SEC Adopts Final Rules on Proxy Access and Facilitation of Nominations of Directors by Shareholders

On August 25, 2010, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) adopted final rules to facilitate nominations of directors by shareholders, including so-called “proxy access” rules. As adopted, the rules permit any shareholder or group of shareholders that has owned three percent or more of the company’s voting stock for at least three years to include director nominees in that company’s proxy materials. Shareholders will be entitled to include the greater of one nominee or the number of nominees that represent twenty-five percent of the total number of the company’s directors. As explained in the SEC’s 451-page release, the rules are mandatory and will become effective sixty days after publication in the federal register, though the SEC granted a three-year reprieve to “smaller reporting companies.” The rules fundamentally affect the manner in which directors are elected and deserve close attention.

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Three Bills Introduced to Repeal Section 929I of the Dodd-Frank Financial Reform Bill

As reported in BNA’s Privacy Law Watch on July 29, 2010, three bills were introduced by House Republicans to repeal Section 929I of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the “Dodd-Frank Act”).  Section 929I of the Dodd-Frank Act has been a source of controversy because it gives the SEC significant latitude to sidestep FOIA requests by providing that the SEC "shall not be compelled to disclose" certain information it obtains pursuant to the '34 Act when conducting surveillance, risk assessments or other regulatory and oversight activities.

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