Coca-Cola to lose its last Atlanta-based board member
After its annual meeting in April, Coca-Cola will for the first time ever have nobody from Atlanta on its board of directors.
The
Coca-Cola Co. (NYSE: KO) said Tuesday that Ronald W. Allen will not
stand for reelection to the board in April. The 78-year-old has been a
director for the company since 1991 and currently serves as chair of the
audit committee. Coca-Cola declined to comment about potential
replacement plans for Allen on the board, which currently includes 14
directors.
Allen is the former
chairman and CEO of Delta Air Lines who captained the Atlanta-based
airlines' international expansion. He also served and chairman and CEO
of Aaron's Inc. from 2012-14. He remains as a director of Forward Air
Corp. and Aircastle Limited.
Allen owned 24,000 shares of Coca-Cola as of the company's SEC filings in February 2019.
"It
has been an honor to serve as a director of Coca-Cola for 29 years and
to work with six different CEOs, beginning with Roberto Goizueta and
ending with James Quincey,” Allen said in a news release. “I am very
confident of the continued success of The Coca-Cola Company under the
leadership of James and his outstanding leadership team.”
Throughout
Coca-Cola's more than 130-year history, Atlanta leaders have held
significant roles on the board. That's changed of late, with the retirement last year of then-lead director Sam Nunn, who'd
served since 1997. In 2013, former SunTrust CEO James B. "Jimmy"
Williams and former Coca-Cola exec Donald R. Keough retired from the
board.
Quincey, who last April assumed the role of chairman in addition to being CEO, has a place in Atlanta but his primary residence has been in England.
In
a emailed statement to Atlanta Business Chronicle about the company’s
commitment to the city, Coca-Cola said: “Since the first Coke was served
in downtown Atlanta in 1886, The Coca-Cola Company has been part a
central part of Atlanta, and Atlanta has been a central part of
Coca-Cola. That has never changed. Even with an operational footprint in
more than 200 countries and territories, our system proudly employs
more people in Atlanta than in any single city on the globe. We’re proud
of this legacy — and proud of the investments we continue to make in
the city we’ve called home for more than 133 years.”
Coca-Cola is officially based in Wilmington, Del., but has its headquarters in Atlanta. Atlanta Business Chronicle previously reported that the beverage giant became Georgia's first public company with five women on its board, following the 2018 election of Caroline Tsay.