Barbara Hackman Franklin Inducted into NACD`s 2014 Directorship

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Barbara Hackman Franklin Inducted into
NACD's 2014 Directorship 100 Hall of Fame
Former US Secretary of Commerce to be recognized with
Leading F500 Directors and Governance Experts at Dinner on Dec 3 in NYC
Franklin sits on Aetna Board of Directors
WASHINGTON, D.C. (November 12, 2014) – The Honorable Barbara Hackman
Franklin is to be inducted into the National Association of Corporate Directors' (NACD)
2014 Directorship 100 Hall of Fame. This award recognizes Secretary Franklin as one
of the most influential leaders in the boardroom and corporate governance community.
For more than 30 years, Franklin has served on corporate boards, beginning at a time
when there were few women directors. Her service encompasses membership on 14
public and three private company boards, and she has chaired six public company audit
committees, three governance committees, and served as a non-executive chairman
and as a lead director. Currently, she serves on the board of Aetna where she is a
member of the nominating and compensation committees and is past chair of the audit
and governance committees. She is chairman emerita of the board of NACD, has cochaired two NACD Blue Ribbon Commissions and served on a dozen others.
This year's honorees will be recognized during a gala dinner at the eighth annual NACD
Directorship 100 Gala on Dec. 3, in New York City.
“Barbara has exhibited a commitment to the highest principles of board leadership
throughout the years she has served on our Board of Directors,” said Aetna Chairman,
CEO and President Mark T. Bertolini. “She has earned this prestigious honor from the
NACD, and we thank her for her dedication and hard work on behalf of Aetna’s
shareholders.”
“The Hall of Fame leaders are committed to excellence and are recognized for their
unique and extraordinary service to the corporations and shareholders they serve," said
NACD President and CEO Ken Daly. “Barbara’s track record speaks for itself – she
epitomizes director professionalism.”
"I truly believe that more effective corporate governance and more vigilance on the part
of all directors can contribute significantly to a company's better financial and ethical
performance," said Secretary Franklin. "We directors have a responsibility to do our part
to help restore trust in corporate governance and in American business to build longterm value and to do our best for the company and its stakeholders. I am so honored to
be recognized in this way by NACD along with such an esteemed group of corporate
directors and corporate governance leaders.”
In addition to the NACD Hall of Fame induction, Secretary Franklin was the 2013
Connecticut Women’s Hall of Fame awardee recognizing her for her years of service to
the state and the country.
Barbara Hackman Franklin is President and Chief Executive Officer of Barbara Franklin
Enterprises, a private international consulting firm headquartered in Washington, DC.
She is an advocate for and adviser to American companies doing business in
international markets, notably China, and is an expert on corporate governance,
auditing, and financial reporting practices.
As the 29th U.S. Secretary of Commerce for President George H.W. Bush, she
achieved a major goal – increasing American exports – with emphasis on marketopening initiatives in China, Russia, Japan and Mexico. Her historic mission to China in
1992 normalized commercial relations with that country, removed the ban on ministerial
contact that the U.S. had imposed following the events at Tiananmen Square in 1989,
and brought back $1 billion in signed contracts for American companies. Trade with
China grew dramatically in the ensuing years as did foreign investment.
Secretary Franklin's public service began two decades earlier. In 1971 she led the first
White House effort to recruit women for high-level government jobs as a staff assistant
to President Richard Nixon, an effort which resulted in nearly quadrupling the number of
women in those positions (1971-73). Her White House story is told in the 2012 book by
Lee Stout, A Matter of Simple Justice: the Untold Story of Barbara Hackman Franklin
and A Few Good Women. Following this, the President appointed her an original
Commissioner of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, where she focused
on safer products for children and better control of carcinogens (1973-79).
Additionally, Franklin has served four terms on the Advisory Committee for Trade Policy
and Negotiations, by appointments of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W.
Bush, and as Alternate Representative to the 44th United Nations General Assembly by
appointment of President George H. W. Bush. Altogether, Franklin has served five U.S.
Presidents and, in 2006, received the Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service.
In the private sector Franklin has served on the boards of directors of 14 public
companies and three private companies, and is currently a board member of Aetna Inc.,
a trustee of a cluster of American Funds, and a member of the Lafarge International
Advisory Board, Paris, France. She has received numerous governance awards and
served as chairman of the National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) during a
period of significant growth in membership and vitality.
Secretary Franklin is chairman emerita of the Economic Club of New York, immediate
past president of the Management Executives' Society, and a board member of the US
China Business Council, the National Committee on US-China Relations, the Atlantic
Council, the Committee for Economic Development (CED), and the National Symphony
Orchestra. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the Advisory
Council of the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States at the Woodrow
Wilson International Center for Scholars. She was a founding member of Executive
Women in Government (EWG) in 1973 and of the Women's Forum of Washington, DC,
in 1981. During the 1980's, Franklin was a Senior Fellow of the Wharton School of the
University of Pennsylvania.
Fresh out of Harvard Business School and prior to joining the White House staff in
1971, Franklin worked at the Singer Company as manager of environmental analysis
and at First National City Bank (now Citibank) as assistant vice president. Her analysis
of the Bank's relationships with government led to the creation of its first government
relations department, which she headed.
Born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, Franklin graduated with distinction from the
Pennsylvania State University and was one of the first women graduates of the Harvard
Graduate School of Business Administration. Among her many honors and awards, she
has received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Penn State and the Alumni
Achievement Award from Harvard Business School. She is married to Wallace Barnes,
retired chairman and CEO of Barnes Group, Inc. They reside in Washington, DC and
Bristol, CT.
For more information go to:
www.bhfranklin.com
For the full list of the 2014 NACD Directorship 100 honorees go to:
http://www.nacdonline.org/Directorship100/2014honorees.cfm
To learn more about the NACD or NACD Directorship 100, or to register to attend, visit
www.NACDonline.org/D100
Contact:
Stacie Binney, Director of Media and Research
Barbara Franklin Enterprises
202-337-9100
sbinney@bhfranklin.com
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