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Some Tribune leaders forgo bonuses linked to buyout

However, experts point to other rich incentives for executives to stay.

April 30, 2007|Julie Johnsson and Michael Oneal, Chicago Tribune

Several top officers of Tribune Co. have joined Chief Executive Dennis J. FitzSimons in limiting or declining their slice of a "transaction bonus pool" related to the company's $8.2-billion bid to go private.

Tribune's board established the special incentive in September to prompt management to seek the best deal for shareholders even though such a transaction might cost them their jobs, according to an April 25 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.


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FitzSimons opted out of the pool, which was set up to pay $6.5 million to 32 unnamed executives if the transaction closed as planned.

The Chicago company's latest filings show that Scott Smith, president of Tribune Publishing, has also forfeited his $400,000 bonus, while Donald Grenesko, senior vice president for finance and administration, and John Reardon, president of Tribune Broadcasting, will receive smaller bonuses than the company indicated in an earlier filing.

Grenesko will receive $400,000 instead of $600,000; Reardon will get $200,000 instead of $350,000.

The pullbacks reduced the total payout to $5.2 million, although the pool had been expanded to include 39 executives.

Smith said Friday that he didn't know he had been included in the bonus pool initially. When he learned that FitzSimons had opted out, Smith said he believed it was appropriate for him to decline the payout too.

With Tribune going through a difficult period and "making tough decisions about staffing," Smith said, it would be better for him to "focus on what was best for the company."

Tribune newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times, recently announced a total of about 300 job reductions, and the company's corporate office last week laid off 11 people. Against that backdrop, the bonus pool had created high resentment among Tribune's rank and file.

Smith insisted, however, that the bonus pool was an appropriate reward for the rest of Tribune's management team, given the premium they created for shareholders by signing a deal with billionaire Sam Zell that prices the stock at $34. "There were others who worked exceptionally hard and who are very deserving," Smith said.

Even so, some compensation experts have questioned why Tribune believed that it needed the pool to reward senior executives and entice them to stay when there were plenty of other incentives in place.

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