ABC Countryhour - Wheat Board changes - Grower-elected domination of the AWB
Board has come to an end. After a two-week adjournment AWB re-convened its
Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) in Melbourne late yesterday, where 77
per cent of growers voted in support of constitutional change. The
company's dual A-class and B-class share structure will now cease and AWB
has instructed Computershare Investor Services to redeem all A-class shares.
The AWB Board met immediately after the vote was taken to choose a date for
the next EGM, which must be set and notified within 21 days. At that
meeting a new constitution will be adopted by shareholders and all A-class
grower directors must retire. AWB chairman, Brendan Stewart, re-opened
yesterday's contentious EGM, adjourned on the 21st of August following a
request from the floor of the meeting by the Victorian Farmers' Federation
(VFF). Only 27 per cent of growers had bothered to vote and AWB did not
have the numbers to get past the magical 75 per cent majority of votes cast
that it required. After a fortnight of intensive lobbying, AWB got what
it wanted and Brendan Stewart says the reason constitutional reform is now a
reality is because growers who hadn't voted got involved. "We were very
successful in bringing that participation vote in the last two weeks from 27
per cent to 44 per cent," he says. Former deputy prime minister, John
Anderson, is encouraging growers to throw their support behind AWB after it
got its constitutional reforms through yesterday. 77 per cent of A-class
growers backed plans to scrap the dual A-class and B-class share structure
at an E-G-M in Melbourne, ending grower-elected control of the company. But
long-time Single Desk supporter and architect of the two-tiered system, Mr
Anderson, told Catherine Clifford the time has now come for growers to unite
and look to the new.
Board has come to an end. After a two-week adjournment AWB re-convened its
Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) in Melbourne late yesterday, where 77
per cent of growers voted in support of constitutional change. The
company's dual A-class and B-class share structure will now cease and AWB
has instructed Computershare Investor Services to redeem all A-class shares.
The AWB Board met immediately after the vote was taken to choose a date for
the next EGM, which must be set and notified within 21 days. At that
meeting a new constitution will be adopted by shareholders and all A-class
grower directors must retire. AWB chairman, Brendan Stewart, re-opened
yesterday's contentious EGM, adjourned on the 21st of August following a
request from the floor of the meeting by the Victorian Farmers' Federation
(VFF). Only 27 per cent of growers had bothered to vote and AWB did not
have the numbers to get past the magical 75 per cent majority of votes cast
that it required. After a fortnight of intensive lobbying, AWB got what
it wanted and Brendan Stewart says the reason constitutional reform is now a
reality is because growers who hadn't voted got involved. "We were very
successful in bringing that participation vote in the last two weeks from 27
per cent to 44 per cent," he says. Former deputy prime minister, John
Anderson, is encouraging growers to throw their support behind AWB after it
got its constitutional reforms through yesterday. 77 per cent of A-class
growers backed plans to scrap the dual A-class and B-class share structure
at an E-G-M in Melbourne, ending grower-elected control of the company. But
long-time Single Desk supporter and architect of the two-tiered system, Mr
Anderson, told Catherine Clifford the time has now come for growers to unite
and look to the new.
Comment