MILLIONS FOR THE CORPORATE ELITE - ZERO FOR MAINSTREET! THE BASTARDS!
Gannett CEO Craig Dubow (right) resigned last week for health reasons, saying that back and hip problems prevent him for fulfilling his duties. He leaves a job that could pay him as much as $9.4 million this year, but don’t feel too bad for Dubow: He’s eligible for severance pay of up to $37 million.
The irony of this kind of executive compensation for a company that has laid off nearly 40% of its workforce over the last six years isn’t lost on former New York Times columnist Peter Lewis, who posts a savage send-up of Gannett’s extravagance on his blog. Lewis is particularly brutal in contrasting Dubow’s performance to that of Steve Jobs, who died last week:
Annual base pay: Steve Jobs $1. Craig Dubow $1.2 million.
Stock price during CEO tenure: Apple, up 4,000+ percent. Gannett, down 85 percent.
Job creation during CEO tenure: Apple, plus 28,000. Gannett: minus 20,000.
Notable new products as CEO of Apple: Macintosh, iMac, MacBook, iPod, iTunes, Apple Stores, iPhone, iPad, etc., etc.
Notable new products as CEO of Gannett: ?
Executive pay has been out of control at US companies for decades now, but the practice is particularly offensive at companies in dying industries that are downsizing their way out of existence. Is it conceivable that a talented and motivated executive could be found to lead Gannett at a salary of less than $9 million? How does a company look its employees in the eye and ask them to accept yet another layoff or salary freeze when it nearly doubled the salary of the head of its US newspaper division?
We might just go occupy Wall Street over this.
To the barricades!
Gannett Co. bought The Des Moines Register in 1985. The Register was a great newspaper; at the time it had won more Pulitzer prizes than any other newspaper save The New York Times. I worked for The Register in college and for several years afterward, before my knowledge of soybeans and hogs proved irresistible to The Times and I moved to New York. A couple of years later, when Gannett bought The Register I asked a Gannett executive: How do you pronounce the name of your company? Is it GAN-nett, or gan-NETT?
“It’s gan-NET,” he said. “The emphasis is always on the net.”
He was, of course, referring to the amount of money that is left over after expenses and taxes and accounting tricks … otherwise known as profits. (He was not referring to the Internet, of which Gannett still has barely a clue.)
So it was with profound sadness that I learned of the resignation of Gannett CEO Craig Dubow last week for health reasons. Mr. Dubow, 56 years old and a 30-year veteran of the company, assumed the helm of Gannett six years ago but has been plagued by back and hip problems. Like Steve Jobs, who was four months younger than he, Dubow took a couple of medical leaves of absence before deciding that he could no longer carry out the duties of CEO.
And that’s where the similarities with Steve Jobs end. I do not know Mr. Dubow personally, and have no reason to doubt that he is a fine fellow. My sadness comes not from his departure from Gannett, but for what it exemplifies.
When Dubow took over as CEO, Gannett employed some 52,000 people in its publishing, broadcast, digital and mobile divisions. When he resigned last week, it employed 32,000 people. Among the 20,000 jobs that were cut were thousands of talented journalists. Mr. Dubow also required many employees to take unpaid leaves of absence, and instituted pay freezes. He referred to this as “increasing workplace efficiencies.”
When Dubow took over as CEO, Gannett’s stock price was $72-something a share. At his departure last week it was $10-something, down 85 percent in his tenure.
Last year, while laying off more journalists, Gannett increased Mr. Dubow’s 2010 pay package to $7.9 million. Including the estimated future value of stock awards and options, his 2010 pay package could increase to $9.4 million. Gannett said the raise was meant to reward Mr. Dubow for boosting the publisher’s earnings — remember, the emphasis is always on the net — for the fourth consecutive year.
Mr. Dubow managed to keep earnings high, according to analysts, by cutting costs (i.e. people) more aggressively than any other company in the media industry. Gannett refers to this as “workplace restructuring.”
Mr. Dubow is now eligible to collect a retirement and disability pay package of $37.1 million, according to Gannett.
Bob Dickey, the head of Gannett’s U.S. newspapers division, also got a hefty pay raise in 2010 to $3.4 million, up from $1.9 million the year before. In a memo this summer announcing that 700 more newspaper jobs would be eliminated, Mr. Dickey wrote: “While we have sought many ways to reduce costs, I regret to tell you that we will not be able to avoid layoffs.”
But back to Mr. Dubow. We mentioned the Steve Jobs comparison, and I hasten to add that I wish Mr. Dubow a speedy recovery from the medical problems that required his leaves of absence and resignation.
- Annual base pay: Steve Jobs $1. Craig Dubow $1.2 million.
- Stock price during CEO tenure: Apple, up 4,000+ percent. Gannett, down 85 percent.
- Job creation during CEO tenure: Apple, plus 28,000. Gannett: minus 20,000.
- Notable new products as CEO of Apple: Macintosh, iMac, MacBook, iPod, iTunes, Apple Stores, iPhone, iPad, etc., etc.
- Notable new products as CEO of Gannett: ?
In his resignation statement, Mr. Dubow insisted that his top priority as CEO was to serve the consumer:
“I am extremely proud of where we are today as a company. We have always maintained an unwavering focus on the consumer. As a result, we have evolved into a digitally led media and marketing solutions company committed to delivering trusted news and information anywhere, anytime.”
And the Gannett board insisted that serving the consumer — not, of course, to maximize corporate profits and executive compensation — was the corporate goal.
“Craig championed our consumers and their ever-changing needs for news and information,” said Marjorie Magner, non-executive chairman of Gannett’s board of directors.
Gracia Martore, who replaces Dubow as CEO, said: “We will continue our relentless quest to provide trusted news and information and will actively support the people and businesses in the communities we serve.”
These people are lying. The corporate goal is not to serve the consumer; it’s to maximize profits and pay packages for top executives. Can anyone argue that Gannett newspapers and journalism are better today, and that news consumers are better served?
How did Mr. Dubow and Gannett serve the consumer? They laid off journalists. They cut the pay of those who remained, while demanding that they work longer hours. They closed news bureaus. They slashed newsroom budgets. As revenue fell, and stock prices tanked, and product quality deteriorated, they rewarded themselves huge pay raises and bonuses.
This is the sort of stuff that causes people to occupy Wall Street and main streets in cities across the country.
Should Gannett CEO Dubow have been rewarded for company’s decline?
Peter Lewis, who once was an employee at The Des Moines Register before Gannett bought it, writes that the compensation of departing CEO Craig Dubow is ironic — he stands to collect $37.1 million in retirement and disability and his 2010 pay package was $7.9 million — considering how much the company has shrunk and lost value during his tenure. The company employed 52,000 people when Dubow became CEO; now it’s 32,000. Gannett’s stock traded at about $72 per share then; now it’s around $10. “Can anyone argue that Gannett newspapers and journalism are better today, and that news consumers are better served? … As revenue fell, and stock prices tanked, and product quality deteriorated, they rewarded themselves huge pay raises and bonuses.” Those figures are especially revealing, he says, when compared to similar figures for Apple under Steve Jobs. PaidContent’s David Kaplan writes that comparing a legacy media company to a tech company is a bit of an “apples-to-oranges comparison, pardon the pun. … But in a larger sense, placing Jobs and Dubow side-by-side clearly shows the opportunities on the tech side of the media divide and the misery on the content creation side.” || Related: In addition to the $37.1 million, Dubow gets an office, secretary, free tech support, life and medical insurance, access to Gannett’s plane and more. He has to pay by the hour for the plane. (Footnoted) || Earlier: What’s next for Gannett after CEO resigns, MomsLikeMe shuttered on same day (Poynter.org)Ex-Gannett Employee: Craig Dubow’s Performance ‘Is What Causes People To Occupy Wall Street’
Peter Lewis, a former employee of Gannett (as well as Fortune and the New York Times) has slammed ex-CEO Craig Dubow for cutting jobs and getting paid for it.
Dubow, who resigned Friday citing medical issues, laid off 20,000 staffers during his tenure as CEO, Lewis says. The company’s stock fell from $72 a share to $10. And Dubow’s pay package for 2010 was nearly $8 million.
His retirement/disability pay package could be as much as $37 million, or “considerably” more than the $22.5 million he’d get if he retired for non-disability.
“The corporate goal is not to serve the consumer; it’s to maximize profits and pay packages for top executives,” Lewis writes. “Can anyone argue that Gannett newspapers and journalism are better today, and that news consumers are better served?”
To Dubow’s credit, paidContent says, “Dubow was able to return Gannett to profitability during one of the worst periods for newspaper companies in particular and media companies in general. He’s also tried to pivot Gannett into being a interactive media and marketing company as a way of supporting the traditional side of the business until digital revenues can completely offset print losses.
“But he also cut more than he built, a situation that will plague the legacy of most media company chiefs who had to deal with more challenges than opportunities.”
“This,” Lewis writes, “is the sort of stuff that causes people to occupy Wall Street and main streets in cities across the country.”
What Dubow gets if disability forces him out: $37M; payout much bigger than in traditional retirement
Dubow |
Dubow also would get limited use of the Corporate jet and access to a country club, the cost of which he would pay -- but at substantially lower, company-subsidized rates, the proxy report says.
The $37.1 million disability payout is outlined on Pages 45-47 of the report.
Martore |
In its statement, the company quoted lead board of directors member Duncan McFarland: "We wish Craig well during this difficult personal time. The board has confidence in Gracia and our very capable management team to run the day to day operations of the company, and we believe Gannett won't miss a beat at this important juncture."
The announcement came after stock markets closed. This morning, GCI recently traded for $10.12 a share, up 4 cents.
Length of leave unclear
Dubow has been chief executive since July 2005, and was made chairman of the board of directors a year later. Martore was promoted in February 2010 to GCI's No. 2 executive, president and chief operating officer. She had been chief financial officer since 2003, and first joined the company in 1985.
The company's announcement did not say when Dubow's medical leave would start, and did not estimate how long he might be out. It also did not say when Dubow and the board of directors first discussed this leave, leaving unanswered questions about the urgency of his medical situation.
Since his return to work in October 2009 from his last leave, Dubow has often been seen in a wheelchair and using crutches during frequent visits to GCI worksites. He has been reported on these visits as recently as the past month.
Breakdown of $37.1M
Similar disability payouts, although in very different amounts, also are due to Martore and four other executives, the proxy says.
Here's a breakdown of the estimated payouts to Dubow:
- Pension: $12.9 million
- Stock options: $6 million
- Restricted stock units: $5.3 million
- Disability benefits: $6.9 million
- Final salary, bonus payment: $5.9 million
Board empowered to remove him
However, under the terms of Dubow's employment contract, the board of directors is empowered to remove him under circumstances where he is no longer able to perform his duties or has otherwise violated the terms of the contract.
If Dubow were to retire voluntarily, rather than via disability, he would get the much smaller $22.5 million as follows, according to Page 43 of the proxy report.
- Pension: $11.1 million
- Stock options: $6 million
- Restricted stock units: $5.3 million
"Pursuant to their employment contracts, upon a termination of employment as a result of disability, Dubow and Martore would be entitled to a lump sum payment in an amount equal to two times the sum of (a) the executive’s base salary as of the date of termination (but no less than the minimum contractually provided for base salaries for Dubow and Martore, and ignoring any voluntary reduction of their salaries) and (b) the greater of (i) the amount of the executive’s annual bonus earned with respect to the year ended prior to the year of termination, or (ii) the average of the executive’s three most recent annual bonuses as of the date of termination."
In 2010, Dubow's base salary was $1.2 million, an amount he voluntarily reduced to $1 million beginning Nov. 1, 2008. His cash bonus was $1.75 million. That is the highest of his three most recent bonuses. In 2009 and 2008, his bonuses were $1.45 million and $875,000. ( Table lists salary and bonus payments for all six NEOs last year.)
GCI is the largest U.S. newspaper publisher by circulation. It has nearly 100 dailies in the U.S., including USA Today, and the U.K. It also owns 23 U.S. TV stations, plus hundreds of other media businesses, employing more than 30,000 workers.
The proxy report's Page 46 details potential disability payments to Martore and the other four officers: Chief Financial Officer Paul Saleh, U.S. newspapers division President Bob Dickey, USAT President Dave Hunke, and broadcasting division President Dave Lougee.
Other non-cash disability benefits
In addition to the $37.1 million in payments, Dubow also is entitled to the same other benefits promised him if he left via a conventional retirement, the report says, in footnotes on Page 44 and 47. They include:
- Supplemental medical insurance coverage that extends to his family, plus a Medicare supplement and reimbursement for the cost of Medicare Part B coverage, beginning at age 65 and continuing for life.
- Legal and financial counseling services on the same basis as available to an active executive at the time his employment terminates, for three years after his employment terminates, at an estimated incremental cost to the company of approximately $25,000 annually.
- Use of company aircraft "for three years after his employment terminates, at times not inconveniencing the company, the cost of which would be reimbursed by Mr. Dubow at the company’s then-effective incremental hourly rate."
- Ownership of existing home office equipment would be transferred to him.
- Home computer assistance, for three years after his employment terminates.
- Use of an office, secretarial assistance and access to company facilities at no charge for three years after his employment terminates.
- Access, for three years after his employment terminates, to "one country club selected by Mr. Dubow of which the company is a member at the time of his retirement and to which Mr. Dubow had access during the time of his employment, the usage cost of which would be paid by Mr. Dubow."
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