Catholic
Colleges & Universities Early risers challenged to confront wrongdoing
in business
By PATRICIA LEFEVERE
Minneapolis
It was still dark outside when 200 business leaders, professors,
MBA candidates and undergraduate business students set out for a 7 a.m.
breakfast meeting with Charles Denny Jr. The retired CEO of ADC
Telecommunications and former marketing manager at Honeywell challenged them to
step forward and protest aberrant behavior in the corporate world.
The early risers were attending the monthly Faith and Work series
last month in St. Olaf Church in downtown Minneapolis. They applauded when
Denny said that he was seriously disappointed by the lack of public
voice among executives to the moral breakdown occurring at Enron,
WorldCom, Tyco, Adelphia, Sunbeam and many other firms. Leaders in the business
world have shown they avoid taking action before there is an accusation
of wrongdoing.
Most of us dont like confronting our peers. We
dont speak up to our kids, afraid to offend them or lose their love.
Disapprobation and disapproval are foreign to us, Denny said. But the
Enron debacle was not simply the handiwork of Kenneth Lay and a few executives.
It was the failure of society at large, he said.
Denny parceled out the blame to Enrons auditors, its legal
counsel, government regulatory agencies, Congress -- swayed by campaign
contributions -- and the Enron board of directors.
Corporate governance and potential corporate corruption begin with
the selection of the board of directors, Denny said. At Enron, the board
included academics, doctors, ex-government officials and businesspersons, some
of whom had blatant conflicts of interest and failed to exercise
their supervisory powers with diligence, he said. The lesson, he said, is that
a board of ones peers is not the best protection for the public.
The board has the right to demand a measure of performance from
the CEO, who is the boards agent in the firm, he said. Release of
performance reports to the public is a necessary step in keeping CEOs
responsible.
Denny knocked the star system, which the media helped
boost in the 90s, creating the cult of the infallible CEO.
These were people wed be lucky to see in the distance, much less
touch, he said, and whose salaries we coveted. Such ratings are
nonsense in the corporate world. Every executive is a team player
and every CEO makes mistakes, Denny told NCR. I was carried on the
backs of others.
CEO rates of pay that in some cases are 400 times greater than
worker pay are also nonsense, he said. But Denny believes that executives ought
to be well paid for making hard decisions, facing problems with no clear-cut
solutions and with lots of implications. Al Ca-pone, the gangster, earned twice
what President Hoover did, he noted.
If youre well paid, you should have the courage to
face difficult issues. No one is dragooned into being a CEO. You put your hand
up.
Denny urged his audience to become value-setters in the workplace,
establishing policies that promote fairness and creating checks and balances
that assure that what is described in the values is practiced. In
the absence of self-regulation, government will act to set standards, he
warned. Law makers cant rewrite laws fast enough to accommodate all
the aberrations in corporate life.
Asked whether prayer and spirituality have a place in the
corporate arena, Denny, a Catholic, said he was nervous about
suggesting how people should live their lives. But he was also uneasy with the
claim by many CEOs that their personal behavior can be separated from their
executive and professional role.
Whether a supervisor or a CEO, we all have a definite
influence on those with whom and for whom we work. We follow the leader,
he said, adding that leaders whose values are foremost offer the best chance
for a principled workplace.
Denny is reasonably convinced that most business
leaders subscribe to certain common values and have a solid, if
unarticulated moral core. But often they are afraid to use the power of
their office, which comes from others, to speak out for fear it will affect
their business. Where there is aberrant behavior, business leaders need to
regulate, he said. We cant let these guys run riot.
Denny urged courage in citing and fighting corporate abuse.
No one gets up in the morning aspiring to be average, but we all have
feet of clay.
Michael Naughton, director of the John A. Ryan Institute for
Catholic Social Thought at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul and Fr.
John Forliti, pastor of St. Olaf Church, co-founded the breakfast series nine
years ago. Naughton and 25 of his undergraduate students came to hear
Denny.
Paul Samargia, a computer information systems major, found it
interesting that there are people in the business world who care about
corporate ethics. Travis Thooft, who is scheduled to graduate in business
in December, hoped that the current crisis will produce some good and
scare companies back to higher standards.
Dennys advice to students: The business world is a
good place for you to spend your life and follow your professional vocation.
There is a sea of possibility in which you can swim. You can speak up or not.
You can confront evil and take the consequences, he said, adding:
The consequences are never fatal, only inconvenient.
National Catholic Reporter, October 25,
2002
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