More than 600 publicly held companies with California headquarters would be required to have at least one person of color serving on their corporate boards by the end of 2021 under the legislation introduced by Assembly members Chris Holden, a Pasadena Democrat, and Cristina Garcia, a Bell Gardens Democrat.
Holden said many corporations need to be prodded into racially diversifying their boards.
鈥淭his is the time to do something bold,鈥 he said. People of color 鈥渘eed to have the same access as those who have benefitted for so long, and the time is now.鈥
Nationally, 19.5% of board members of companies are people of color, according to a 2018 by the Alliance for Diversity.
In California, many large corporations 鈥 including Disney, Apple, Intel, Tesla, Oracle, Chevron, Facebook, Wells Fargo, Cisco Systems and Alphabet Inc., the parent company of Google 鈥 already have at least one person of color on their boards. But some, like Monster Beverage Corporation and Chegg, Inc., have all-white boards.
鈥淭he Legislature seems intent to make the same mistake again.鈥MICHAEL BEKESHA, SENIOR ATTORNEY WITH JUDICIAL WATCH
The law, if enacted, would be the first in the nation to mandate the racial makeup of corporate boards. Last year, Illinois a bill that would have required companies based there to have a woman, Latino and a Black person on their boards, but instead only required them to report the gender, race and ethnicity of the members.
California鈥檚 bill, , faces its next hurdle on Aug. 13 in the Senate Banking and Financial Institutions committee. The Legislature has until Aug. 31 to pass bills unless Gov. Gavin Newsom calls lawmakers back for a special .
The California Chamber of Commerce and the California Manufacturers & Technology Association declined to comment on the bill. Both opposed California鈥檚 2018 gender diversity bill, .
Opponents say the diversity bill will trigger legal challenges, just as the law mandating female corporate directors did.
鈥淭he Legislature seems intent to make the same mistake again,鈥 said Michael Bekesha, a senior attorney with Judicial Watch.
Judicial Watch challenged the gender diversity law as unconstitutional on behalf of three California taxpayers. The California Secretary of State aimed to have the lawsuit thrown out but a court ruled in favor of Judicial Watch and the will go to trial sometime next year, Bekesha said.
When Gov. Jerry Brown the bill into law that required corporations to include women on boards, 鈥渉e was aware that there would be concerns that the law was unconstitutional and I think you鈥檒l see similar statements playing out as this new bill progresses,鈥 Bekesha said.
Some opponents say such laws are patronizing.
Anastasia Boden, senior attorney at the Pacific Legal Foundation, which also challenged the gender diversity law in court, said that race and sex-based laws 鈥渧ery often can harm the very people they intend to help.鈥
鈥淚t relegates women to quota hires,鈥 Boden said. 鈥淲omen will now be seen as being hired simply because of the government mandate rather than because of their qualifications and achievements when they may have even been hired without the quota.鈥
The diversity bill defines underrepresented communities as people who self-identify as Black, African American, Hispanic, Latino, Asian, Pacific Islander, Native American, Native Hawaiian or Alaska Native.
The requirements would ramp up in 2022. For corporations with nine or more directors, at least three directors must be people of color by the end of 2022, and corporations with between five and eight directors must have at least two. Companies would be fined $100,000 if they don鈥檛 comply.
Supporters say the new diversity bill is sorely needed because racism is widespread.
鈥淲hat COVID has revealed is systemic racism and the impact on different ethnic groups or racial groups,鈥 said Maeve Richard, a former assistant dean at Stanford鈥檚 Graduate School of Business. 鈥淎nd so the post COVID answer is we need to do something about it.鈥
Richard said some companies rely heavily on their social network, which often leads to a predominantly white board of directors. Companies, she said, should use objective criteria to ensure their boards have qualified and diverse members, adding that government can play a role in creating a more equal system.
Others emphasize how little has changed over the years. Maria Contreras-Sweet, administrator of the Small Business Administration from 2014 to 2017, served on the U. S. Department of Labor鈥檚 Glass Ceiling , which was formed in 1991. She said she sees some of the same problems still persisting now. While she sees progress, she recognizes how slow it鈥檚 been.
鈥淚 definitely think that these times have brought a greater awareness and more conversations in boardrooms about maybe unconscious bias that may exist,鈥 she said. 鈥淧eople are having hard conversations. It鈥檚 a journey, it鈥檚 not like you turn on a switch and all of a sudden people are enlightened.鈥
The Latino Corporate Directors Association reported that 86% of California-based public companies have no Latinos on their boards even though Latinos represent 39% of the state. The organization has not taken a formal position on the bill.
鈥淭his moment feels a lot different from other moments, that鈥檚 why I鈥檓 going to say I鈥檓 hopeful,鈥 said Linda Akutagawa, the CEO of LEAP, a nonprofit which aims to cultivate Asian and Pacific Islander leadership. 鈥淏ut despite the kind of change that we鈥檙e going through right now, I don鈥檛 think this is going to change as quickly as maybe advocates and activists want to see.鈥
McKinsey & Company found that companies with ethnically diverse executive teams are 33% more likely to outperform companies with less diverse teams on profitability, according to 2017 data.
Even though diversifying a company can improve the bottom line, Akutagawa explained why change has been slow:
鈥淧eople with power do not give up power that easily,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd corporate boards have power.鈥
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