in termination of employment. The Committee also reviews information regarding long-term incentive awards, including statistics on share usage, analysis of current exercise values of outstanding option grants and current values of RSU and PSU awards, and a summary of current and past performance results.
Chief Executive Officer Compensation
Each year, the Committee meets in executive session (i.e., separately from management) to evaluate the Chief Executive Officer’s performance and determine his total compensation. The Committee conducts an assessment of the Chief Executive Officer’s performance as well as an assessment of other relevant factors, such as the Company’s performance, individual tenure, position tenure and succession planning, and sets the Chief Executive Officer’s compensation for each year based on the Committee’s assessment of these factors. Although the Committee does not attempt to target the Chief Executive Officer’s compensation at any specific percentile of compensation at similarly-situated or peer group companies, the Committee does use the data provided by Equilar as context in reviewing the Chief Executive Officer’s overall compensation levels and approving recommended compensation actions. Based on compensation data provided by Equilar, the Chief Executive Officer’s compensation is below the market median when compared to other companies in the Company’s peer group established by ISS (described above).
24
The Company’s executive compensation program consists of four basic elements:
Compensation Element |
|
Objective |
|
Key Characteristics |
Base Salary |
|
Provide a fixed level of cash compensation for performing day‑to‑day functions |
|
Levels are evaluated annually by the Committee |
|
|
Attract and retain strong executive talent |
|
In 2017, base salaries were established based on a number of factors, including advice from Pearl Meyer and analysis of market trends and economic conditions |
|
|
|
|
|
Annual Incentive Plan |
|
Reward annual financial, operational, and individual performance |
|
Award targets are established as a percentage of base salary |
|
|
|
|
Majority of each award is based on objective, pre‑established criteria related to the Company’s EPS performance against target |
|
|
|
|
|
Long‑term Incentive Awards |
|
Reward long‑term Company performance |
|
Awards are provided through a mix of stock options, time‑vesting restricted stock units (“RSUs”), and dollar‑denominated PSUs |
|
|
Encourage focus on growing stockholder value |
|
Stock options only have value if the price of the Company’s Common Stock increases |
|
|
Align management’s interests with stockholders’ interests |
|
Dollar‑denominated PSUs are earned based on objective, pre‑established performance measures, including total shareholder return relative to certain comparable companies and EPS performance against target |
|
|
Encourage retention of key management employees, stability, and continuity of leadership |
|
Stock options and RSUs are subject to a three‑year vesting schedule; dollar‑denominated PSUs that are earned based on performance cliff vest following the end of a three‑year performance period |
|
|
|
|
|
Benefits |
|
Attract and retain strong executive talent |
|
Participation in health, welfare, and retirement benefit plans on the same terms as all employees at the Company’s corporate office |
|
|
Provide basic financial stability |
|
|
25
While base salaries, together with health, welfare and retirement benefits, are designed to provide basic compensation and financial stability to the executive officers, the purpose of annual incentive compensation is primarily to encourage the executive officers to focus on the execution of the Company’s business strategy and plan for the current year. Long-term incentives, granted in the form of stock options, RSUs and PSUs, are designed to align executive officers’ interests with those of stockholders, incentivize executive officers to attain longer-term goals and also to encourage them to remain with the Company. Unlike annual incentive compensation, which, as discussed below, tends to focus on more current Company and individual performance, long-term incentives focus on sustained results and growing stockholder value.
Relative Size of Major Compensation Elements
The combination of base salary, annual incentive awards, and long-term incentive awards is referred to as the “total direct compensation” for the Named Executive Officers. In setting executive officer compensation, the Committee considers the aggregate compensation payable to the executive, assuming target performance is achieved, and the forms of the compensation. The Committee seeks to achieve the appropriate balance between current cash compensation and incentives for the achievement of both annual and long-term financial and non-financial objectives.
Allocation Among Compensation Elements
For 2017, the portion of the Chief Executive Officer’s total direct compensation (assuming target performance was achieved and, for equity awards, based on grant date values at target) that was at-risk is illustrated as follows:
|
|
For 2017, the portion of Messrs. George’s and McKenna’s and Ms. Shaeff’s total direct compensation (assuming target performance was achieved and, for equity awards, based on grant date values at target) that was at risk is illustrated as follows, based on an average of their respective compensation:
|
|
26
Although the value that a named executive officer may receive with respect to RSUs will depend on the performance of the Company’s Common Stock, and therefore is variable, we have included these awards as an element of “Fixed Pay” in the charts above.
Base Salary
The Committee determines base salary after considering several factors, including: the executive’s individual experience, previous job performance and individual skills. Only after weighing these factors does the Committee consider comparable indicators. The Committee uses management’s performance assessments, Company performance, survey data provided by Equilar, ISS peer group data (with respect to the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer), and its own analysis of job performance to set each executive’s base salary at least annually. Based on the factors described above, on December 14, 2016, the Committee approved an increase in each Named Executive Officer’s base salary as set forth in the table below.
Named Executive Officer(1) |
|
2016 Base Salary |
|
2017 Base Salary |
|
||
Brian E. Lane |
|
$ |
625,000 |
|
$ |
670,000 |
|
William George |
|
$ |
400,000 |
|
$ |
426,000 |
|
Trent T. McKenna |
|
$ |
340,000 |
|
$ |
351,000 |
|
Julie S. Shaeff |
|
$ |
270,000 |
|
$ |
278,100 |
|
(1) |
The Committee also approved an increase to Mr. Mylett’s base salary from $350,000 in 2016 to $360,500 in 2017. However, Mr. Mylett resigned from the Company effective on February 1, 2017. For more information regarding Mr. Mylett’s resignation, see “Potential Payments on Termination or Change in Control” below. |
Annual Incentive Plan
The Named Executive Officers are eligible to participate in a cash-based annual incentive plan and receive incentive bonuses based on actual performance against key business and individual objectives. For 2017, each of the Named Executive Officers was eligible to participate in the annual incentive plans on the terms described below except Mr. Mylett. References to “named executive officers” below do not include references to Mr. Mylett since he forfeited his right to receive any annual incentive for 2017 upon his resignation in February 2017.
The annual incentive plan consists of two distinct components: a corporate financial performance component and an individual performance component. In 2017, the principal component of the annual incentive plan rewarded the achievement of earnings-per-share (“EPS”) and free cash flow (“FCF”) goals (collectively, the “Corporate Financial Incentive”). The Committee continued the use of FCF as a metric under the annual incentive plan because it incentivizes management’s focus on increasing the Company’s cash flow. The Committee believes that EPS remains an important metric for the Company because it encourages a focus on profitability. The second, smaller, component of the annual incentive plan rewarded the achievement of certain individual performance metrics (the “Individual Performance Incentive”). Target annual incentive opportunities for 2017 are summarized in the table below:
|
|
Target Annual Incentive |
|
||||
Named Executive Officer(1) |
|
Target |
|
Target |
|
Total Target Opportunity |
|
Mr. Lane |
|
100 |
% |
10 |
% |
110 |
% |
Mr. George |
|
90 |
% |
10 |
% |
100 |
% |
Mr. McKenna |
|
65 |
% |
10 |
% |
75 |
% |
Ms. Shaeff |
|
55 |
% |
10 |
% |
65 |
% |
27
Corporate Financial Incentive Criteria
At the beginning of each year, the Committee sets a threshold, target and maximum performance level for each of EPS and FCF for purposes of the Corporation Financial Incentive component of the annual incentive plan. For each of the Named Executive Officers, the EPS portion of the Corporate Financial Incentive represents 70% of the total Corporate Financial Incentive, and the FCF portion of the Corporate Financial Incentive represents 30% of the total Corporate Financial Incentive. If both the EPS and FCF thresholds are not met, no portion of the Corporate Financial Incentive is paid. If only one of the EPS or FCF thresholds is met, then only that portion of the Corporate Financial Incentive is paid. The threshold, target and maximum performance levels for each of the corporate goals for 2017 bonuses were:
2017 Corporate Financial Incentive Criteria
EPS |
|
FCF |
||||||||||||||
Threshold |
|
Target |
|
Max |
|
Threshold |
|
Target |
|
Max |
||||||
$ |
1.04 |
|
$ |
1.80 |
|
$ |
2.36 |
|
$ |
35.5M |
|
$ |
64.4M |
|
$ |
85.7M |
The Committee establishes short-term incentive levels among the Named Executive Officers by assigning certain base salary percentages to each EPS and FCF performance level. Once set, the Committee has never previously adjusted the assigned base salary percentages, the EPS levels, or the FCF levels during the year; however, the Committee annually reserves the right to adjust these percentages or levels if it believes that an adjustment is appropriate and, for 2017, made an adjustment to the EPS calculation as described below. For the purpose of determining 2017 incentive compensation, (i) EPS is calculated from the Company’s audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2017 in accordance with GAAP, except that it does not take into account: (A) goodwill impairment; (B) write-off of debt costs; (C) restructuring charges; (D) any cumulative effect of a change in accounting principles; and (E) any other unusual or non-recurring items as determined by the Committee; and (ii) FCF is calculated by excluding certain items related to acquisitions or sales of businesses less customary capital expenditures plus the proceeds from asset sales. For the year ended December 31, 2017, the Committee determined that it was appropriate to exclude a one-time charge taken in the fourth quarter of 2017 from the EPS calculation used for incentive compensation. This charge relates to a reduction in the carrying value of our deferred tax assets by $9.5 million, or $.25 per share, as a result of the reduction in the corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21% in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, which was signed into law on December 22, 2017. In December 2017, the Committee also determined that it would exclude the impact of tax reform legislation from the EPS calculation for purposes of the Corporate Financial Incentive for each Named Executive Officer for the year ending December 31, 2018. For a discussion of how we calculate FCF, see the “Liquidity and Capital Resources” section of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017.
For 2017, the base salary percentages for each portion of the Corporate Financial Incentive are set forth in the table below. For performance between threshold, target and maximum performance levels, the amount that is earned is determined on a straight-line basis.
2017 Corporate Financial Incentive Levels
|
|
|
|
EPS Incentive Award Levels |
|
FCF Incentive Award Levels |
|
|||||||||
Named Executive Officer |
|
Base Salary |
|
Threshold |
|
Target |
|
Maximum |
|
Threshold |
|
Target |
|
Maximum |
|
|
Mr. Lane |
|
$ |
670,000 |
|
14 |
% |
70 |
% |
105 |
% |
6 |
% |
30 |
% |
45 |
% |
Mr. George |
|
$ |
426,000 |
|
12.6 |
% |
63 |
% |
94.5 |
% |
5.4 |
% |
27 |
% |
40.5 |
% |
Mr. McKenna |
|
$ |
351,000 |
|
9.1 |
% |
45.5 |
% |
68.25 |
% |
3.9 |
% |
19.5 |
% |
29.25 |
% |
Ms. Shaeff |
|
$ |
278,100 |
|
7.7 |
% |
38.5 |
% |
57.75 |
% |
3.3 |
% |
16.5 |
% |
24.75 |
% |
In setting the EPS and FCF threshold, target and maximum performance levels, the Committee reviews management’s recommendations and then considers the Company’s historical financial performance as well as projections for the industry and other competing companies’ historical financial performance and projections. The Committee sets EPS and FCF at levels that it considers aggressive but attainable with the intention that the Named Executive Officers will be encouraged to strive for continued improvement in Company performance, ultimately benefiting the Company’s stockholders, and to continue those efforts even after the EPS and/or FCF threshold performance levels have been met. The Committee believes that the added value that results from the Company’s
28
achievement of EPS and/or FCF above the threshold performance levels to the Company and its stockholders is sufficient to justify the proportionate increases in amounts paid to the Named Executive Officers for achievement above threshold performance levels. To determine the assigned base salary percentages for each Named Executive Officer, in addition to historical and projected Company financial performance, the Committee considers the degree to which a Named Executive Officer’s efforts and job function are expected to influence and contribute to the Company’s financial performance. After assigning threshold, target and maximum base salary percentages for each Named Executive Officer, the Committee then uses data provided by Equilar and, with respect to the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, ISS peer group data, to assess the reasonableness of such assigned levels. The Committee did not adjust the base salary percentages for any Named Executive Officer in 2017.
The Company’s EPS and FCF for calculating incentive compensation achievement levels for 2017 was $1.74 and $80.0 million, respectively. The amounts earned by each of the Named Executive Officers in respect of the Corporate Financial Incentives under the annual incentive plan in 2017 are summarized in the table below.
2017 Corporate Financial Incentive Achievement Levels
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Corporate |
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Financial |
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
|
EPS Incentive Award |
|
FCF Incentive Award |
|
Incentive |
|
Corporate |
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
Achievement |
|
Achievement |
|
Awarded |
|
Financial |
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
(as a % of |
|
|
|
(as a % of |
|
|
|
(as a % of |
|
Incentive |
|
||||
|
|
Base |
|
Base |
|
|
|
Base |
|
|
|
Base |
|
Awarded |
|
||||
Named Executive Officer |
|
Salary |
|
Salary) |
|
(in dollars) |
|
Salary) |
|
(in dollars) |
|
Salary) |
|
(in dollars) |
|
||||
Mr. Lane |
|
$ |
670,000 |
|
63.8 |
% |
$ |
427,618 |
|
41.0 |
% |
$ |
274,606 |
|
104.8 |
% |
$ |
702,223 |
|
Mr. George |
|
$ |
426,000 |
|
57.4 |
% |
$ |
244,699 |
|
36.9 |
% |
$ |
157,140 |
|
94.3 |
% |
$ |
401,839 |
|
Mr. McKenna |
|
$ |
351,000 |
|
41.5 |
% |
$ |
145,613 |
|
26.6 |
% |
$ |
93,509 |
|
68.1 |
% |
$ |
239,123 |
|
Ms. Shaeff |
|
$ |
278,100 |
|
35.1 |
% |
$ |
97,621 |
|
22.5 |
% |
$ |
62,690 |
|
57.6 |
% |
$ |
160,311 |
|
Individual Performance Incentive
In addition to and independent of the Corporate Financial Incentive portion of the annual incentive plan, each Named Executive Officer is eligible to receive annual incentive compensation based on certain individual strategic objectives that relate to the executive’s achievement of established quantitative strategic goals (the Individual Performance Incentive).
At the beginning of each year, each Named Executive Officer, including the Chief Executive Officer, identifies individual performance goals and objectives for the upcoming year. Each Named Executive Officer’s individual performance goals are discussed and identified in consultation with the Chief Executive Officer, in the case of Messrs. George and McKenna, with the Chief Financial Officer, in the case of Ms. Shaeff, and with the Compensation Committee, in the case of Mr. Lane. These goals and objectives vary depending on the roles and responsibilities for each Named Executive Officer. For 2017, specific goals for each Named Executive Officer included:
Executive |
|
2017 Individual Performance Goals |
|
Brian E. Lane |
|
|
Grow acquired revenue |
|
|
|
Strategic personnel initiatives |
|
|
|
Improve Company‑wide employee safety measure(1) |
William George |
|
|
Grow acquired revenue |
|
|
|
Improve Company‑wide employee safety measure(1) |
Trent McKenna |
|
|
Litigation management and compliance strategic initiatives |
|
|
|
Benefits program strategic initiatives |
|
|
|
Improve Company‑wide employee safety measure(1) |
Julie Shaeff |
|
|
Complete implementation phase of new revenue recognition standard |
|
|
|
Achieve 2017 target implementations for ERP strategy |
|
|
|
Improve Company‑wide employee safety measure(1) |
29
(1) |
The Company-wide employee safety measure tracks the OSHA Lost Time Incident Rate (“LTIR”), which is a nationally-recognized metric that tracks all injuries serious enough to require OSHA documentation of lost time. In addition to the LTIR performance metric, the Named Executive Officers are required to attend safety training classes on an annual basis. No safety incentive is payable to the Named Executive Officers if there is a work-related fatality of a Company employee during the year. In 2017, the Company did not have a work-related fatality, and the Company’s LTIR was improved from the prior fiscal year. |
Each of the Named Executive Officers’ individual performance goals is quantifiable and is composed of four levels of attainment: Minimum (25% attainment), Meets (50% attainment), Exceeds (75% attainment) and Significantly Exceeds (100% attainment). The goals are measured on a scale of 0‑200% and are weighted to reflect each goal’s strategic importance.
The Chief Executive Officer and the General Counsel present a summary evaluation of the level of achievement of these goals for each Named Executive Officer (other than Mr. Lane) to the Committee following the end of the year. In addition, each Named Executive Officer (other than Mr. Lane) receives performance feedback from his or her direct supervisor throughout the year and a formal performance review at the end of each year, at which time the Named Executive Officer and his or her direct supervisor will evaluate the executive’s satisfaction of the individual performance goals.
In executive session, the Committee reviews and discusses its evaluation of Mr. Lane’s performance over the past year and the performance summaries for each other Named Executive Officer. The Committee also considers significant individual contributions beyond established goals and each executive’s overall effectiveness. In the Committee’s sole discretion, based on its evaluation of these factors, the Committee then grades each executive’s attainment of individual performance goals to determine the Named Executive Officer’s individual performance score. For 2017, the individual performance scores and the Individual Performance Incentive for each of the Named Executive Officers are set forth below:
2017 Individual Performance Incentive Determination
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Individual |
|
|
|
||
|
|
|
|
Individual Performance |
|
|
|
Performance |
|
Individual |
|
||||||
|
|
|
|
Incentive Opportunity |
|
Individual |
|
Incentive |
|
Performance |
|
||||||
|
|
Base |
|
(as a % of Base Salary) |
|
Performance |
|
(as a % of |
|
Incentive |
|
||||||
Named Executive Officer |
|
Salary |
|
Threshold |
|
Target |
|
Maximum |
|
Score |
|
Base Salary) |
|
(in dollars) |
|
||
Mr. Lane |
|
$ |
670,000 |
|
1 |
% |
10 |
% |
20 |
% |
110.0 |
% |
11.0 |
% |
$ |
73,700 |
|
Mr. George |
|
$ |
426,000 |
|
1 |
% |
10 |
% |
20 |
% |
20.0 |
% |
2.0 |
% |
$ |
8,520 |
|
Mr. McKenna |
|
$ |
351,000 |
|
1 |
% |
10 |
% |
20 |
% |
132.5 |
% |
13.3 |
% |
$ |
46,508 |
|
Ms. Shaeff |
|
$ |
278,100 |
|
1 |
% |
10 |
% |
20 |
% |
177.5 |
% |
17.8 |
% |
$ |
49,363 |
|
The Committee believes that corporate financial measures such as EPS, when joined together with an additional component to reflect individual achievement, are appropriate measures for determining annual incentive compensation. This two‑part framework provides the Named Executive Officers with incentives to both achieve favorable results and sustain long‑term growth for the Company, yet maintains the Committee’s flexibility to reward outstanding individual performance.
Long‑term Incentives
In 2017, long-term incentive (“LTI”) grants provided by the Company consisted of (i) stock options, (ii) RSUs, and (iii) PSUs, which are denominated in dollar amounts but, once earned, are settled in shares of Common Stock based on the market value of the Company’s Common Stock following the end of the applicable performance period. The Committee designs the components and weightings of LTI awards to encourage the achievement of key performance goals and retention and also to balance performance compensation between the Company’s performance relative to certain comparable companies, the Company’s ongoing profitability, and the performance of the Company’s Common Stock. The Committee believes that these awards promote a long-term view and further align the executive officers’
30
interests with those of our stockholders. The Committee adopted the current structure for LTI awards in 2012 based, in part, on input from Pearl Meyer.
Award Type |
|
Description |
|
Alignment with and Key |
Stock Options |
|
30% of total LTI grant value |
|
|
|
|
Vest ratably over three years |
|
Inherently performance‑based |
|
|
Exercise price equal to the closing price on date of grant |
|
Value contingent upon positive stock price performance |
|
|
No value to the executive unless stock price increases after the date of grant |
|
10‑year term encourages a focus on longer‑term performance |
|
|
|
|
|
Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) |
|
30% of total LTI grant value |
|
Value partially dependent upon stock price performance |
|
|
Vest ratably over three years |
|
Enhances retention of executive talent |
|
|
|
|
Encourages long‑term stock ownership |
|
|
|
|
|
Performance Stock Units (PSUs) |
|
40% of total LTI grant value (assuming target performance) |
|
Performance‑contingent |
|
|
Vest following the end of a three‑year performance period contingent upon achievement of certain levels of performance |
|
EPS performance goals reward focus on sustainable year-over-year profitability |
|
|
Dollar‑denominated awards Settled in shares based upon stock price following the end of the performance period |
|
TSR performance goals reward focus on producing stockholder returns in excess of those for our peers |
|
|
Performance based upon: |
|
|
|
|
EPS performance against budget (50%) |
|
|
|
|
TSR performance against peers (50%) |
|
|
The Committee believes that LTI compensation should be correlated with salary and short-term incentive compensation. As such, the Committee uses a percentage of each Named Executive Officer’s base salary to determine the total dollar amount of the award of LTI compensation to be granted to that Named Executive Officer each year, based on grant date values and, for PSUs, assuming target performance is achieved. The Committee determines these percentage levels by analyzing each Named Executive Officer’s tenure, responsibilities and professional experience and recommendations from Pearl Meyer based on market survey data as described above. For 2017, the following percentage of base salary was used for the Named Executive Officers to determine the grant date value of LTI awards: Mr. Lane,
31
150% of base salary; Mr. George, 140% of base salary; Mr. McKenna, 100% of base salary; and Ms. Shaeff, 75% of base salary. Mr. Mylett was not granted LTI awards for 2017 due to his resignation effective in February 2017.
Once each Named Executive Officer’s total grant date value is determined, the number of RSUs and stock options and the value of PSUs is determined. The number of RSUs granted is determined by dividing the total dollar amount of the RSUs to be granted by the closing price of the Company’s stock on the date of grant. The number of stock options to be granted is determined by dividing the total dollar amount of the stock options to be granted by the estimated value of the options on the date of grant using a Black‑Scholes model. PSUs are denominated in dollars.
As an illustration, Mr. Lane’s 2017 award of LTI compensation was calculated as follows:
Total Amount of Award: 150% of base salary of $670,000 equals $1,005,000.
RSUs Awarded: 30% of $1,005,000 equals $301,500 in value of RSUs. $301,500 divided by $36.25 (the closing price of the Company’s Common Stock on the date of grant) equals 8,317 RSUs.
Stock Options Awarded: 30% of $1,005,000 equals $301,500 in value of stock options. $301,500 divided by approximately $11.60 (the approximate value of the stock options on the date of grant using a Black-Scholes valuation model) equals 25,988 stock options.
PSUs Awarded: 40% of $1,005,000 equals $402,000 in value of PSUs.
The table below sets forth the 2017 LTI compensation awards for each of the Named Executive Officers, other than Mr. Mylett:
Named Executive Officer |
|
Base |
|
Salary Percentage |
|
Number of |
|
Number of |
|
Dollar Value of |
|
Value of Awards |
|
|||
Mr. Lane |
|
$ |
670,000 |
|
150 |
% |
25,988 |
|
8,317 |
|
$ |
402,000 |
|
$ |
1,005,000 |
|
Mr. George |
|
$ |
426,000 |
|
140 |
% |
15,422 |
|
4,935 |
|
$ |
238,500 |
|
$ |
596,400 |
|
Mr. McKenna |
|
$ |
351,000 |
|
100 |
% |
9,076 |
|
2,904 |
|
$ |
140,400 |
|
$ |
351,000 |
|
Ms. Shaeff |
|
$ |
278,100 |
|
75 |
% |
5,393 |
|
1,726 |
|
$ |
83,430 |
|
$ |
208,575 |
|
PSU Design
Upon vesting, PSUs will be settled in shares of the Company’s Common Stock, with the number of such shares determined by dividing the dollar denomination of vested PSUs (which may be up to 200% of the original dollar denomination of such PSUs) by the market value of the Company’s Common Stock following the end of the applicable three-year performance period. PSUs are earned based on the two metrics set forth in the table below, both of which are measured over a three-year performance period, and earned PSUs vest in full upon certification of the performance metrics by the Compensation Committee following the end of the applicable three-year performance period, generally subject to continued employment through the end of the three-year performance period:
Performance Measure |
|
Measurement |
|
Percentage of |
|
Earnings Per Share |
|
Company’s actual EPS performance relative to budgeted EPS performance |
|
50 |
% |
Relative Total Shareholder Return |
|
Company’s performance relative to identified peer group* |
|
50 |
% |
* For purposes of measuring the Company’s relative total shareholder return for awards granted in 2017, the identified group of comparable companies consists of: Matrix Service Company; Primoris Services Corporation; Tutor Perini Corporation; Stantec Inc.; Dycom Industries Inc.; MasTec, Inc.;
32
Sterling Construction, Inc.; EMCOR Group Inc.; MYR Group, Inc.; Quanta Services, Inc.; Tetra Tech Inc.; Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corporation; Granite Construction Incorporated; Layne Christensen Company; and NCI Building Systems Inc. Based on industry analysis and conversations with financial analysts, the Company believes these companies are the most likely to compete with the Company for investment by institutional investors. This group of comparable companies is not used for benchmarking the compensation of the Company’s Named Executive Officers.
EPS: The EPS measure compares the Company’s actual EPS performance against its budgeted EPS performance over a three-year performance period. For this purpose, EPS is determined and calculated as described under “Annual Incentive Plan” above. For each year in the performance period, the Company’s actual EPS performance is compared against the budgeted EPS and expressed as a percentage. The EPS percentages for each of the three years in the performance period are then averaged together to determine the final level of EPS achievement upon which the payout, if any, will be earned.
Relative Total Shareholder Return (“TSR”): The relative TSR measure compares the Company’s TSR to the TSR of a specified group of comparable companies and payouts are determined by the Company’s rank relative to others in the group. For each year in the three-year performance period, TSR is calculated by determining the difference between the average closing price of a company’s common stock during the first 30 consecutive days of the year and the last 30 consecutive days of the year. The calculation assumes that dividends are reinvested in additional shares. The Company’s TSR is then compared against the TSR for other companies in the group and assigned a percentile ranking. The Company’s TSR percentile ranking for each of the three years in the performance period are then averaged together to determine the final percentile ranking upon which the payout, if any, will be earned.
The following chart shows the range of potential settlement of the PSUs based on the two performance measures, as a percentage of the target amount. The potential settlements range from 0% to 200% of the target award amount.
|
|
Relative TSR |
|
EPS |
|
||||
|
|
Percentage of |
|
|
|
Percentage of |
|
|
|
Performance Level |
|
Target Earned |
|
Performance Measure |
|
Target Earned |
|
Performance Measure |
|
Maximum |
|
200 |
% |
75th Percentile or Above |
|
200 |
% |
120% of Target or Higher |
|
Target |
|
100 |
% |
50th Percentile |
|
100 |
% |
100% of Target |
|
Threshold |
|
50 |
% |
25th Percentile |
|
25 |
% |
70% of Target |
|
Below Threshold |
|
0 |
% |
Below 25th Percentile |
|
0 |
% |
Below 70% of Target |
|
PSU Awards Vesting in 2016 and 2017
PSU awards granted in 2014 with a 2014-2016 performance period were settled in early 2017. The following table shows the EPS and TSR levels achieved over such awards’ three-year performance period and the payout factor (percentage of the target award earned) for these awards:
|
|
2014 |
|
2015 |
|
2016 |
|
3 Year |
|
Payout |
|
EPS |
|
83 |
% |
178 |
% |
126 |
% |
129 |
% |
200 |
% |
TSR |
|
33 |
% |
93 |
% |
20 |
% |
49 |
% |
98 |
% |
33
PSU awards granted in 2015 with a 2015-2017 performance period were settled in early 2018. The following table shows the EPS and TSR levels achieved over such awards’ three-year performance period and the payout factor for these awards.
|
|
2015 |
|
2016 |
|
2017 |
|
3 Year |
|
Payout |
|
EPS |
|
178 |
% |
126 |
% |
96 |
% |
133 |
% |
200 |
% |
TSR |
|
93 |
% |
20 |
% |
87 |
% |
67 |
% |
167 |
% |
The “Rule of 75” provides that if an executive retires from the Company at a time when the sum of his or her age and his or her years of service at the Company is greater than or equal to 75, then upon the executive’s retirement, the executive will have been deemed to have satisfied the continuous employment requirement for any equity award to vest. Pursuant to the Rule of 75, all performance-based equity awards will continue to be earned only if the applicable performance measures are satisfied, but the requirement that the executive be employed by the Company at the time of vesting based on performance will be deemed to be satisfied. As of December 31, 2017, Mr. Lane was the only Named Executive Officer to satisfy the Rule of 75.
Health and Retirement Benefits
The Company’s health and retirement plans include medical, dental, life, disability and accidental death and dismemberment coverage, and eligibility to participate in the Company’s 401(k) retirement plan. The Company’s benefit programs are designed to be competitive with other similarly-sized and -situated companies. The plans offered to executive officers are broad‑based plans applicable to all full-time employees. Under the Company’s 401(k) retirement plan, the Company matches an employee’s pre‑tax contributions to the plan at a rate of 50% of up to 5% of an employee’s annual pay or up to the maximum allowed contribution pursuant to the Code.
Perquisites
The Company generally does not provide perquisites to the Named Executive Officers that are not provided to other employees. However, the Named Executive Officers are beneficiaries of increased levels of disability and life insurance coverage that are only available to executive officers of the Company. The Company pays these increased premiums on behalf of the executive officers.
Change in Control and Severance Benefits
The Company’s Named Executive Officers and other members of senior management serve as at-will employees of the Company without any guaranteed period of employment. However, the Committee believes that an executive severance policy paired with change in control agreements provide appropriate protections to attract and retain qualified and talented individuals to serve as the Company’s executive officers, permit the Company’s executive officers to focus fully on improving the Company’s operations and long-term success, and protect stockholder value by providing continuity of management during a transition period. The severance and change in control benefits are intended to be set at market-competitive levels and help ensure that the Company can attract and retain talented executive officers. These benefits also help ensure that executive officers remain focused on maximizing stockholder value in the context of an actual or potential transaction that might result in the loss or the diminution of their current positions. The Company believes that these benefits are reasonable and ultimately benefit stockholders. The Company previously provided executive officers with so-called Section 280G gross-ups, but in 2013 decided to not offer this type of benefit on a go-forward basis with respect to newly-hired executive officers. The executive severance policy and change in control agreements are more fully described below under “Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control.”
34
The Company’s stock ownership guidelines require that within three years of being appointed as an executive officer, or being promoted to such a position, an executive is required to beneficially own Common Stock, taking into account all outstanding vested and unvested stock options, RSUs, PSUs and stock, having a market value or cost basis, whichever is higher, equal to at least the following multiple of his or her base salary (for purposes of calculating this multiple, the actual compensation expense incurred by the Company related to the equity award is used only if it is greater than the current market value of the Common Stock subject to the equity award):
Level |
|
Base Salary |
|
Chief Executive Officer |
|
5 |
|
Chief Operating Officer |
|
3 |
|
Chief Financial Officer |
|
3 |
|
General Counsel |
|
2 |
|
Chief Accounting Officer |
|
1 |
|
As of December 31, 2017, each of our executive officers was in compliance with the stock ownership guidelines.
Executive Compensation Recovery Policy
The Company’s executive compensation recovery, or “clawback,” policy provides that, to the extent permitted by applicable law, the Board may seek to recoup—or “claw back”—any cash compensation paid to executive officers and certain other employees identified by the Board where the payment was predicated upon the achievement of certain financial results that were satisfied based upon such individual’s intentional fraudulent or illegal conduct. The Board has the sole discretion to determine whether an individual’s conduct has or has not met any particular standard of conduct. The Board may, in its sole discretion after considering the best interests of the Company, determine not to recover such payment. In the event that a restatement of the Company’s financial statements is required, the Company will seek to recover any compensation received by the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer that is required to be recovered by Section 304 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
We prohibit our directors and executive officers from hedging their ownership of the Company’s stock, including trading in options, puts, calls, or other derivative instruments related to Company stock or debt. Directors and executive officers are prohibited from purchasing the Company’s stock on margin, borrowing against the Company’s stock held in a margin account, or pledging the Company’s stock as collateral for a loan.
Risk Considerations in our Compensation Policies
The Committee regularly reviews our various compensation programs and has concluded that they do not create risks that are reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company or our stockholders. In reaching this conclusion, the Committee considered the following: (i) the use of balanced performance targets; (ii) the Company’s “clawback” policy; (iii) the Company’s required stock ownership guidelines; (iv) the use of EPS performance metrics that are uniformly applied to all executive officers; (v) a three-year vesting period for LTI compensation; and (vi) the Company’s anti-hedging/pledging policy.
Impact of Accounting and Tax Treatment on Compensation
Section 162(m) of the Code (“Section 162(m)”) generally disallows a tax deduction for any publicly-held corporation for individual compensation exceeding $1 million in any taxable year payable to certain executive officers. For 2017 and prior years, this deduction limit did not apply to compensation that qualified as performance-based under Section 162(m). The performance-based compensation exception to Section 162(m) was repealed and certain other
35
changes were made to Section 162(m), generally effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017. As a result, compensation paid to certain current and former executive officers in excess of $1 million in a taxable year generally will not be deductible beginning in 2018 unless such compensation qualifies for transition relief applicable to legally-binding contracts that were in effect on November 2, 2017.The Committee takes into consideration the potential deductibility of the compensation as one of the factors to be considered when establishing the Company’s executive compensation program. However, the Committee believes that its primary responsibility is to provide a compensation program that attracts, retains and rewards the executive officers and other key employees that are important to the Company’s success. Accordingly, the Committee may, in its judgment, authorize compensation payments that are limited as to tax deductibility. The Committee will continue to monitor the effect of tax reform on the Company’s executive compensation program.
The Committee regularly considers the accounting implications of significant compensation decisions, especially in connection with decisions that relate to our equity plans and programs. If accounting standards change, the Company may revise certain programs to appropriately align accounting expenses of our equity awards with our overall executive compensation philosophy and objectives.
Summary of Executive Compensation
The following table includes information regarding the compensation paid or awarded to, or earned by, the Named Executive Officers for each of 2017, 2016 and 2015. For more information about the components of total compensation for 2017, please refer to the following subsections of the CD&A:
· |
“Base Salary” for information about salary; |
· |
“Annual Incentive Plan” for information about short‑term incentives; |
· |
“Long‑term Incentives” for information about equity grants; and |
· |
“Health and Retirement Benefits” and “Perquisites” for information about other compensation. |
Summary Compensation Table
Name and Principal Position |
|
Year |
|
Salary |
|
Bonus |
|
Stock |
|
Option |
|
Non‑Equity |
|
All Other |
|
Total |
|
|||||||
Brian E. Lane, |
|
2017 |
|
$ |
670,000 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
703,491 |
|
$ |
301,498 |
|
$ |
775,923 |
|
$ |
12,110 |
|
$ |
2,463,023 |
|
President and Chief |
|
2016 |
|
$ |
625,000 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
656,225 |
|
$ |
281,196 |
|
$ |
673,406 |
|
$ |
10,247 |
|
$ |
2,246,074 |
|
Executive Officer |
|
2015 |
|
$ |
585,000 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
614,244 |
|
$ |
218,683 |
|
$ |
880,425 |
|
$ |
10,156 |
|
$ |
2,308,508 |
|
William George, |
|
2017 |
|
$ |
426,000 |
|
$ |
0 |
|
$ |
417,454 |
|
$ |
178,918 |
|
$ |
410,359 |
|
$ |
8,237 |
|
$ |
1,440,968 |
|
Executive Vice President |
|
2016 |
|
$ |