Filed by the Registrant x
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Filed by a Party other than the Registrant o
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Check the appropriate box:
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o
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Preliminary Proxy Statement
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o
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
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x
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Definitive Proxy Statement
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o
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Definitive Additional Materials
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o
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Soliciting Material Pursuant to §240.14a-12
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CH ENERGY GROUP, INC.
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(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
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(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
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x
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No fee required.
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o
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Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.
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1)
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Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
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2)
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Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
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3)
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Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
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4)
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Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
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5)
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Total fee paid:
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o
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Fee previously paid with preliminary materials.
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o
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Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
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1)
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Amount Previously Paid:
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2)
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Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.
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3)
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Filing Party:
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4)
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Date Filed:
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Steven V. Lant
Chairman of the Board, President
and Chief Executive Officer
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NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
|
|||
To the Holders of Shares of Common Stock:
|
|||
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of CH Energy Group, Inc. (the “Corporation”) will be held:
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TIME
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10:30 AM (Eastern Time) on Tuesday, April 24, 2012
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PLACE
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Offices of the Corporation
284 South Avenue
Poughkeepsie, New York 12601-4839
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ITEMS OF BUSINESS
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(1)To elect nine Directors, each to serve for a one-year term expiring in 2013;
(2)To hold an advisory (non-binding) vote to approve named executive officer compensation;
(3)To ratify the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the Corporation’s independent registered public accounting firm for 2012; and
(4)To act upon any other matters that may properly come before the meeting.
These items are more fully described in the following pages, which are part of this Notice.
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RECORD DATE
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Holders of Record of Shares of Common Stock on the close of business on March 1, 2012, are entitled to receive notice of, to attend, and to vote at, the meeting.
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ANNUAL REPORT
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The Annual Report to Shareholders, as combined with the Corporation’s Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, is enclosed.
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PROXY VOTING
|
It is important that your shares be represented and voted at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders. Please MARK, SIGN, DATE, AND RETURN PROMPTLY the enclosed proxy card in the postage-paid envelope furnished for that purpose. As an alternative to returning your proxy card by mail, you can also vote your shares by proxy by calling the toll-free number on your proxy card or by using the Internet at www.cesvote.com. For shareholders of record, both methods of voting are available twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, and will be accessible until 11:59 PM (Eastern Time) on April 23, 2012. Shareholders who hold shares through a bank or broker should follow the instructions provided on their voting instruction form. You may revoke your voted proxy in the manner described in the accompanying Proxy Statement at any time prior to its exercise at the meeting, or you may vote in person if you attend the meeting.
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By Order of the Board of Directors,
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|||
March 21, 2012
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Denise D. VanBuren
Corporate Secretary and
Vice President – Corporate Communications
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1
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4
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4
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10
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17
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20
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21
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22
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22
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44
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61
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62
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62
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(a)
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by submitting written notice of revocation to the Corporate Secretary;
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(b)
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by submitting another proxy by telephone, electronically, using the Internet at www.cesvote.com, or by mail that is later dated and (if by mail) that is properly signed; or
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(c)
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by voting in person at the Annual Meeting.
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Principal Occupation and
|
Qualifications That Led the Board
|
||||
Business Experience During
|
to Conclude This Person Should
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||||
Name and Age (1)
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the Past Five Years (1)
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Serve as a Director
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Steven V. Lant
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55 |
Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation; Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Central Hudson; Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer of CHEC, 2004-present; Director of the Corporation, Central Hudson, and CHEC.
Mr. Lant has been a Director since 2002.
|
Mr. Lant started working with Central Hudson in the Cost and Rate Department in 1980, and he was steadily promoted until he reached his current position in 2004. He is an economist by training, and he has previously served as Chief Operating Officer and as Chief Financial Officer of the Corporation. He is thoroughly familiar with the finances and operations of CH Energy Group, Central Hudson, and CHEC. Having lived in the Hudson Valley for 30 years, Mr. Lant is also thoroughly familiar with the Central Hudson service territory. Mr. Lant’s financial expertise, thorough understanding of the businesses of the Corporation, including long experience with the regulatory environment in which Central Hudson operates, and his lengthy experience in the Hudson Valley, all serve to enable him to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board.
|
||
Margarita K. Dilley
|
54 |
Consultant; Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director of Astrolink International LLC, 1998-2004; Director of Strategy & Corporate Development and Treasurer of INTELSAT, 1992-1998; Treasurer, COMSAT Corporation, 1987-1992.
Ms. Dilley has been a Director since 2004.
|
Ms. Dilley has in-depth experience with strategic planning, financial management, and corporate governance. She has served as Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and a member of the Board of Directors of Astrolink International, LLC, (a satellite telecommunications company) as well as Director of Strategy & Corporate Development and Treasurer of INTELSAT, and as Treasurer and Director of Finance of COMSAT. Ms. Dilley’s financial expertise and her extensive business experience in a highly competitive industry enables her to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board. In nominating Ms. Dilley, the Governance and Nominating Committee also gave positive consideration to her qualification to serve as an “audit committee financial expert.”
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Principal Occupation and
|
Qualifications That Led the Board
|
||||
Business Experience During
|
to Conclude This Person Should
|
||||
Name and Age (1)
|
the Past Five Years (1)
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Serve as a Director
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|||||
Steven M. Fetter
|
60 |
President, Regulation UnFettered, a consulting firm, 2002-present; Group Head and Managing Director, Global Power Group, Fitch Ratings, 1998-2002; Chairman and Commissioner of the Michigan Public Service Commission, 1987-1993; Acting Associate Deputy Under Secretary of Labor, U.S. Department of Labor, 1987; Majority General Counsel, Michigan State Senate, 1984-1985.
Mr. Fetter has been a Director since 2002.
|
Mr. Fetter has extensive experience in connection with the regulated utility industry, having served as the Chairman of the Michigan Public Service Commission and as a Managing Director of the Global Power Group within Fitch Ratings. He currently serves as President of Regulation UnFettered, a consulting firm specializing in matters relating to the regulation of electric and natural gas utilities. Mr. Fetter’s extensive experience in the energy industry enables him to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board.
|
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|
|||||
Stanley J. Grubel
|
70 |
Consultant; Director, Asyst Technologies, Inc., 1997-2009; Vice President and General Manager, Philips Semiconductor Manufacturing, Inc., 2000-2001; Chief Executive Officer, MiCRUS, 1995-2000.
Mr. Grubel has been a Director since 1999.
|
Mr. Grubel previously served as the Chief Executive Officer of MiCRUS, an advanced semiconductor manufacturing company employing approximately 1,300 employees in the Central Hudson service territory. Mr. Grubel also served as a Director of the New York Business Council and as Chair of the Marist College School of Management’s Advisory Council. Mr. Grubel’s management experience in a highly competitive industry, his business experience within the Central Hudson service territory, and his experience as the leader of a major customer of Central Hudson enable him to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board.
|
||
Manuel J. Iraola
|
64 |
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, The Aloaris Group, a consulting and investment firm, 2002-present; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Homexperts, Inc. (d/b/a Homekeys), a real estate services company, 2005-present; Director, Schweitzer-Mauduit International, Inc., 2005-2007; President, Phelps Dodge Industries, 1995-2002; Director, Phelps Dodge Corporation, 1997-2002.
Mr. Iraola has been a Director since 2006.
|
Mr. Iraola serves as the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Aloaris Group, a consulting and investment firm based in Miami, Florida. He previously served as the President of Phelps Dodge Industries and as a Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of the Columbian Chemicals Company. Mr. Iraola’s financial expertise and his executive experience with complex business operations enable him to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board.
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Principal Occupation and
|
Qualifications That Led the Board
|
||||
Business Experience During
|
to Conclude This Person Should
|
||||
Name and Age (1)
|
the Past Five Years (1)
|
Serve as a Director
|
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|
|||||
E. Michel Kruse
|
68 |
Retired; Chairman and Senior Advisor-Financial Institutions Group of UBS Warburg, 2000-2002; Chief Executive of BHF-Bank AG, 1997-1999; Chief Financial Officer and Vice Chairman of the Board of The Chase Manhattan Corporation, 1992-1996.
Mr. Kruse has been a Director since 2002.
|
Mr. Kruse has in-depth experience with strategic planning, financial management, and corporate governance. His responsibilities at Chase included being in charge of all finance and risk assessment functions of the bank, as well as overseeing the bank’s financing of a portfolio of public utilities in the United States. Mr. Kruse’s financial expertise, his knowledge of utility finances, and his extensive experience in managing risk enable him to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board. In nominating Mr. Kruse, the Governance and Nominating Committee also gave positive consideration to his qualification to serve as an “audit committee financial expert.”
|
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Edward T. Tokar
|
64 |
Senior Managing Director of Investments, Beacon Trust Company, 2004-present, Vice President-Investments and Corporate Officer, Honeywell International, Inc. and predecessor companies, including Chief Executive Officer, Allied Capital Management, LLC, 1977-2004; Trustee, the Gabelli Dividend and Income Trust, 2003-present; Trustee, the Gabelli Global Deal Fund, 2006-present; Director, Teton Advisors, Inc., 2008-2010; Director, DB Hedge Strategies Fund LLC, 2002-2007; Director, Topiary Fund for Benefit Plan Investors LLC, 2004-2007.
Mr. Tokar has been a Director since 2009.
|
Mr. Tokar serves as a Senior Managing Director of the Beacon Trust Company (trust services), having previously served as the Chief Executive Officer of Allied Capital Management, LLC (a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International Inc.). Mr. Tokar was responsible for Honeywell’s investment management program for employee benefit fund assets totaling $18 billion worldwide. Mr. Tokar is a Certified Public Accountant and he also led the Finance Division at the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association in Washington, D.C. Mr. Tokar’s financial expertise and extensive experience in assessing and managing investments enable him to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board.
|
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Principal Occupation and
|
Qualifications That Led the Board
|
||||
Business Experience During
|
to Conclude This Person Should
|
||||
Name and Age (1)
|
the Past Five Years (1)
|
Serve as a Director
|
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|
|||||
Jeffrey D. Tranen
|
65 |
Senior Vice President, Compass Lexecon (an FTI Company), a consulting firm, 2000-present; Director, Doble Engineering Company, 1998-2007; Director, Oglethorpe Power Corporation, 2000-2004; Director, Earthfirst Technologies Incorporated, 2001-2002; President and Chief Operating Officer, Sithe Northeast Inc., 1999-2000; President and Chief Executive Officer, California Independent System Operator, 1997-1999; President, New England Power Company, 1993-1997.
Mr. Tranen has been a Director since 2004.
|
Mr. Tranen is currently a Senior Vice President of Compass Lexecon (a consulting firm), having previously served as President of the New England Power Company, President and Chief Executive Officer of the California Independent System Operator, and as President and Chief Operating Officer of Sithe Northeast, Inc., where he was responsible for acquiring and overseeing generating assets totaling 8000 megawatts. Mr. Tranen’s extensive operating and management experience in the regulated and unregulated energy industries enable him to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board.
|
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Ernest R. Verebelyi
|
64 |
Retired; Non-executive Chairman, 2005-present, and Director, 2003- present, Columbus McKinnon Corporation, an industrial manufacturing company; President- Americas, Terex Corporation, 2001-2002; President-Americas and Mining, Terex Corporation, 2001.
Mr. Verebelyi has been a Director since 2006.
|
Mr. Verebelyi currently serves as the Non-executive Chairman of Columbus McKinnon Corporation, an international publicly owned manufacturer of industrial equipment based in Amherst, N.Y. and listed on NASDAQ. Mr. Verebelyi previously served as President-Americas of the Terex Corporation, as Executive Vice President of Operations, General Signal Corporation, and as Executive Vice President-Special Products Division of the Emerson Electric Company. Mr. Verebelyi’s involvement in the governance of a public company and his executive experience with complex business operations enable him to serve meaningfully and effectively on our Board.
|
||
·
|
In no event will a Director be considered “independent” if:
|
|
(A)
|
within the preceding three years:
|
|
(i)
|
the Director was employed by the Corporation;
|
|
(ii)
|
any member of the Director’s immediate family was employed by the Corporation as an executive officer;
|
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(iii)
|
the Director or any member of his or her immediate family received more than $120,000 during a twelve-month period within the last three years in direct compensation from the Corporation (other than Director’s fees and pension or other forms of deferred compensation for prior service with the Corporation); or
|
|
(iv)
|
an executive officer of the Corporation was on the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors of an entity that employed either the Director or any member of his or her immediate family as an executive officer; or
|
|
(B)
|
(i)
|
the Director or any member of his or her immediate family is a current partner of a firm that is the Corporation’s internal or external auditor;
|
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(ii)
|
the Director is a current employee of such a firm;
|
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(iii)
|
any member of the immediate family of the Director is a current employee of such a firm and participates in the firm’s audit, assurance, or tax compliance (but not tax planning) practice; or
|
|
(iv)
|
the Director or any member of his or her immediate family was within the last three years (but is no longer) a partner or employee of such a firm and personally worked on the Corporation’s audit within that time; or
|
|
(C)
|
the Director is a current employee, or an immediate family member of the Director is a current executive officer, of an entity that has made payments to, or received payments from, the Corporation for property or services in an amount which, in any of the last three fiscal years, exceeds the greater of $1 million or 2% of such other entity’s consolidated gross revenues.
|
·
|
Transactions between the Corporation and another entity with which a Director or a member of a Director’s immediate family is affiliated:
|
|
(i)
|
if the transactions occurred more than three years prior to the determination of independence, or
|
|
(ii)
|
if the transactions occur in the ordinary course of business and are consistent with other arm’s length transactions in which the Corporation has engaged with third parties, unless
|
|
(a)
|
the Director is a current employee, executive officer, director, or owner of 5% or more of the voting stock of the other entity, or a member of the Director’s immediate family is a current employee, executive officer, director, or owner of 5% or more of the voting stock of the other entity, and
|
|
(b)
|
such transactions represent, in any of the last three fiscal years, more than the greater of $1 million or 2% of the other entity’s consolidated gross revenues; and
|
·
|
Discretionary charitable contributions by the Corporation to non-profit entities with which a Director or a member of the Director’s immediate family is affiliated, if such contributions:
|
|
(i)
|
occurred more than three years prior to the determination of independence, or
|
|
(ii)
|
are consistent with the Corporation’s philanthropic practices, unless
|
|
(a)
|
the Director or family member is a current executive officer, director, or trustee of the entity, and
|
|
(b)
|
the Corporation’s contributions represent, in any of the last three fiscal years, more than the greater of $1 million or 2% of such entity’s consolidated gross revenues.
|
|
1.
|
reviewed and discussed the audited financial statements with management;
|
|
2.
|
discussed with the Independent Accountants the matters required to be discussed by Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61, as amended (AICPA, Professional standards, Vol.1 AU Section 380, as adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board in Rule 3200T);
|
|
3.
|
received the written disclosures and the letter from the Independent Accountants required by applicable requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board regarding the Independent Accountant’s communications with the Audit Committee concerning independence, and has discussed with the Independent Accountant the Independent Accountant’s independence; and
|
|
4.
|
received the reports of the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer relating to their evaluation of the Corporation’s internal control over financial reporting.
|
The Audit Committee:
|
|
Margarita K. Dilley, Chair
|
|
Steven M. Fetter
|
|
Stanley J. Grubel
|
|
E. Michel Kruse
|
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
|
2011
|
2010
|
||||||
Audit Fees
|
$ | 1,043,158 | $ | 1,057,732 | ||||
Tax Fees | ||||||||
Includes review of consolidated federal and state income tax returns and tax research
|
$ | 29,300 | $ | 22,200 | ||||
All Other Fees | ||||||||
Includes consulting services
|
$ | 60,600 | $ | 313,274 | ||||
TOTAL
|
$ | 1,133,058 | $ | 1,393,206 |
Name of Beneficial Owner
|
Amount and Nature of
Beneficial Ownership of
the Corporation’s
Common Stock (1)(2)
|
Percentage of the
Corporation’s
Common
Stock (3)
|
|||||
Margarita K. Dilley (9)
|
0 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Steven M. Fetter (9)
|
5,618 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Stanley J. Grubel (2)(9)
|
3,319 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Manuel J. Iraola (9)
|
6,850 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
E. Michel Kruse (2)(9)
|
1,100 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Steven V. Lant (2)(8)
|
30,870 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Edward T. Tokar (9)
|
5,000 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Jeffrey D. Tranen (9)
|
0 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Ernest R. Verebelyi (9)
|
0 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
8,851 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
John E. Gould
|
12,351 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
W. Randolph Groft (8)
|
4,433 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
James P. Laurito (8)
|
24 |
Less than 1%
|
|||||
Blackrock, Inc. (4)
|
1,185,675 | 7.96% | |||||
GAMCO Investors, Inc. (5)
|
1,543,938 | 10.37% | |||||
Manulife Financial Corporation (6)
|
1,069,530 | 7.19% | |||||
The Vanguard Group, Inc. (7)
|
789,626 | 5.30% | |||||
All Directors and Executive Officers as a Group (16 Persons)
|
96,937 |
Less than 1%
|
(1)
|
In the case of Directors and executive officers, this table is based on information furnished to the Corporation by such persons as of December 31, 2011. Unless otherwise noted, each individual or entity named in the table has sole voting and dispositive power.
|
(2)
|
Includes shares of Common Stock covered by options that are exercisable within sixty days of December 31, 2011. The Directors and executive officers named in the above table who have such options and the number of shares which may be acquired are as follows: Mr. Grubel (1,000); Mr. Kruse (1,000); and Mr. Lant (4,400). The Directors and executive officers as a group hold a total of 7,300 options that are currently exercisable.
|
(3)
|
The percentage of ownership calculation for each beneficial owner, including each percentage calculation set forth in footnotes 4, 5, 6 and 7 below, has been made on the basis of the amount of outstanding shares of Common Stock as of the record date.
|
(4)
|
Based upon a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on February 13, 2012, by Blackrock, Inc. In the Schedule 13G/A, Blackrock, Inc. reports beneficial ownership of Common Stock, as of December 30, 2011, in the amount of 1,185,675 shares (7.96%). The principal business address of Blackrock, Inc., as reported in the filing, is 40 East 52nd Street, New York, New York 10022.
|
(5)
|
Based upon a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on February 2, 2012, by GAMCO Investors, Inc. on behalf of Gabelli Funds, LLC, GAMCO Asset Management Inc., GGCP, Inc., GAMCO Investors, Inc., Teton Advisors, Inc., and Mario J. Gabelli. As reported in the Schedule 13G/A, as of December 30, 2011, the Corporation’s Common Stock was beneficially owned as follows: Gabelli Funds, LLC – 810,394 (5.44%), GAMCO Asset Management Inc. – 732,644 (4.92%), Teton Advisors, Inc. – 400 (less than 1%) and Mario J. Gabelli – 500 (less than 1%). GAMCO does not have the sole authority to vote 849,769 of the reported shares. The principal business address of GAMCO Investors, Inc., as reported in the filing, is One Corporate Center, Rye, New York 10580.
|
(6)
|
Based upon a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on February 13, 2012, by Manulife Financial Corporation on behalf of Manulife Financial Corporation, Manulife Asset Management (North America) Limited, and Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC. As reported on the Schedule 13G/A, as of December 31, 2011, Common Stock was beneficially owned as follows: Manulife Asset Management (North America) Limited – 11,530 (less than 1%); and Manulife Asset Management (US) LLC – 1,058,000 (7.11%). The principal business address for Manulife Financial Corporation, as reported in the filing, is 200 Bloor Street, East, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4W1E5.
|
(7)
|
Based upon a Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on February 10, 2012, by The Vanguard Group, Inc. on behalf of The Vanguard Group, Inc., and Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company. As reported on the Schedule 13G, as of December 31, 2011, The Vanguard Group, Inc. reported beneficial ownership of 789,626 (5.30%), with sole voting and shared dispositive power with respect to 22,433 shares (0.15%) (as to which its wholly-owned subsidiary, Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company held beneficial ownership as a result of serving as investment manager of collective trust accounts) and sole dispositive power with respect to 767,193 shares (5.15%). The principal business address of The Vanguard Group, Inc., as reported in the filing, is 100 Vanguard Blvd., Malvern, Pennsylvania 19355.
|
(8)
|
Messrs. Lant, Groft and Laurito have deferred compensation accounts under the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan that are credited with deferred stock units of Common Stock as of December 31, 2011. As of that date, Mr. Groft had 5,278 deferred stock units and Mr. Laurito had 146 deferred stock units. The deferred stock units credited to Mr. Lant’s account under the plan are shown in the table set forth in the next section entitled “Stock and Stock Equivalents Ownership of Directors.” Such shares are not reflected on the “Beneficial Ownership” table.
|
(9)
|
The non-employee Directors have deferred compensation accounts under the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan that are credited with deferred stock units of Common Stock as of December 31, 2011. Please refer to the next section entitled “Stock and Stock Equivalents Ownership of Directors” for more information. Such deferred stock units are not reflected in the “Beneficial Ownership” table.
|
Name
|
Number of
Deferred Stock Units (1)
|
Number of Shares
Beneficially Owned (2)
|
Total Ownership (3)
|
|||||||||
Steven V. Lant
|
6,519 | 30,870 | 37,389 | |||||||||
Margarita K. Dilley
|
7,105 | 0 | 7,105 | |||||||||
Steven M. Fetter
|
6,552 | 5,618 | 12,170 | |||||||||
Stanley J. Grubel
|
7,219 | 3,319 | 10,538 | |||||||||
Manuel J. Iraola
|
2,690 | 6,850 | 9,540 | |||||||||
E. Michel Kruse
|
7,615 | 1,100 | 8,715 | |||||||||
Edward T. Tokar
|
2,761 | 5,000 | 7,761 | |||||||||
Jeffrey D. Tranen
|
7,358 | 0 | 7,358 | |||||||||
Ernest R. Verebelyi
|
6,842 | 0 | 6,842 | |||||||||
Total
|
54,661 | 52,757 | 107,418 |
____________________
|
(1)
|
The information in this column is as of December 31, 2011.
|
(2)
|
The information in this column is as of December 31, 2011, and reflects the total number of shares beneficially owned by each of the Directors as set forth in the table under the “Beneficial Ownership” section on page 20.
|
(3)
|
The total for each individual is less than 1% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock, and the total for the group of all independent Directors (8 persons) is 70,029, which is less than 1% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock; both percentages are calculated as of the record date.
|
|
•
|
Attract and retain experienced, talented, and performance-driven executives by offering compensation opportunities that are competitive with opportunities offered by comparable companies in the markets in which we compete for executive talent; and
|
|
•
|
Align the interests of our executive officers and shareholders by motivating executive officers to maximize our shareholders’ return on investment, to minimize risks over the long-term and to achieve high levels of customer satisfaction, and by rewarding executive officers for performance related to the creation of sustainable value.
|
|
•
|
We allocate a significant portion of the core program to variable compensation elements that are tied to CH Energy Group’s key performance objectives.
|
|
•
|
We maintain stock ownership requirements for our executives.
|
|
•
|
We maintain a Compensation Recovery Policy (commonly referred to as a clawback policy), which allows us to recover certain incentive compensation paid to an executive officer if the payment was based on financial results that the Corporation must subsequently restate as a result of that officer’s fraud or misconduct.
|
|
•
|
We provide only limited perquisites or fringe benefits to our executives, and those perquisites and fringe benefits are directly aligned to our business interests.
|
|
•
|
We closed our defined benefit retirement plans to new management employees as of January 1, 2008.
|
|
•
|
Our change in control agreements only provide benefits on a “double trigger,” meaning that the benefits are due only if our executives incur a qualifying termination of employment in connection with a change in control.
|
|
Program
|
Form
|
Fixed or
Variable
|
Business Objectives
|
|||
Base Salary
|
Cash
|
Fixed
|
Attract and retain experienced, talented, and performance-driven executives.
|
|||
Annual Short-term
Incentives
|
Cash
|
Variable
|
Attract and retain experienced, talented, and performance-driven executives; reward achievement of strong corporate performance, strong individual performance, and high levels of customer satisfaction; and emphasize variable performance-based compensation.
|
|||
Long-term Incentives
(i.e., equity awards)
|
Equity
|
Variable
|
Attract and retain experienced, talented, and performance-driven executives; reward achievement of strong corporate performance, including growth in earnings per share, and dividends paid to shareholders, positive stock price performance, and enhancement of sustainable long-term value; emphasize variable performance-based compensation; and promote stock ownership to align interests with shareholders.
|
|||
Retirement
|
Cash
|
Fixed
|
Retain experienced, talented, and performance-driven executives.
|
Allegheny Energy Inc.
|
Integrys Energy Group Inc.
|
||
Allete Inc.
|
MDU Resources Group Inc.
|
||
Alliant Energy Corp.
|
Nicor Inc.
|
||
Ameren Energy Corp.
|
Northeast Utilities
|
||
American Electric Power Co. Inc.
|
NorthWestern Corp.
|
||
Atmos Energy Corporation
|
NSTAR
|
||
Avista Corp.
|
NV Energy Inc.
|
||
Black Hills Power Corp.
|
Northwest Natural Gas Company
|
||
CenterPoint Energy Inc.
|
OGE Energy Corp.
|
||
Cleco Corp.
|
Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
|
||
CMS Energy Corp.
|
Pepco Holdings Inc.
|
||
Consolidated Edison Inc.
|
Pinnacle West Capital Corp.
|
||
Constellation Energy Group Inc.
|
Portland General Electric Co.
|
||
Dominion Resources Inc.
|
PPL Corp.
|
||
DPL Inc.
|
Progress Energy Inc.
|
||
DTE Energy Co.
|
Public Service Enterprise Group Inc.
|
||
Duke Energy Corp.
|
Puget Energy Inc.
|
||
E.ON U.S.
|
SCANA Corp.
|
||
Edison International
|
Sempra Energy
|
||
Energen Corp.
|
Southern Company
|
||
Energy Future Holdings Corp.
|
UIL Holdings Corp.
|
||
Energy Northwest
|
UniSource Energy Corp.
|
||
Entergy Corp.
|
Unitil Corp.
|
||
Exelon Corp.
|
Vectren Corp.
|
||
FirstEnergy Corp.
|
Westar Energy Inc.
|
||
FPL Group
|
Wisconsin Energy Corp.
|
||
Hawaiian Electric Industries Inc.
|
Xcel Energy Inc.
|
||
IDACORP Inc.
|
|
•
|
The Committee was able to confirm that the 2011 target total direct compensation for the Named Executive Officers was within the competitive range of the market data.
|
|
•
|
The Committee is able to better understand the relationship of various components of the total compensation program to each other. For example, the total remuneration calculations provided to the Compensation Committee illustrate how adjustments to base salary and short-term incentives impact the retirement benefits, and therefore total remuneration, of the Named Executive Officers.
|
Name
|
Short-Term Incentive Opportunity
|
|||
Mr. Lant
|
Increased from 60% to 70% of base salary
|
|||
Messrs. Laurito and Groft
|
Maintained at 50% of base salary
|
|||
Mr. Capone
|
Maintained at 45% of base salary
|
|||
Mr. Gould
|
Maintained at 40% of base salary
|
Performance Goal and Business Objective
|
Weight
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Superior
|
||||
CH Energy Group
|
||||||||
Dividends
|
||||||||
Increase quarterly dividend rate during 2011 to 55.5 cents
per share
|
40% | N/A |
Board decision made by September 30, 2011 to increase dividend in fourth quarter
|
Board decision made by June 30, 2011 to increase dividend in third quarter |
Objective: | The primary drivers of share price growth are earnings per share and capacity to pay dividends. |
EPS(1)(2)
|
||||||||
Achieve aggregate EPS target for Central Hudson and Griffith, adjusted for accretion from share repurchases
|
35%
|
$2.91
|
$3.06
|
$3.21
|
Objective: | The primary drivers of share price growth are earnings per share and capacity to pay dividends. |
(1) When these team goals were established, the Committee provided that actual earnings per share for Central Hudson would be normalized (i.e., adjusted) to eliminate the impact of major storms and that Griffith’s EPS would be normalized for heating degree days, both revenue and expense. The Committee believes that these items can distort performance during a year. Moreover, the Committee wanted to structure the EPS goals so that the executives will neither benefit nor be penalized as a result of certain events over which they have little control.
(2) Incremental overheads as a result of divestitures were not recognized as expenses for purposes of this goal. Accretion due to share repurchases funded by divestiture proceeds was not recognized for purposes of this goal.
|
Divestitures | ||||||||
Divest renewable asset portfolio | 25% | $53.6 million aggregate net proceeds |
$68.9 million aggregate net proceeds
|
$81.5 million aggregate net proceeds
|
Central Hudson
|
||||||||
Financials (1)(2)(3) |
50%
|
|||||||
Group Expenses | 25% | $135.7 million |
$133.2 million
|
$130.7 million
|
||||
EPS | 25% | $2.76 | $2.86 | $2.96 |
Objective: | Efficient and cost-effective operations serve regulated customers’ interests and increase the probability of earning the return on equity authorized by Central Hudson’s regulatory agency. Earnings per share is a primary driver of share price growth. |
(1)
|
When these team goals were established, the Committee provided that actual earnings per share for Central Hudson would be normalized (i.e., adjusted) to eliminate the impact of major storms. The Committee believes that this impact can distort performance during a year. Moreover, the Committee wanted to structure the expense goals so that the executives will neither benefit nor be penalized as a result of certain events over which they have little control.
|
(2)
|
Incremental overheads as a result of divestitures were not recognized as expenses for purposes of Group Expenses goal.
|
Customer Satisfaction
|
22%
|
|||||||
JD Power (Eastern Region) | 10% | N/A |
Above Median
|
Top Quartile
|
||||
PSC Service Quality Metrics | ||||||||
Customer Contact Index | 4% | PSC Target ≥ 85% | Index ≥ 88% | Index ≥ 90% | ||||
PSC Complaint Rate | 4% | N/A | PSC Target | N/A | ||||
Call Center Average Speed of Answer Within
Customer Services Group Budget
|
4% | 68% ≤ 30 sec. | 70% ≤ 30 sec. | 72% ≤ 30 sec. |
Objective: | Customer satisfaction is a metric used by Central Hudson’s regulatory agency, is a primary business objective for our regulated utility business, and directly relates to cost recovery and achievement of allowed rates of return on capital. |
Performance Goal and Business Objective
|
Weight
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Superior
|
||||
Safety Targets
|
15%
|
|||||||
OSHA Severity Index | 7.5% | 9.4 |
8.5
|
7.5
|
||||
Preventable Motor Vehicle Accidents | 7.5% | 34 | 31 | 27 |
Objective: |
Reducing injuries and motor vehicle accidents protects the safety of our employees and customers, reduces costs, and serves to improve the morale and operating performance of Central Hudson’s entire workforce.
|
Reliability
|
13%
|
|||||||
CAIDI - 2.50 | 4% | N/A |
Meet
all PSC
requirements
|
10% better than
applicable PSC Metrics,
subject to expense budget
|
||||
SAIFI - 1.45 | 4% | N/A | ||||||
Gas Safety Measures | 5% | N/A |
Objective: |
Reliability is a primary driver of utility customer satisfaction and is viewed as such by Central Hudson’s regulatory agency. Improving reliability has been the focus of a multi-year plan. SAIFI (System Average Interruption Frequency Index) and CAIDI (Customer Average Interruption Duration Index) have been selected as valid measures of reliability.
|
Griffith
|
|||||||||
EPS (1) |
60%
|
$0.16 | $0.20 | $0.24 |
Objective: |
The primary drivers of share price growth are earnings per share and capacity to pay dividends.
|
(1)
|
When these team goals were established, the Committee provided that actual earnings per share for Griffith would be normalized to eliminate the impact of abnormal heating degree days, both revenue and expense. The Committee believes that this impact can distort performance during a year. Moreover, the Committee wanted to structure the EPS goal so that the executives will neither benefit nor be penalized as a result of certain events over which they have little control.
|
Safety | |||||||||
Workers' Compensation
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
Incidents per 200,000 hours
|
10%
|
6.8
|
6.1
|
5.4
|
Objective: |
Reducing injuries protects the safety of our employees and customers, reduces costs, and serves to improve the morale and operating performance of Griffith’s entire workforce.
|
Acquisitions
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
Acquire tuck-in oil companies in the mid-Atlantic marketing area that meet the guidelines set by the Strategy and Finance Committee
|
30%
|
*
|
*
|
*
|
Objective: |
Increasing the customer base is an important component of increasing earnings per share.
|
*
|
The Compensation Committee has determined that the specific performance levels are confidential commercial information, the disclosure of which would result in competitive harm for CH Energy Group. These performance levels were established so that they were challenging but achievable. In this regard, target attainment was not assured. In fact, actual achievement levels under our STI program generally have been below target for 5 of the last 11 performance periods prior to 2011 (i.e., 2000 through 2010).
|
MR. CAPONE – INDIVIDUAL GOALS
|
||||||||
Goal
|
Weight
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Superior
|
||||
Divest renewable asset portfolio.
|
40%
|
$53.6 million aggregate net proceeds
|
$68.9 million aggregate net proceeds
|
$81.5 million aggregate net proceeds
|
||||
Provide visible and active support for corporate-wide B2E1 efforts. Measurement is based on achieving Central Hudson’s expense target.
|
20%
|
$135.7 million
|
$133.2 million
|
$130.7 million
|
||||
At Griffith, for acquisitions completed in 2010, achieve pro-forma earnings projections as set forth in documents used by the Board in approving the acquisition; performance of each acquisition is measured for the first full 12 calendar months of ownership. The level of achievement for this goal is calculated on the basis of the aggregate level of such “measured performances” for all acquisitions made in 2010.
|
5%
|
*
|
*
|
*
|
||||
Acquire tuck-in oil companies in the mid-Atlantic marketing area that meet the guidelines set by the Strategic Planning Committee.
|
10%
|
*
|
*
|
*
|
||||
Achieve Griffith EPS Target.
|
25% | $0.16 | $0.20 | $0.24 |
*
|
The Compensation Committee has determined that the specific performance levels are confidential commercial information, the disclosure of which would result in competitive harm for CH Energy Group. These performance levels were established so that they were challenging but achievable. In this regard, target attainment was not assured. In fact, actual achievement levels under our STI program generally have been below target for 5 of the last 11 performance periods prior to 2011 (i.e., 2000 through 2010).
|
MR. GOULD – INDIVIDUAL GOALS
|
||||||||
Goal
|
Weight
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Superior
|
||||
Hold face-to-face meetings with each law firm providing legal services (more than de minimis) to Griffith, develop recommendations with respect to maintaining and/or enhancing the legal services arrangements, and with respect to enhancements approved by Mr. Lant, develop action plans for implementation of the enhancements.
|
30%
|
N/A
|
Meetings held and recommendations submitted by July 31, 2011
|
Implementation by December 31 of all actions that are approved for implementation in 2011
|
||||
Hold face-to-face meetings with each law firm providing legal services (more than de minimis) to CHEC and/or to one or more of its subsidiaries that remain in the renewable asset portfolio, develop recommendations with respect to maintaining and/or enhancing the legal services arrangements, and with respect to enhancements approved by Mr. Lant, develop action plans for implementation of the enhancements.
|
10%
|
N/A
|
Meetings held and recommendations
submitted by July 31, 2011
|
Implementation by December 31 of all actions that are approved for implementation in 2011
|
||||
Prepare an analysis of the existing legal fee arrangements with primary outside counsel, develop recommendations for maintaining and/or enhancing the arrangements, and with respect to the enhancements approved by Mr. Lant, develop action plans for implementation of the enhancements.
|
30%
|
N/A
|
Analysis completed and recommendations
submitted by July 31, 2011
|
Implementation by December 31 of all actions that are approved for implementation in 2011
|
||||
Achieve assigned group expense budget, excluding special projects outside budget that may arise during the year (e.g., legal expenses for HVEX project; litigation outside normal course of business).
|
30%
|
105% of Budget
|
Achieve 2011 Budget
|
95% of Budget
|
MR. GROFT – INDIVIDUAL GOALS
|
||||||||
Goal
|
Weight
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Superior
|
||||
Acquire tuck-in oil companies in the mid-Atlantic marketing area that meet the guidelines set by the Strategy and Finance Committee.
|
10%
|
*
|
*
|
*
|
||||
Griffith Safety – Workers’ Compensation Incidents per 200,000 hours.
|
10%
|
6.8
|
6.1
|
5.4
|
||||
At Griffith, for acquisitions completed in 2010, achieve pro-forma earnings projections as set forth in documents used by the Board in approving the acquisition; performance of each acquisition is measured for the first full 12 calendar months of ownership. The level of achievement for this goal is calculated on the basis of the aggregate level of such “measured performances” for all acquisitions made in 2010.
|
5%
|
*
|
*
|
*
|
||||
Achieve service department net profitability inclusive of HVAC expansion.
|
15%
|
*
|
*
|
*
|
||||
Conduct CARGAS Software Pilot.
|
10%
|
*
|
*
|
*
|
||||
Operational Performance - Improve the percentage of ADS customers receiving deliveries between 150-235 gallons with run out % < 1%.
|
15%
|
*
|
*
|
*
|
||||
In consultation with a fraud prevention and detection consultant, develop, recommend and upon approval, implement a fraud detection and prevention program.
|
20% |
Submit recommendation by May 1, 2011, to both Internal Audit and the Griffith Board of Directors
|
Obtain approvals by July 1, 2011, from both Internal Audit and the Griffith Board for implementation of a fraud detection and prevention program |
Implement all aspects of the approved program by October 1, 2011
|
||||
Achieve identifiable expense reductions in 2011 from B2E process improvements.
|
15% | $100,000 | $125,000 | $150,000 | ||||
* The Compensation Committee has determined that the specific performance levels are confidential commercial information, the disclosure of which would result in competitive harm for CH Energy Group. These performance levels were established so that they were challenging but achievable. In this regard, target attainment was not assured. In fact, actual achievement levels under our STI program generally have been below target for 5 of the last 11 performance periods prior to 2011 (i.e., 2000 through 2010).
|
MR. LAURITO – INDIVIDUAL GOALS
|
||||||||
Goal
|
Weight
|
Threshold
|
Target
|
Superior
|
||||
Achieve Central Hudson’s Group Expenses and EPS Targets:
● Group Exepnses (1)
● EPS (2)
|
20%
20%
|
$135.7 million
$2.76
|
$133.2 million
$2.86
|
$130.7 million
$2.96
|
||||
Achieve the following credit and collections targets:
● Write-Offs
● Bad Debt Reserve
|
10%
10%
|
$8.4 million
$5.5 million
|
$8.0 million
$5.3 million
|
$7.6 million
$5.1 million
|
||||
Obtain PSC approval of the Twin Peaks and Electric Uncollectible portions of the pending Deferral Petition.
|
20%
|
PSC approval of deferral and proposed recovery method via offset of Twin Peaks and Electric Uncollectible Deferral Petition
|
Any approval for variation between these two outcomes
|
PSC approval of deferral and proposed recovery method via offset of Twin Peaks, Electric Uncollectible, and electric and gas property taxes Deferral Petition
|
||||
With the new Chief Information Officer, develop an outline of a 5-year IT Strategic Plan to utilize technology to reduce annualized costs.
|
10%
|
Plan outline by December 31, 2011 with $250K annualized cost reductions
|
Plan outline by September 30, 2011 with $500K annualized cost reductions
|
Plan outline by June 30, 2011 with $750K annualized cost reductions
|
||||
Achieve the Hudson Valley Express Pipeline (“HVEX”) Project milestones.
|
10%
|
Decision to proceed or not to proceed with next phase of HVEX project development, including establishment of 2011 schedule and budget, by April 30, 2011
|
Threshold performance, plus reach agreement with a selected partner in 2011
|
Target performance, plus reach agreement with an “Anchor Shipper” in 2011
|
(1)
|
Incremental overheads as a result of divestitures were not recognized as expenses for purposes of the Group Expenses goal. Excludes major storms, net of revenue matched expenses.
|
(2)
|
Accretion due to share repurchases was not recognized for purposes of the EPS goal.
|
2011 TEAM GOALS – RESULTS
|
||||
Performance Goal
|
Actual Results
|
Percentage of Target Achieved
|
||
CH Energy Group
|
||||
Dividend Increase
|
Dividend Increased | 100% | ||
Central Hudson and Griffith EPS
|
$3.21
|
150%
|
||
Divestiture Proceeds | Below Threshold | 0% | ||
Central Hudson
|
||||
Financials
|
||||
Group Expenses
EPS
|
$131 million
$2.96
|
144%
150%
|
||
Customer Satisfaction
|
||||
JD Power (Eastern Region)
|
Below Threshold
|
0%
|
||
PSC Service Quality Metrics
|
||||
Customer Contact Index
|
89.3%
|
133%
|
||
PSC Complaint Rate
|
At Target
|
100%
|
||
Call Center Average Speed of Answer Within Customer Services Group Budget
|
70.53% < 30 sec.
|
113%
|
||
Safety Targets
|
||||
OSHA Severity Index
|
6.96
|
150%
|
||
Preventable Motor Vehicle Accidents
|
21
|
150%
|
||
Reliability
|
||||
CAIDI – 2.50
|
2.26
|
148%
|
||
SAIFI – 1.45
|
1.19
|
150%
|
||
Gas Safety Measures
|
Above Target
|
141%
|
||
Griffith
|
||||
EPS
|
$0.11
|
0%
|
||
Workers' Compensation Incidents per 200,000 hours
|
6.40
|
79%
|
||
Acquire tuck-in oil companies
|
*
|
121%
|
·
|
Mr. Capone: The Committee set Mr. Capone’s achievement level for 2011 vs. individual goals at 62% of target because of: (i) a below threshold performance with regard to the aggregate divestiture proceeds from the renewable asset portfolio; (ii) a slightly below superior performance with regard to providing active support to the B2E efforts, and achieving Central Hudson’s expense target; (iii) a superior performance with regard to achieving pro-forma earnings projections for acquisitions made by Griffith in 2010; (iv) an above target performance in connection with Griffith’s acquisition of oil companies in the mid-Atlantic marketing area; and (v) a below threshold performance in connection with the earnings per share target at Griffith. The weighted average of the achievement levels for Mr. Capone’s team goals (93% achievement level with a 70% weighting) and individual goals (62% achievement level with a 30% weighting) resulted in a short-term incentive payout for Mr. Capone equal to 83% of his target short-term incentive opportunity.
|
·
|
Mr. Gould: The Committee set Mr. Gould’s achievement level for 2011 vs. individual goals at 160% of target because of: (i) a superior performance in connection with analyzing the legal services arrangements at Griffith and implementing his recommendations for enhancing the arrangements; (ii) a target performance with regard to analyzing the legal services arrangements for the subsidiaries in the renewable asset portfolio of CHEC, and in connection with implementing his recommendations for maintaining such arrangements; (iii) a target performance with regard to analyzing the existing legal fee arrangements with our primary outside counsel and in connection with implementing his recommendations with respect to such arrangements; and (iv) a superior performance with regard to achieving the legal services expense budgets at Central Hudson. The weighted average of the achievement levels for Mr. Gould’s team goals (93% achievement level with a 70% weighting) and individual goals (160% achievement level with a 30% weighting) resulted in a short-term incentive payout for Mr. Gould equal to 113% of his target short-term incentive opportunity.
|
·
|
Mr. Groft: The Committee set Mr. Groft’s achievement level for 2011 vs. individual goals at 139% of target because of: (i) an above target performance in connection with Griffith’s acquisition of oil companies in the mid-Atlantic marketing area; (ii) a below target performance with regard to workers’ compensation incidents in 2011; (iii) a superior performance with regard to achieving pro-forma earnings projections for acquisitions made by Griffith in 2010; (iv) a threshold performance with regard to Griffith’s service department achieving net profitability; (v) a superior performance in connection with transitioning Griffith to use a CARGAS operating software; (vi) an above threshold performance in connection with meeting identified operating metrics; (vii) a superior performance with regard to developing and implementing a new fraud prevention and detection program; and (viii) a superior performance with regard to achieving expense reductions in 2011 from B2E process improvements. The weighted average of the achievement levels for Mr. Groft’s team goals (44% achievement level with a 60% weighting) and individual goals (139% achievement level with a 40% weighting) resulted in a short-term incentive payout for Mr. Groft equal to 82% of his target short-term incentive opportunity.
|
·
|
Mr. Laurito: The Committee set Mr. Laurito’s achievement level for 2011 vs. individual goals at 148% of target because of: (i) a slightly below superior performance with regard to achieving Central Hudson’s expense target; (ii) a superior performance with regard to achieving Central Hudson’s earnings per share target; (iii) a superior performance with regard to achieving Central Hudson’s target for reducing uncollectible amounts owed by customers; (iv) an above target performance with regard to reducing Central Hudson’s bad debt reserve; (v) a threshold performance in connection with obtaining Public Service Commission approvals for the deferral of specified expense items and the accounting treatment of certain income tax refunds; (vi) a superior performance in connection with the development of a 5-year Information Technology “Strategic Plan” to reduce annualized costs; and (vii) a threshold performance in connection with the development of the Central Hudson project known as the “Hudson Valley Express Pipeline Project” or “HVEX.” The weighted average of the achievement levels for Mr. Laurito’s team goals (118% achievement level with a 70% weighting) and individual goals (148% achievement level with a 30% weighting) resulted in a short-term incentive payout for Mr. Laurito equal to 127% of his target short-term incentive opportunity.
|
Name
|
Team Goals
Achievement %
|
Individual Goals
Achievement %
|
Actual Payout Percentage (Weighted Average of Team and
Individual Achievement %’s)
|
|||
Mr. Lant
|
93%
|
N/A
|
93%
|
|||
Mr. Capone
|
93%
|
62%
|
83%
|
|||
Mr. Gould
|
93%
|
160%
|
113%
|
|||
Mr. Groft
|
44%
|
139%
|
82%
|
|||
Mr. Laurito
|
118%
|
148%
|
127%
|
|
•
|
If the Committee concludes that an eligible executive’s performance during the year merits an additional payment, the Committee may grant a discretionary bonus to the participant; provided that (i) the discretionary bonus cannot be awarded to “make-up” amounts that were not earned under the team and individual goals, and (ii) the discretionary bonus may not exceed 50% of the participant’s target opportunity apportioned to the individual goals.
|
|
•
|
If the Committee concludes that a participant’s performance during the year has been deficient, the Committee may reduce the award otherwise payable to the participant; provided, that the amount of any reduction may not exceed 50% of the participant’s target opportunity apportioned to the individual goals.
|
Name
|
Long-Term Incentive Opportunity
|
|||
Mr. Lant
|
Maintained at 110% of base salary
|
|||
Mr. Capone
|
Increased from 70% to 80% of base salary
|
|||
Mr. Laurito
|
Increased from 60% to 70% of base salary
|
|||
Mr. Groft
|
Maintained at 60% of base salary
|
Percentile Rank Relative to Performance Group | ||||||||
Performance Objectives –
Each has an Equal Weight of 50%
|
Threshold
(3.3% payout)
|
Target
(100% payout)
|
Superior
(150% payout)
|
Business Objective
|
||||
The average of CH Energy Group’s annual dividend yield on book value over the three-year performance cycle as compared to the average of the annual dividend yield on book value of the companies in the performance peer group over the same time period.
|
21st percentile | 50th percentile | 80th percentile or better |
The Compensation Committee and the Board believe that significant macro-economic factors, such as interest rates, affect our entire industry. The Board believes that our relative performance within the industry peer group is an important measure of performance and therefore assesses earnings per share growth and dividend yield against the performance group.
|
||||
The percentage growth in CH Energy Group’s basic earnings per share over the three-year performance cycle as compared to the percentage growth in basic earnings per share of the companies in the performance peer group over the same time period. | 21st percentile | 50th percentile | 80th percentile or better | The Compensation Committee and the Board believe that our shareholders desire a substantial dividend payment and consistent share price appreciation over time, which in combination provide an attractive total return on investment. Earnings per share growth is used as a performance metric because the Compensation Committee and the Board believe that earnings per share growth is the primary driver of share price appreciation. |
ALLETE, Inc.
|
NorthWestern Corporation
|
||
Ameren Corporation
|
NV Energy, Inc.
|
||
Avista Corporation
|
OGE Energy Corporation
|
||
Central Vermont Public Service Corporation
|
Pinnacle West Capital Corporation
|
||
Cleco Corporation
|
PNM Resources, Inc.
|
||
Consolidated Edison, Inc.
|
Portland General Electric Company
|
||
El Paso Electric Company
|
UniSource Energy Corporation
|
||
Empire District Electric Company
|
Unitil Corporation
|
||
Entergy Corporation
|
Westar Energy, Inc.
|
||
Great Plains Energy Incorporated
|
Xcel Energy Inc.
|
||
IDACORP, Inc.
|
EPS Growth
|
Dividend Yield
|
3% Increase in EPS
|
Total % Earned
|
|||||||
Percentile
|
% Earned
|
Percentile
|
% Earned
|
Earned
|
||||||
27%
|
23.3%
|
68%
|
130%
|
0%
|
38.3%
|
·
|
upon closing of the transaction, the level of attainment of each performance goal will be (i) target attainment, or (ii) actual attainment through the full fiscal quarters ending immediately prior to the transaction, whichever level of attainment results in a greater number of shares earned in respect of the award; and
|
·
|
in calculating the actual level of attainment of performance goals applicable to all performance shares (whether or not they settle upon or after the transaction), any expenses or costs associated with or arising as a result of or in connection with the transaction and any non-recurring charges that would not reasonably be expected to have been incurred had the transaction not occurred are excluded.
|
Named Executive Officer
|
Ownership Guidelines
for Shares or Units
by Applicable Deadline
|
Actual Ownership
of Shares or Units
as of 12/31/2011
|
||||
Mr. Lant
|
23,000
|
32,989
|
||||
Mr. Capone
|
6,000
|
8,851
|
||||
Mr. Gould
|
6,000
|
12,351
|
||||
Mr. Groft
|
5,000
|
9,711
|
||||
Mr. Laurito
|
8,500
|
15,392
|
|
•
|
The executive compensation program of the Corporation reflects an appropriate mix of compensation elements and balances current and long-term performance objectives, cash and equity compensation, and risks and rewards associated with executive roles.
|
|
•
|
We use a variety of corporate and individual performance metrics that are consistent with the business objectives of the Corporation and correlate to long-term value. The performance goals are set at levels that we believe are reasonable in light of past performance and market conditions.
|
|
•
|
We do not use highly-leveraged performance goals; instead, incentive opportunities are based on balanced performance metrics that promote disciplined progress toward long-term goals and all payouts are capped at a pre-established percentage of the target payment opportunity.
|
|
•
|
We retain discretion to adjust compensation levels based on the quality of company and individual performance and adherence to the Corporation’s ethics and compliance programs, among other things.
|
|
•
|
The long-term incentive opportunities generally vest over a period of three years to focus the executives of the Corporation on long-term performance and to enhance retention. The performance shares are granted annually and have overlapping three-year performance periods, so any risks taken to increase the payout under one award could jeopardize the potential payouts under other awards.
|
|
•
|
We regularly evaluate the compensation programs and levels of our compensation comparator groups to confirm that our compensation programs are consistent with market practice.
|
|
•
|
As described above, we have adopted several risk mitigating strategies, such as stock ownership guidelines and a “clawback policy.”
|
Name and Principal Position
|
Year
|
Salary
($)
|
Bonus
($)
(1)
|
Stock
Awards
($)
(2)
|
Non-Equity
Incentive
Plan
Compensation
($)
(3)
|
Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred
Compensation Earnings
($)
(4)(5)
|
All Other
Compensation
($)
(6)
|
Total
($)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Steven V. Lant
Chairman of the Board, President, and Chief Executive Officer
|
2011
2010
2009
|
575,000
550,000
525,000
|
0
0
60,000
|
632,079
563,466
547,119
|
372,313
264,825
412,650
|
815,500
845,500
755,300
|
8,250
8,250
8,250
|
2,403,142 2,232,041 2,308,319 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Christopher M. Capone
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
|
2011
2010
2009
|
345,000
335,000
300,000
|
0
0
27,000
|
275,726
303,761
187,795
|
129,368
132,684
198,450
|
239,500
216,200
118,900
|
8,416
9,927
8,250
|
998,010
997,572
840,395
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
James P. Laurito (7)
Executive Vice President of CH Energy Group and President of Central Hudson
|
2011
2010
2009
|
380,000
370,000
130,000
|
42,750
137,000
65,000
|
265,772
206,617
575,877
|
241,582
157,668
0
|
0
0
0
|
22,178
22,234
0
|
952,282
893,519
770,877
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
John E. Gould (8)
Executive Vice President and General Counsel of CH Energy Group
|
2011
2010
2009
|
335,000
325,000
81,250
|
0
0
187,500
|
0
0
630,488
|
151,085
127,725
0
|
0
0
0
|
75,915
68,470
45,813
|
562,000
521,195
945,051
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
W. Randolph Groft
President and Chief Operating Officer of Griffith
|
2011
2010
2009
|
258,001
240,769
249,230
|
0
0
24,000
|
149,808
225,362
125,197
|
122,666
107,942
166,490
|
0
0
0
|
22,600
39,910
30,982
|
553,075
613,983
595,899
|
(1)
|
For 2011, reflects a discretionary cash bonus of $28,500 paid to Mr. Laurito under the Short-Term Incentive Plan, and a special bonus of $14,250 paid to Mr. Laurito for outstanding performance during the year.
|
(2)
|
For 2011, reflects the aggregate grant date fair value of the performance shares granted to the Named Executive Officers (based on the probable outcome of the performance conditions as of the date of grant). The grant date fair value of the performance shares, assuming that the highest level of performance would be achieved, is as follows: Mr. Lant: $948,119; Mr. Capone: $413,589; Mr. Laurito: $398,658; and Mr. Groft: $224,712. The aggregate grant date fair value of the awards was determined in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification Topic 718, Compensation – Stock Compensation (“FASB ASC Topic 718”). See Note 11 of the Consolidated Financial Statements contained in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2011 (“Annual Report”) for an explanation of the assumptions made in valuing these awards. For additional information about the performance shares granted in 2011, please refer to the “2011 Grants of Plan-Based Awards” section of this Proxy Statement, which begins on page 46.
|
(3)
|
Reflects the short-term incentive opportunity earned by the Named Executive Officers. For additional information about the 2011 short-term incentive opportunities, please refer to the “2011 Grants of Plan-Based Awards” section of this Proxy Statement, which begins on page 46.
|
(4)
|
Reflects the increase in the present value of the accumulated benefits under the RIP, SERP, and Retirement Benefit Restoration Plan ("RBRP") for Messrs. Lant and Capone. These defined benefit retirement plans are closed, meaning that new hires are not eligible to participate. Therefore, neither Mr. Laurito nor Mr. Gould participates in these plans. Mr. Groft does not participate in CH Energy Group’s defined benefit pension program because he is an employee at Griffith, which historically has not provided defined benefit retirement plans to its executives. For more information on these plans and benefits, please refer to the “2011 Pension Benefits” section of this Proxy Statement on page 49. The Named Executive Officers did not accrue any above-market earnings under the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan, and therefore we have not reported any earnings credited under that plan in this column.
|
(5)
|
The increase in the present value of Messrs. Lant’s and Capone’s benefits under the defined benefit retirement plans from 2010 to 2011 was due primarily to the use of a lower discount rate to calculate the present value compared to 2010. They did not receive any enhanced benefit under their defined benefit retirement plans in 2011.
|
(6)
|
Reflects the following for 2011:
|
|
•
|
company matching contributions under the 401(k) plan of $8,250 for each of Messrs. Lant, Capone, Laurito, and Gould and $9,800 for Mr. Groft;
|
|
•
|
profit sharing contributions under the 401(k) plan of $7,350 for Mr. Laurito, $7,350 for Mr. Gould and $2,450 for Mr. Groft;
|
|
•
|
financial planning services of $315 for Mr. Gould, $181 for Mr. Laurito, and $166 for Mr. Capone;
|
|
•
|
reimbursement of $8,000 for premiums paid on a life insurance policy held by Mr. Groft;
|
|
•
|
a car allowance of $6,397 for Mr. Laurito and $2,350 for Mr. Groft; and
|
|
•
|
contributions to Mr. Gould’s account under the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan of $60,000.
|
(7)
|
Mr. Laurito was hired to serve as Executive Vice President of CH Energy Group and President of Central Hudson, effective November 1, 2009.
|
(8)
|
Mr. Gould was hired to serve as Executive Vice President and General Counsel of CH Energy Group, effective October 1, 2009.
|
Estimated Future Payouts Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards (1) | Estimated Future Payouts Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards (2) |
Grant Date Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards
($) (3)
|
||||||||||||||
Name
|
Grant
Date
|
Threshold
($)
|
Target
($)
|
Maximum
($)
|
Threshold
(#)
|
Target
(#)
|
Maximum
(#)
|
|||||||||
Steven V. Lant
|
2/7/2011 | 201,250 | 402,500 | 603,750 | 419 | 12,700 | 19,050 | 632,079 | ||||||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
2/7/2011 | 77,625 | 155,250 | 256,163 | 183 | 5,540 | 8,310 | 275,726 | ||||||||
James P. Laurito
|
2/7/2011 | 95,000 | 190,000 | 313,500 | 176 | 5,340 | 8,010 | 265,772 | ||||||||
John E. Gould
|
2/7/2011 | 67,000 | 134,000 | 221,100 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||||||
W. Randolph Groft
|
2/7/2011 | 62,500 | 125,000 | 212,500 | 99 | 3,010 | 4,515 | 149,808 |
(1)
|
This column provides information about the short-term incentive opportunities established during 2011 for the Named Executive Officers. The information included in the “Threshold,” “Target,” and “Maximum” columns reflects the range of potential payouts when the performance goals were established by the Compensation Committee and the Board of Directors. Please refer to the “Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation” column and “Bonus” column of the Summary Compensation Table for the amount of the short-term incentive award earned by our Named Executive Officers for 2011. For a brief description of the short-term incentive program, please refer to the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section of this Proxy Statement, which begins on page 22.
|
(2)
|
This column provides information about the performance shares granted under the Long-Term Equity Incentive Plan during 2011 to the Named Executive Officers. The information included in the “Threshold,” “Target,” and “Maximum” columns reflects the range of potential payouts under the performance shares when the performance goals were established by the Compensation Committee. The threshold equals 3.3% of the target award and the maximum equals 150% of the target award. The actual payout will depend on the extent to which we achieve the applicable performance goals during the performance period commencing January 1, 2011 and ending December 31, 2013. Payment of the performance shares that are earned will be made in the form of shares of the Corporation’s Common Stock in 2014. An executive’s right to receive the performance shares will be forfeited if he terminates employment with the Corporation for any reason (other than death or retirement) prior to payment of the performance shares. However, if an executive retires or dies during the performance period, the Board of Directors (or appropriate committee thereof) generally would determine the extent to which the applicable performance goals had been achieved through the fiscal quarter prior to the date of death (or in the case of retirement, over the entire performance period), and the resulting award would be prorated based on the number of days the executive had been employed during the performance period. Upon a “change in control,” the Board of Directors (or appropriate committee thereof) would determine the extent to which the applicable performance goals have been achieved through the fiscal quarters completed prior to that date and the resulting award would be paid without pro-ration. The executives have no right to dividends during the performance period and no right to vote the performance shares until they are paid. For additional information about the performance shares, please refer to the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section of this Proxy Statement, which begins on page 22.
|
(3)
|
Reflects the grant date fair value, as determined in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, of each performance share award. See Note 11 of the Consolidated Financial Statements contained in the Annual Report for an explanation of the assumptions made in valuing these awards.
|
Name
|
Option Awards
|
Stock Awards
|
||||||||||||||
Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options Exercisable
(#) (1)
|
Number of Securities Underlying Unexercised Options Unexercisable
(#)
|
Option Exercise Price
($) (2)
|
Option Expiration Date
|
Number of Shares or Units of Stock That Have Not Vested
(#) (3)
|
Market Value of Shares or Units of Stock that Have Not Vested
($) (4)
|
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested
(#) (5)
|
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Market or Payout Value of Unearned Shares, Units or Other Rights That Have Not Vested
($) (6)
|
|||||||||
Steven V. Lant
|
4,400
|
0
|
48.62
|
1/7/13
|
0
|
0
|
57,585
|
3,361,812
|
||||||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
N/A
|
2,200
|
128,436
|
22,500
|
1,313,550
|
||||||||
James P. Laurito
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
N/A
|
15,222
|
888,675
|
16,035
|
936,123
|
||||||||
John E. Gould
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
N/A
|
8,625
|
503,528
|
0
|
0
|
||||||||
W. Randolph Groft
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
N/A
|
2,200
|
128,436
|
13,755
|
803,017
|
(1)
|
Reflects the number of shares underlying outstanding stock options that have vested as of December 31, 2011.
|
(2)
|
Reflects the exercise price for each stock option reported in the table. The exercise price equaled the fair market value per share of the underlying option shares on the date of grant.
|
(3)
|
Reflects the number of restricted shares and restricted stock units held by each Named Executive Officer. The restricted shares held by Messrs. Capone and Groft generally vest on February 10, 2013. The restricted shares held by Mr. Gould generally vest in equal installments on each anniversary of October 1, 2009. The restricted stock units held by Mr. Laurito generally vest in three equal annual installments commencing on November 1, 2014.
|
(4)
|
Reflects the product of (i) the number of outstanding restricted shares or restricted stock units, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
(5)
|
Reflects the aggregate number of performance shares outstanding as of December 31, 2011, assuming performance at the “Superior” level for the 2009–2011, 2010–2012, and 2011–2013 performance cycles. The performance shares vest based on the extent to which we achieve the applicable performance goals as of the end of the applicable performance period. Please note that the performance shares for the 2009–2011 performance cycle are included in this column, even though the performance period ended December 31, 2011. As of the date of this Proxy Statement, the financial information for all the companies in the performance peer group was not yet available and, therefore, we were not able to determine the payout level.
|
(6)
|
Reflects the product of (i) the aggregate number of outstanding performance shares, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
Option Awards
|
Stock Awards
|
|||||||
Name
|
Number of
Shares Acquired
on Exercise
(#)
|
Value Realized
on Exercise
($) (1)
|
Number of
Shares Acquired
(#) (2)
|
Value Realized
($) (3)
|
||||
Steven V. Lant
|
0
|
0
|
4,808
|
259,604
|
||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
0
|
0
|
1,538
|
83,043
|
||||
James P. Laurito
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
||||
John E. Gould
|
0
|
0
|
2,875
|
149,989
|
||||
W. Randolph Groft
|
800
|
3,864
|
3,149
|
153,955
|
(1)
|
Reflects the product of (i) the number of shares acquired upon the exercise of the stock option, multiplied by (ii) the excess of the closing price per share of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on the date of exercise over the per share exercise price of the stock option.
|
(2)
|
Reflects the performance shares awarded in 2008 to Messrs. Lant and Capone that were paid in 2011. The relevant financial information for all the companies in the peer group for the 2008–2010 performance cycle was not available until May 2011. Because the payout of the awards did not occur until May, the Committee provided that, at the time the performance shares were paid, each executive would receive additional shares with a value equal to dividends that the executives would have received on the earned performance shares had they instead been paid on January 1, 2011. Also reflects the restricted shares held by Mr. Gould and restricted shares held by Mr. Groft that vested in 2011.
|
(3)
|
Reflects the product of (i) the number of shares acquired, multiplied by (ii) the closing price of those shares upon acquisition.
|
Name
|
Plan Name (1)
|
Number of Years Credited Service
(#)
|
Present Value of Accumulated Benefit
($) (2)
|
Payments During Last Fiscal Year
($)
|
||||
Steven V. Lant
|
Retirement Income Plan
Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
Retirement Benefit Restoration Plan
|
30 yrs., 2 mos.
30 yrs., 2 mos.
30 yrs., 2 mos.
|
1,871,500
3,748,700
511,100
|
0
0
0
|
||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
Retirement Income Plan
Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
Retirement Benefit Restoration Plan
|
9 yrs., 8 mos.
9 yrs., 8 mos.
9 yrs., 8 mos.
|
486,000
414,600
2,700
|
0
0
0
|
||||
James P. Laurito (3)
|
Retirement Income Plan
Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
Retirement Benefit Restoration Plan
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
||||
John E. Gould (3)
|
Retirement Income Plan
Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
Retirement Benefit Restoration Plan
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
||||
W. Randolph Groft (3)
|
Retirement Income Plan
Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan
Retirement Benefit Restoration Plan
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
N/A
N/A
N/A
|
(1)
|
The formal name of each plan is as follows:
|
|
•
|
Retirement Income Plan of Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corporation (the “RIP”)
|
|
•
|
CH Energy Group, Inc. Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (the “SERP”)
|
|
•
|
Central Hudson Retirement Benefit Restoration Plan (the “RBRP”)
|
(2)
|
The present value of accumulated benefits was prepared based on the same assumptions used in the Consolidated Financial Statements contained in the Annual Report, including (i) a 4.5% discount rate for the RIP and a 4.6% discount rate for the SERP and RBRP, (ii) the Retirement Plan 2000 Combined Table Projected to 2017, no collar adjustment, and (iii) a retirement age of 61 under the SERP and a retirement age of 55 under the RIP and the RBRP.
|
(3)
|
These defined benefit retirement plans are closed, meaning that new hires are not eligible to participate. Therefore, neither Mr. Laurito nor Mr. Gould participates in these plans. Mr. Groft does not participate in CH Energy Group’s defined benefit pension program because he is an employee at Griffith, which historically has not provided defined benefit retirement plans to its executives.
|
|
•
|
The regular service benefit equals the sum of the benefit earned each year after October 1, 2003, based on 2% of “annual compensation” for each year of benefit service beginning before age 50 and 2.5% for each such year beginning after age 50. The term “annual compensation” means base salary at October 1, plus, for periods after 2004, short-term incentives in the prior 12 months.
|
|
•
|
The supplementary past service benefit equals a participant’s years of benefit service at October 1, 2003 multiplied by the sum of 1.45% of “average earnings” up to $37,500 and 1.75% of average earnings in excess of $37,500. If larger, a participant will receive the prior regular service benefit at September 30, 2003. The term “average earnings” means the average of 100% of base salary at October 1, 2001 and 2002, and 50% of base salary at October 1, 2000 and 2003.
|
|
•
|
For participants on January 1, 1987, 10% of the participant’s base salary on that date.
|
|
•
|
For participants on September 30, 1991, 5% of the participant’s base salary on that date.
|
|
•
|
For participants on September 30, 1997, 5% of the participant’s base salary on that date.
|
|
•
|
For participants on September 30, 1999, 5% of the participant’s base salary on that date.
|
|
•
|
Annual interest, generally based on the yield for 30-year Treasury Bonds.
|
|
•
|
Normal Retirement Benefit. If a participant terminates employment on or after the date he or she attains age 61, he or she will be entitled to a normal retirement benefit. The annualized normal retirement benefit is equal to (i) 57% of the participant’s highest consecutive three-year average of base salary and short-term incentive during the ten-year period that precedes the participant’s termination of employment, multiplied by (ii) a fraction, the numerator of which is the participant’s years of benefit service under the RIP (not to exceed 30) and the denominator of which is 30.
|
|
•
|
Early Retirement Benefit. Upon the participant’s vested termination of employment before the date he or she attains age 61, the participant will be entitled to an early retirement benefit equal to the normal retirement benefit (described above) reduced by 0.333% for each full month by which his or her benefit commencement date precedes the date the participant attains age 61.
|
Name
|
Executive Contributions in Last FY
($) (1)
|
Registrant Contributions in Last FY
($) (2)
|
Aggregate Earnings in Last FY
($)
|
Aggregate Withdrawals/
Distributions
($)
|
Aggregate Balance at Last FYE
($) (3)
|
|||||
Steven V. Lant
|
0
|
0
|
74,631
|
0
|
380,608
|
|||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
|||||
James P. Laurito
|
30,400
|
0
|
(1,897)
|
0
|
58,106
|
|||||
John E. Gould
|
0
|
60,000
|
6,825
|
0
|
174,454
|
|||||
W. Randolph Groft
|
21,588
|
27,030
|
57,206
|
0
|
405,296
|
(1)
|
Each Named Executive Officer is eligible to defer base salary, short-term incentive awards, and performance shares under the terms of the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan, described below. The “Executive Contributions in Last FY” column shows the aggregate deferrals for each Named Executive Officer during 2011. The 2011 base salary deferrals are included in the “Salary” column, and the 2011 short-term incentive deferrals are included in the “Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation” and “Bonus” columns of the Summary Compensation Table.
|
(2)
|
Mr. Gould received a company contribution to his account under the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan of $60,000. This amount is reflected in the “All Other Compensation” column of the Summary Compensation Table. Mr. Groft receives a profit sharing contribution to his 401(k) plan. His aggregate contribution over the past several years exceeded the IRS limits applicable to 401(k) plans, and therefore $27,030 of the prior contributions to his account under the 401(k) plan was reallocated to the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan in 2011. This amount was previously earned by Mr. Groft and was reported as compensation in the Summary Compensation Table for prior years.
|
(3)
|
The aggregate balance as of December 31, 2011 for each Named Executive Officer includes prior deferrals of base salary, short-term incentives, and performance shares that were previously earned and reported as compensation on the Summary Compensation Table for prior years. For example, from 2000–2010, our Named Executive Officers deferred the following amounts under the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan that were previously reported as compensation in the Summary Compensation Table: (i) Mr. Lant: $290,287; (ii) Mr. Capone: $90,060; (iii) Mr. Laurito: $29,600; (iv) Mr. Gould: $103,750; and (v) Mr. Groft: $226,020. These amounts have since been adjusted, pursuant to the terms of the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan, for investment performance (e.g., earnings and losses), deferrals credited during 2011 and in-service distributions.
|
|
•
|
An amount equal to his base salary and target annual incentive through the remainder of his employment term (i.e., through December 31, 2014), payable in equal monthly installments over one year.
|
|
•
|
An amount credited to his account under the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan equal to the retirement credits that he would have received had he remained employed through the remainder of his employment term.
|
|
•
|
Full vesting of any unvested restricted shares.
|
Executive
|
Cash
Severance
|
Outplacement
|
Deferred
Compensation
Credit
|
Restricted
Shares (1)
|
Total
|
|||||||||||||
Steven V. Lant
|
0
|
$ |
30,000
|
0
|
0
|
$ |
30,000
|
|||||||||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
0
|
$ |
30,000
|
0
|
0
|
$ |
30,000
|
|||||||||||
James P. Laurito
|
0
|
$ |
30,000
|
0
|
0
|
$ |
30,000
|
|||||||||||
John E. Gould | $ | 1,407,000 | $ | 30,000 | $ | 200,000 | $ | 503,528 | $ | 2,140,528 | ||||||||
W. Randolph Groft
|
0
|
$ |
30,000
|
0
|
0
|
$ |
30,000
|
(1)
|
The value of Mr. Gould’s restricted shares equals the product of (i) the number of unvested shares, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
|
•
|
Performance Shares. Except as otherwise provided below, a Named Executive Officer would forfeit his right to all outstanding performance shares, if any, for the 2011–2013 and the 2010–2012 performance cycles if his employment terminated during the applicable performance period. However, if the executive had retired or died during a performance period, then the Board of Directors (or appropriate committee thereof) would have determined the extent to which the applicable performance goals had been achieved through the fiscal quarter prior to the date of death (or in the case of retirement, over the entire performance period), and the resulting award would have been prorated based on the number of days the executive had been employed during the performance period. Such amounts would have been paid in a single lump sum in the form of shares of the Corporation’s Common Stock. For this purpose, the term “retirement” means termination of employment either (i) at or after age 65 or (ii) at or after age 55 with at least 10 years of service pursuant to the early retirement provisions of the RIP.
|
|
•
|
Restricted Shares and Restricted Stock Units. Upon death, all restricted shares and restricted stock units held by each of Messrs. Capone, Gould, Laurito, and Groft would have become fully vested. However, vesting does not accelerate upon retirement.
|
Performance Shares
|
||||||||||||||||
Executive
|
2010-2012
Performance Period (1)
|
2011-2013
Performance Period (2)
|
Restricted Shares/Units (3)
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Steven V. Lant
|
$ | 567,843 | $ | 247,142 | 0 | $ | 814,985 | |||||||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
$ | 219,898 | $ | 107,808 | $ | 128,436 | $ | 456,142 | ||||||||
James P. Laurito
|
$ | 208,222 | $ | 103,916 | $ | 888,675 | $ | 1,200,813 | ||||||||
John E. Gould
|
0 | 0 | $ | 503,528 | $ | 503,528 | ||||||||||
W. Randolph Groft
|
$ | 140,890 | $ | 58,575 | $ | 128,436 | $ | 327,901 |
(1)
|
The value of the performance shares for the 2010–2012 performance period equals the product of (i) the number of performance shares earned assuming a payout of 100% of target, prorated based on the performance of services during 2/3 of the performance period, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
(2)
|
The value of the performance shares for the 2011–2013 performance period equals the product of (i) the number of performance shares earned assuming a payout of 100% of target, prorated based on the performance of services during 1/3 of the performance period, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
(3)
|
Unlike the performance shares described above, the restricted shares and restricted stock units held by Messrs. Capone, Laurito, Gould, and Groft become fully vested on death but not upon retirement. The value of the restricted shares and the restricted stock units equals the product of (i) the number of unvested restricted shares or restricted stock units outstanding as of the end of the year, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
|
•
|
SERP. Only Messrs. Lant and Capone participate in the SERP. As described below, an eligible executive’s termination of employment due to disability can result in enhanced benefits under the SERP. Specifically, if an eligible executive who was vested under the SERP had become disabled (within the meaning of our long-term disability plan) on December 31, 2011, then his benefit would have been calculated as if he had received additional years of benefit service (up to 5), consistent with the disability crediting rules under the RIP. For additional information about the SERP, please refer to the “2011 Pension Benefits” section of this Proxy Statement on page 49.
|
|
•
|
Mr. Gould’s Employment Agreement. Upon Mr. Gould’s disability, he would have been entitled to the following benefits under his employment agreement: (i) continued base salary for 18 months, (ii) his target annual incentive for the year in which his disability occurred, (iii) the retirement credit for the year in which his disability occurred unless previously credited, and (iv) full vesting of his restricted shares.
|
|
•
|
Restricted Shares and Restricted Stock Units. Upon disability, all outstanding restricted shares and restricted stock units held by Messrs. Capone, Laurito, Gould, and Groft would have become fully vested.
|
Executive
|
Cash Severance
|
Additional
Service Credit
under the SERP (1)
|
Restricted Shares/Units (2)
|
Total
|
|||||||||
Steven V. Lant
|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
0 | 0 | $ | 128,436 | $ | 128,436 | |||||||
James P. Laurito
|
0 | 0 | $ | 888,675 | $ | 888,675 | |||||||
John E. Gould
|
$ | 636,500 | 0 | $ | 503,528 | $ | 1,140,028 | ||||||
W. Randolph Groft
|
0 | 0 | $ | 128,436 | $ | 128,436 |
(1)
|
The value of the additional service credit under the SERP equals the excess, if any, of (i) the present value of the individual’s vested SERP benefit as of December 31, 2011, calculated as if he remained employed for an additional 5 years, over (ii) the present value of the individual’s vested SERP benefit as of December 31, 2011. The present value was determined based on the assumptions used in the “2011 Pension Benefits” section of this Proxy Statement on page 49.
|
(2)
|
The value of the restricted shares and the restricted stock units held by Messrs. Capone, Laurito, Gould, and Groft, respectively, equals the product of (i) the number of restricted shares or restricted stock units outstanding, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
|
•
|
Performance Shares. Upon a change in control, the Board of Directors (or appropriate committee thereof) is required to determine the extent to which the applicable performance goals have been achieved through the full fiscal quarters completed prior to that date, and the resulting award is required to be paid to the executives without pro-ration. Such amounts would be paid in a single lump sum in the form of either shares or cash.
|
|
•
|
Restricted Shares and Restricted Stock Units. Upon a change in control, all outstanding restricted shares and restricted stock units held by Messrs. Capone, Laurito, Gould, and Groft would become fully vested.
|
|
•
|
Enhanced SERP Benefit. Upon a change in control, each of Messrs. Lant and Capone would be fully vested in his benefit under the SERP. Payment of the SERP benefit will commence upon the later of his termination of employment or attainment of age 55. For additional information about the SERP, please refer to the “2011 Pension Benefits” section of this Proxy Statement on page 49.
|
Performance Shares
|
||||||||||||||||
Executive
|
2010-2012
Performance Period (1)
|
2011-2013
Performance Period (2)
|
Restricted Shares/Units (3)(5)
|
Accelerated Vesting of SERP Benefit (4)
|
Total
|
|||||||||||
Steven V. Lant
|
851,764 | $ | 741,426 | 0 | $ | 3,678,900 | $ | 5,272,090 | ||||||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
$ | 329,847 | $ | 323,425 | $ | 128,436 | $ | 352,800 | $ | 1,134,508 | ||||||
James P. Laurito
|
$ | 312,333 | $ | 311,749 | $ | 888,675 | 0 | $ | 1,512,757 | |||||||
John E. Gould
|
0 | 0 | $ | 503,528 | 0 | $ | 503,528 | |||||||||
W. Randolph Groft
|
$ | 211,336 | $ | 175,724 | $ | 128,436 | 0 | $ | 515,496 |
(1)
|
The value of the performance shares for the 2010–2012 performance period equals the product of (i) the number of performance shares earned assuming a payout of 100% of target, without pro-ration, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
(2)
|
The value of the performance shares for the 2011–2013 performance period equals the product of (i) the number of performance shares earned assuming a payout of 100% of target, without pro-ration, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
(3)
|
The value of the restricted shares and restricted stock units held by Messrs. Capone, Laurito, Gould, and Groft equals the product of (i) the number of restricted shares or restricted stock units outstanding as of the end of the year, multiplied by (ii) $58.38, which was the closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011.
|
(4)
|
The value of the accelerated vesting of the SERP benefit equals the excess, if any, of (i) the present value of the individual’s SERP benefit as of December 31, 2011 (whether or not vested), over (ii) the present value of the individual’s vested SERP benefit as of December 31, 2011. The present value was determined based on the assumptions used in the “2011 Pension Benefits” section of this Proxy Statement on page 49.
|
(5)
|
Mr. Groft’s restricted shares would also vest upon a sale of Griffith.
|
|
•
|
A prorated short-term incentive based on the average of the executive’s last three pre-change in control short-term incentives (“Average Annual Incentive”), paid in a lump sum.
|
|
•
|
An amount equal to three times (or two times for Mr. Groft) the sum of the executive’s base salary and Average Annual Incentive, payable in 12 equal monthly installments.
|
|
•
|
Outplacement services from a recognized outplacement provider, with a value not to exceed $30,000.
|
|
•
|
Continued welfare benefits (including health care benefits) for a period of three years (a two-year period for Mr. Groft) following termination, subject to mitigation upon receiving similar benefits from another employer.
|
|
•
|
For each of Messrs. Lant and Laurito only, a “conditional gross-up” for excise and related taxes in the event the severance compensation and other payments or distributions to him, whether pursuant to the change in control agreement, performance share or otherwise would constitute “excess parachute payments,” as defined in Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code. The tax gross-up will be provided if the aggregate parachute value of all severance and other change in control payments exceeds 110% of the maximum amount that may be paid under Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code without imposition of an excise tax. If the parachute value of the payments does not exceed the 110% threshold, the executive’s payments will be reduced to the extent necessary to avoid imposition of the excise tax on “excess parachute payments.” In contrast, the other Named Executive Officers (i.e., Messrs. Capone and Groft) would be responsible for paying the applicable excise taxes under Section 280G imposed on any payments under the Change in Control Agreement, employment agreement or otherwise, but any payments subject to the excise tax would be reduced if such reduction provides a larger after-tax benefit than if the excise tax applied.
|
|
•
|
Reimbursement for all legal fees and expenses reasonably incurred in asserting his rights under the Agreements, regardless of the outcome of the dispute (unless a tribunal determines that the executive’s position was frivolous or maintained in bad faith). For purposes of the above calculations, we have assumed that the executive will not incur legal fees to enforce his rights under the Change in Control Agreement.
|
|
•
|
Change in control. A change in control generally means any of the following: (i) an acquisition of 20% or more of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock; (ii) a change in the membership of our Board of Directors, such that the current incumbents and their approved successors no longer constitute a majority; (iii) a business combination in which any one of the following is true: our former shareholders do not hold at least 60% of the combined enterprise; there is a 20%-or-more shareholder of the combined enterprise (other than as a result of conversion of the shareholder’s pre-combination interest in CH Energy Group); or the members of our Board of Directors (immediately before the combination) do not make up a majority of the board of the combined enterprise; or (iv) shareholder approval of a complete liquidation.
|
|
•
|
Cause. The term “cause” generally means: (i) the willful and continued failure of the executive to perform his or her duties; (ii) the willful engaging by the executive in illegal conduct or gross misconduct; (iii) the repeated use of alcohol by the executive that materially interferes with his or her duties, use of illegal drugs by the executive, or a violation of our drug or alcohol policies; (iv) a conviction, guilty plea, or plea of nolo contendere of the executive for any crime involving moral turpitude or for any felony; (v) a breach by the executive of his or her fiduciary duties of loyalty or care or a material violation of the Code of Business Conduct and Ethics, or similar policies; or (vi) the breach by the executive of the confidentiality provision of the applicable agreement.
|
|
•
|
Good Reason. The term “good reason” generally means: (i) any material reduction in the executive’s authority, duties, or responsibilities; (ii) any failure by CH Energy Group to maintain the executive’s base salary, short-term incentive, and benefits levels; (iii) any required relocation of the executive’s office of 50 miles or more; (iv) any purported termination of the executive’s employment otherwise than as expressly permitted by the applicable agreement; or (v) any failure by CH Energy Group to require a successor to assume the applicable agreement.
|
Name
|
Cash Severance (1)
|
Outplacement Services
|
Continued Healthcare Benefits (2)
|
Continued Welfare Benefits
(other than Healthcare) (3)
|
Enhanced Retirement Benefit (4)
|
Section 280G Gross-up (5)(6)
|
Total
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Steven V. Lant
|
$ | 2,594,775 | $ | 30,000 | $ | 52,200 | $ | 7,812 | 0 | $ | 1,902,019 | $ | 4,586,806 | |||||||||||||||
Christopher M. Capone
|
$ | 1,437,234 | $ | 30,000 | $ | 43,400 | $ | 5,412 | $ | 271,700 | 0 | $ | 1,787,746 | |||||||||||||||
James P. Laurito
|
$ | 1,724,004 | $ | 30,000 | $ | 52,200 | $ | 5,956 | 0 | $ | 1,390,414 | $ | 3,202,574 | |||||||||||||||
John E. Gould
|
$ | 1,407,000 | $ | 30,000 | $ | 11,600 | 0 | $ | 200,000 | 0 | $ | 1,648,600 | ||||||||||||||||
W. Randolph Groft (7)
|
$ | 782,104 | $ | 30,000 | $ | 29,800 | $ | 2,308 | 0 | 0 | $ | 844,212 |
(1)
|
Assumes termination of employment on December 31, 2011, at which time the short-term incentive for 2011 was earned in accordance with its terms. Therefore, cash severance does not include any prorated Average Annual Incentive for 2011.
|
(2)
|
The present value of the continued healthcare benefits is calculated in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification Topic 715, Compensation – Retirement Benefits. The values assume continued healthcare coverage for the individual and his spouse for the three-year continuation period (a two-year period for Mr. Groft). See Note 11 of the Consolidated Financial Statements contained in the Annual Report for an explanation of the assumptions made in valuing of the continued health care benefits.
|
(3)
|
Represents the premiums for continued group life insurance in excess of $50,000 during the three-year continuation period (a two-year period for Mr. Groft).
|
(4)
|
The value of the enhanced retirement benefit for Mr. Capone equals the present value of the increase in the individual’s SERP benefit as of December 31, 2011, calculated as if he had remained employed for an additional three-year period following termination. The present value was determined based on the assumptions used in the “2011 Pension Benefits” section of this Proxy Statement on page 49. The value of Mr. Gould’s enhanced retirement benefit equals the retirement credits that he would have received under the Directors and Executives Deferred Compensation Plan had he remained employed for the entire employment term.
|
(5)
|
Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code applies if there is a change in control of CH Energy Group, compensation is paid to a Named Executive Officer as a result of the change in control (“parachute payments”), and the present value of the parachute payments is 300% or more of the executive’s “base amount,” which equals his average W-2 income for the five-calendar-year period immediately preceding the change in control (e.g., 2006–2010 if the change in control occurs in 2011). If Section 280G applies, then the Named Executive Officer is subject to an excise tax equal to 20% of the amount of the parachute payments in excess of his base amount (the “excess parachute payments”), in addition to income and employment taxes. Moreover, CH Energy Group is denied a federal income tax deduction for the excess parachute payments. The amounts in the Section 280G Gross-Up column reflects a tax gross-up for the excise and related taxes, as required under the terms of the Change in Control Agreement for each of Messrs. Lant and Laurito described above. The amounts are merely estimates based on the following assumptions: (i) an excise tax rate of 20% and a combined federal, state, and local income and employment tax rate of 45.27%, (ii) discount rates of 0.24% and 1.53%, (iii) a closing price of CH Energy Group’s Common Stock on December 30, 2011 of $58.38 per share, and (iv) no amounts were allocated to the non-solicitation or non-competition covenants contained in the employment agreements. Neither Messrs. Capone, Groft nor Gould is eligible to receive this tax gross-up.
|
(6)
|
On February 10, 2010, the Board of Directors, acting in accordance with the recommendation of the Compensation Committee, determined that CH Energy Group will not enter into any new or materially amended agreements with executive officers that include excise tax gross-up provisions.
|
(7)
|
Mr. Groft also would be entitled to these benefits in the event he incurred a qualified termination in connection with a sale of Griffith.
|
Name
|
Fees Earned or Paid in Cash
($)
(1)
|
Total
($)
(2)
|
||||
Margarita K. Dilley
|
140,000
|
140,000
|
||||
Steven M. Fetter
|
137,500
|
137,500
|
||||
Stanley J. Grubel
|
138,750
|
138,750
|
||||
Manuel J. Iraola
|
130,000
|
130,000
|
||||
E. Michel Kruse
|
137,500
|
137,500
|
||||
Jeffrey D. Tranen
|
137,500
|
137,500
|
||||
Edward T. Tokar
|
130,000
|
130,000
|
||||
Ernest R. Verebelyi
|
130,000
|
130,000
|
(1)
|
Reflects the cash annual retainer, as well as Lead Independent Director and committee chair fees, paid to the independent Directors for service on the Board. Independent Directors receive no other cash compensation for service on the Board.
|
(2)
|
CH Energy Group did not grant any stock options to Directors in 2011. The outstanding stock options, which were granted on January 1, 2003, and have an exercise price per share of $48.62, are held by the following independent Directors in the following number of shares: Mr. Grubel (1,000); and Mr. Kruse (1,000). The stock options were granted with an exercise price equal to the fair market value of the underlying shares on the date of grant. The stock options were fully vested on the date of grant.
|
By Order of the Board of Directors,
|
|
Denise D. VanBuren
|
|
Corporate Secretary and
Vice President – Corporate Communications
|
From New York City Area:
• Taconic State parkway North to
Interstate 84 (I-84)
• I-84 West to Exit 13 (Route 9)
• Turn right off ramp onto Route 9 North
• Route 9 approximately 12 miles to the
Academy Street / South Avenue Exit
• Bear left at end of ramp and go
under overpass
• Turn right into CH Energy Group, Inc.
entrance
From Connecticut:
• I-84 West to Exit 13 (Route 9)
• Continue as above
From Pennsylvania:
• I-84 East to Exit 13 (Route 9)
• Turn left off ramp onto Route 9 North
• Continue as above
From New Jersey and Upstate New York:
• New York State Thruway (I-87) to Exit 18 (New Paltz)
• Turn right onto Route 299
• Route 299 approximately 5 miles, turn
right onto Route 9W South
• Route 9W approximately 2 miles, bear
right for FDR/Mid-Hudson Bridge
• After crossing bridge take first right
(Route 9 South)
• Route 9 approximately 1 mile to
Academy Street/South Avenue exit
• Bear right off exit ramp into CH Energy
Group, Inc. entrance
|
c/o Corporate Election Services
PO Box 3200
Pittsburgh, PA 15230-3200
|
Vote By Telephone
Use any touch-tone telephone to appoint your proxy and transmit your voting instructions until 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday, April 23, 2012. Have your proxy card available when you call the Toll-Free number 1-888-693-8683 and follow the simple instructions to record your vote.
Vote By Internet
Use the Internet to appoint your proxy and transmit your voting instructions until 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday, April 23, 2012. Have your proxy card available when you access the website www.cesvote.com, and follow the simple instructions to record your vote.
Vote By Mail
Please mark, sign and date your proxy card and return it in the postage-paid envelope provided, or return it to: CH Energy Group, Inc., c/o Corporate Election Services, PO Box 3200, Pittsburgh, PA 15230-3200.
|
Vote By Telephone
Call Toll-Free using a
touch-tone telephone:
1-888-693-8683
|
Vote By Internet
Access the Website and
cast your vote:
www.cesvote.com
|
Vote By Mail
Return your proxy
in the postage-paid
envelope provided.
|
è |
CH Energy Group, Inc. | Annual Meeting Proxy Card |
Signature(s)
|
|
Signature(s) | |
Date: ____________________________________________________________________ , 2012
|
|
Please sign exactly as your name appears to the left. Joint owners should each sign. When signing on behalf of a corporation or partnership or as attorney, executor, administrator, trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If a partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ADMISSION TICKET
|
|
|
|
|
||
Please bring this ticket to the Annual Meeting of Shareholders.
|
|||
|
|||
CH ENERGY GROUP, INC.
2012 Annual Meeting of Shareholders |
|||
|
|||
For the purpose of considering and acting upon three proposals, including (1) the election of nine Directors, (2) the advisory (non-binding) vote to approve named executive officer compensation, and (3) the ratification of the appointment of the Corporation’s independent registered public accounting firm, and such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.
|
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|
|||
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
10:30 a.m. Eastern Time CH Energy Group, Inc. 284 South Avenue Poughkeepsie, NY 12601-4839 |
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Please Admit
|
Non-Transferable
|
é Please fold and detach Admission Ticket here. é |
CH Energy Group, Inc. | Annual Meeting Proxy Card |
Proposal No. 1. Election of nine Directors, each for a one-year term: | ||||||
(1) Margarita K. Dilley | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | (5) E. Michel Kruse | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | |
(2) Steven M. Fetter | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | (6) Steven V. Lant | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | |
(3) Stanley J. Grubel | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | (7) Edward T. Tokar | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | |
(4) Manuel J. Iraola | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | (8) Jeffrey D. Tranen | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | |
(9) Ernest R. Verebelyi | o FOR | o WITHHOLD | ||||
Proposal No. 2. Advisory (non-binding) vote to approve named executive officer compensation: | o FOR | o AGAINST | o ABSTAIN | |||
Proposal No. 3. Ratification of the appointment of the Corporation’s Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm: | o FOR | o AGAINST | o ABSTAIN |
Change of Address - please print new address below:
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Comments - Please print your comments below: |