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EOsubnat Discussion |
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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] RE: state EO programs
Sara Fortunately, a state survey is not necessary (at least not right now). We recently did one and the results are posted at http://cog.kent.edu/Author/Author.htm as "Employees and Ownership: Trends, Characteristics, and Policy Implications of State Employee Ownership Legislation." I agree with Tom that a focus on retiring owners is very useful; you get more bang for your buck there. However, this is getting down to a level where you would have to do a lot of research to determine what is actually being down and that, presumably, is beyond the scope of your work. Did I also mention the issue of whether states used available federal funds for preliminary feasibility work? We have a list of those which have, if that is of use to you. We've got an article on that which I can send you, if you like. John At 11:33 AM 10/26/2001, you wrote: >Thanks to everyone who has replied to my query. >You have all been very helpful in helping me formulate a better list of key >criteria for a good state program. > >A few more questions: >In examining state EO programs, what is the best way to collect information >about state policies with the "best practice" elements in them? Would a >state by state survey be required, or is this information available >elsewhere? > >Also, it seems it is not feasible for us to count targeted efforts for >retirement in state program to date, but perhaps we can include this as an >essential element that is not presently countable? Is this correct? >Thanks again for educating me more thoroughly on EO! >Sara > >-----Original Message----- >From: John Logue [mailto:jlogue@kent.edu] >Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2001 5:30 PM >To: EOsubnat@cog.kent.edu >Subject: Re: state EO programs > > >Tom queried me about how we identify retiring owners. Regrettably we >really can't. > >What we are doing is using the Harris Industrial Directory (manufacturing >is our core >constituency because of the wage scale), screening for closely held >companies with >25-250 employees, and mailing the seminar invitations. Our reasoning for >the employment >limits have been that companies with fewer than 25 employees are poor >candidates for >ESOPs while those over 250 get plenty of professional advice. > >We mail some other lists as well. > >We've had a pretty full program for the last 5 years. Registration has >dropped this fall to >15 per program from about 35, probably reflecting the sudden economic >downturn with its >pressure on companies and the reduction in multiples for valuations. > >John > >At 11:41 PM 10/24/2001, you wrote: > > >Ms. Lawrence: > > > >I think Ohio and Vermont probably provide the best examples of what may be > >possible and desirable on the sub-national level (along with what's > >happening in Maine, Canada, and Sweden). Even when it was still active, > >Hawaii's program never got beyond the following: > > > >- Sponsoring small-scale--but inadequately promoted--conferences about > >every other year; > >- Building a small library of EOP lit and offering limited technical > >assistance upon request; > >- Producing an annual "progress" report and Governor's Proclamations > >observing EOP Week in Hawaii (the latter received very little publicity and > >was also not heavily promoted); and > >- One attempt to identify and notify business owners approaching > >retirement. > > > >The annual report became our main promotional piece because there wasn't > >much progress to report, and because it was difficult to measure "progress" > >with precision (which was primarily defined as any increase in the number > >of ESOPs in Hawaii because that was thought to be the most quantifiable > >criterion). > >Our enabling legislation also mandated an advisory committee, which met > >with some regularity for almost ten years (from 1986 to 1995) until the EOP > >statute expired and wasn't renewed. Our legislature approved renewal, but > >our Governor said we could do the same things without enabling legislation. > >So he vetoed it, and the Legislature didn't want to challenge the veto of a > >relatively insignificant bill. (In fact, Hawaii's legislature has > >overridden a veto only once since statehood in 1959!) Not surprisingly, > >nothing has happened since because it is now left up to the discretion of > >the Governor's Economic Development director. He is a mainstream > >economist who thinks ownership doesn't matter. The enabling statute was > >amended in the late 80s to add the importance of worker participation, but > >that didn't matter either in the sense that the program never had any > >dedicated funding or staff. I did most of the staff work on a volunteer > >basis. > > > >As a result, I think if a subnational program in the U.S. could do only one > >thing, it should be to accurately--and annually--identify and notify > >business owners approaching retirement. If done in every state, I think > >this could do more than anything else on the subnational level to broaden > >ownership in the U.S. at present. Our one attempt at this in Hawaii about > >ten years ago was relatively ineffective, in part because the direct mail > >firm we hired to develop a mailing list said it was difficult to identify > >owners by age. I thought perhaps Ohio had perfected this, but John Logue > >has told me they, too, have this problem. Nevertheless, it is my > >impression that OEOC still has done this much more effectively than anyone > >else so far. > > > >So, in summary, I agree with your criteria below as the minimum a > >meaningful program should be measured by--with regular and successful > >identification of retiring owners being the key. You may want to ask John > >for a short summary of how they identify retiring owners, or at least list > >him as a "how-to" reference along with your benchmarks if appropriate. I > >also think Jim Houck mentioned the importance of enabling legislation, and > >I agree. Even though it cannot guarantee the survival of a program, it > >can help. But I think it should be relatively specific in terms of what > >the program can do so it is not left up to the discretion of each new > >gubernatorial appointee. I seem to recall someone was working on model > >state legislation (was it Maine?), which also might be a good "how-to" > >reference. > > > > > > > > > > > > Sara > > Lawrence > > <sara@cfed.org> To: > > "'EOsubnat@cog.kent.edu'" > > Sent > > by: <EOsubnat@cog.kent.edu> > > owner-eosubnat@co cc: > > > > g.kent.edu Subject: state EO > > programs > > > > > > > > > > 10/23/01 04:27 > > AM > > Please respond > > to > > EOsubnat > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >Hello, > >I would greatly appreciate any feedback on the following: > > > >We are working on a project at the Corporation for Enterprise Development > >(CFED) benchmarking outcomes and policies at the state level that are > >promoting asset building and asset protection for state residents. Within > >this "Assets Report Card" we are including state policies that promote > >business capital as one set of asset building strategies. Within business > >capital, one of our measures evaluates employee ownership programs at the > >state level. > > > >In this measure, we want to make sure that the program meets a certain > >threshold, so that we aren't praising a state that has an EO program that > >isn't good, or effective. > > > > From reading John Logue's recent article, I picked these out as > >requirements > >for a quality EO state program: > > > >-disseminates info > >-provides assistance with succession planning > >-encourages employee participation > > > >Do you think this is a decent standard, or do you have any suggestions on > >what we should or should not consider in determining a threshold for a > >quality EO program? The difficulty here is that we want to define a > >standard for a quality program, yet we don't want to overwhelm > >state policymakers with requirements that seem impossible for state > >officials to consider. > > > >The end result of our project will be a set of criteria, where we can > >"check" or give credit to a state for having these elements in their EO > >program. > > > >Suggestions on what you consider essential for an effective EO program at > >the state level would be greatly appreciated. > > > >Sincerely, > >Sara Lawrence > > > > > >Sara Lawrence > >Corporation for Enterprise Development > >123 West Main Street, 3rd Floor > >Durham NC 27701 > >919.688.6444 > >http://www.cfed.org
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