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Berkshire shareholders reject report on workforce oversight, approve say-on-pay

By Thomson Reuters May 2, 2026 | 2:56 PM

By Jonathan Stempel

OMAHA, Nebraska, May 2 (Reuters) – Berkshire Hathaway shareholders on Saturday overwhelmingly rejected a proposal to ​publish a report discussing how ‌the conglomerate oversees its more than 387,000 employees at nearly 200 businesses.

Shareholders also approved proposals backed by Berkshire’s board of directors that ‌they ​grant non-binding approval ⁠of how Berkshire pays ⁠top executives, and every three years have an advisory vote on such compensation, known as “say on pay.”

All 13 ​directors, including Chief Executive Greg Abel and Chairman Warren Buffett, were ⁠also reelected to Berkshire’s ⁠board.

The oversight proposal from shareholder ​Myra Young said Berkshire’s decentralized structure led ​to “inconsistent approaches to human capital management.”

She ‌said this has manifested itself in concerns raised by NetJets pilots about the luxury plane unit’s commitment to ⁠safety and effective training, and a 2021 fire at an Illinois plant run by the ⁠Lubrizol ‌chemicals business that caused $380 million ⁠of property damage.

Berkshire maintained that ​its ‌decentralization reflected the conglomerate’s culture, ​and left ⁠workforce decisions to subsidiaries best positioned to make them. It said this made a report discussing its oversight framework unnecessary.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by ​Alistair Bell)