STERICYCLE, INC. DEF 14A

UNITED STATES

 

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

 

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

SCHEDULE 14A

 

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.    )

 

   Filed by the Registrant  Filed by a Party other than the Registrant

 

Check the appropriate box:
Preliminary Proxy Statement
Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
Definitive Proxy Statement
Definitive Additional Materials
Soliciting Material under Rule 14a-12

 

 

STERICYCLE, INC.

 

(Name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

(Name of person(s) filing proxy statement, if other than the registrant)

 

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
  No fee required.
Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.
  (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
  (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
  (3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11
(set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
  (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
  (5) Total fee paid:
Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
  (1) Amount Previously Paid:
  (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
  (3) Filing Party:
  (4) Date Filed:
 

 

2018

Proxy Statement

 

 

2018 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

 

 

We protect what matters.

 

2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Our Company
At A Glance

 

Stericycle is a global business-to-business services company. We provide an array of highly specialized solutions serving healthcare organizations and commercial businesses of every size. Since our founding in 1989, we have grown from a small start-up in medical waste management into a leader across a range of increasingly complex and highly regulated arenas, such as:

 

Brand protection solutions
Environmental and sustainable solutions
Patient and customer communication solutions
Secure information destruction
Regulated waste management and compliance solutions

 

Every organization today must comply with increasingly strict regulatory guidelines and quality controls in the delivery of their core businesses. Large or small, businesses can’t always do it on their own. They seek out Stericycle to help them. We have the expertise and passion to take on many complicated and often behind-the-scenes services our clients don’t always know how to do well but that ultimately make their businesses better.

 

OUR PURPOSE:

 

To help our customers fulfill their promises by providing solutions that protect people and brands, promote health and safeguard the environment.

 

FOUNDED IN 1989 HEADQUARTERS LAKE FOREST, IL 2017 REVENUE OF $3.6 BILLION 680+ locations IN 21 COUNTRIES MORE THAN ONE MILLION CUSTOMERS WORLDWIDE 23,200+TEAM MEMBERS


 

 

 

 

Notice of 2018 Annual Meeting
of Stockholders

 

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

 

2:00 p.m. Central Daylight Time

Hilton Garden Inn Chicago O’Hare
2930 South River Road
Des Plaines, Illinois 60018

 

DEAR STOCKHOLDER:

 

You are cordially invited to attend our 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”) to be held on Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at 2:00 p.m. Central Daylight Time at the Hilton Garden Inn Chicago O’Hare, 2930 South River Road, Des Plaines, Illinois 60018

 

At the Annual Meeting, you will be asked to consider and vote on the following matters:

 

1. the election to the Board of Directors (the “Board”) of the nine nominees for director named in this proxy statement;
   
2. an advisory vote to approve executive compensation (the “say-on-pay” vote);
   
3. ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018;
   
4. a stockholder proposal entitled Special Shareholder Meeting Improvement;
   
5. a stockholder proposal on the vesting of equity awards upon a change in control; and
   
6. any other matter that properly comes before the meeting.

 

Only stockholders of record at the close of business on the record date of March 29, 2018 are entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting.

 

If you plan to attend the meeting in person, please email your request to Investor@Stericycle.com. If you are the beneficial owner of shares held in street name, you must also provide confirmation of your stock ownership. All requests for admission must be received by May 16, 2018. Admission is not transferable.

 

For the convenience of our stockholders of record who do not plan to attend the Annual Meeting in person but who want their shares voted, we have enclosed a proxy card. If you do not plan to attend the Annual Meeting, please complete and return the proxy card in the envelope provided or go to www.proxyvote.com and follow the instructions. If you return your proxy card and later decide to attend the Annual Meeting and then vote in person, your earlier proxy card (or earlier vote by telephone or Internet) will be revoked. Your attendance at the Annual Meeting, by itself, does not revoke an earlier proxy. If for any other reason you want to revoke your proxy, you may do so at any time before your proxy is voted.

 

For the Board of Directors

 

Dated: April 13, 2018
Lake Forest, Illinois

 

   
   
Robert S. Murley Charles A. Alutto
Chairman of the Board President and Chief Executive Officer

 

Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the 2018
Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be Held on May 23, 2018

 

The Proxy Statement, Notice of Annual Meeting and 2017 Annual Report to
Stockholders are available at www.proxyvote.com

 

Table of Contents

 

SUMMARY INFORMATION 4
   
GENERAL INFORMATION 6
   
STOCK OWNERSHIP 10
   
Stock Ownership by Directors and Officers 10
Stock Ownership of Certain Stockholders 11
   
ITEM 1 ELECTION OF DIRECTORS 12
   
Voting in Uncontested Director Elections 12
Changes to Our Board of Directors 12
Nominees for Director 13
Director Qualifications 15
Committees of the Board 16
Board Leadership 18
Corporate Governance 19
Code of Conduct 20
Communications with the Board 20
Director Compensation 20
   
ITEM 2 ADVISORY VOTE TO APPROVE EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION 22
   
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS 23
   
Executive Summary 23
Our Compensation-Setting Process 25
2017 Compensation Program Highlights 26
Our Executive Compensation Program for 2018 29
Other Compensation Matters 30
   
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT 32
   
2017 SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE 33
   
2017 GRANTS OF PLAN-BASED AWARDS 34
   
2017 OUTSTANDING EQUITY AWARDS AT FISCAL YEAR-END 35

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    2

 
Back to Contents
2017 OPTION EXERCISES AND STOCK VESTED 37
   
POTENTIAL PAYMENTS UPON TERMINATION OR CHANGE IN-CONTROL 37
   
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation 38
   
ITEM 3 RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF ERNST & YOUNG LLP AS OUR INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM FOR 2018 40
   
AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT 41
   
ITEM 4 STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL ENTITLED SPECIAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING
IMPROVEMENT
42
   
ITEM 5 STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL ON VESTING OF EQUITY AWARDS UPON A CHANGE IN CONTROL 43
   
OTHER MATTERS 45
   
STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR THE 2019 ANNUAL MEETING 45
   
SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE 45
   
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION 45
       
APPENDIX A DEFINITION AND RECONCILIATION OF NON-GAAP MEASURES 46

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement   3

 
Back to Contents

SUMMARY INFORMATION

 

This summary highlights information contained elsewhere in this proxy statement. It does not contain all information that you should consider, and you should read the entire proxy statement carefully before voting. In this proxy statement, “we,” “us,” “our,” “Stericycle” and the “Company” all refer to Stericycle, Inc.

 

Annual Meeting of Stockholders

 

Time and Date: 2:00 p.m. Central Daylight Time on Wednesday, May 23, 2018
Place: Hilton Garden Inn Chicago O’Hare
  2930 South River Road
  Des Plaines, Illinois 60018
Record Date: March 29, 2018
Voting: Stockholders as of the record date are entitled to vote
Attendance: Stockholders who wish to attend the meeting in person should email their request to Investor@Stericycle.com by May 16, 2018.
Proxy Materials: This proxy statement and our annual report to stockholders (which includes a copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017) are first being made available to stockholders on or about April 13, 2018.

 

Meeting Agenda and Voting Recommendations

 

Agenda Item Board
Recommendation
Page
Election of nine directors FOR each Nominee 12
Advisory vote to approve executive compensation (the “say-on-pay” vote) FOR 22
Ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018 FOR 40
Stockholder proposal entitled Special Shareholder Meeting Improvement AGAINST 42
Stockholder proposal on the vesting of equity awards upon a change in control AGAINST 43

 

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    4

 
Back to Contents

Board Nominees

 

The following table provides summary information about the nominees for director. Each director is elected by a majority of votes cast.

 

        Director        
Nominee   Age   Since   Principal Occupation   Committees
Robert S. Murley   68   2017   Chairman of the Board, Stericycle, Inc.;
Senior advisor, Credit Suisse, LLC
  •  Audit
Charles A. Alutto   52   2012   President and Chief Executive Officer, Stericycle Inc.   None
Brian P. Anderson   67   2017   Former executive vice president of OfficeMax Incorporated   •  Audit (Chair)
Lynn D. Bleil   54   2015   Former senior partner McKinsey & Company  

•  Compensation

•  Nominating and Governance (Chair)

Thomas D. Brown   70   2008   Former senior vice president and president of the diagnostics division, Abbott Laboratories  

•  Compensation (Chair)

•  Nominating and Governance

Thomas F. Chen   68   2014   Former senior vice president and president of international nutrition, Abbott Laboratories  

•  Audit

•  Nominating and Governance

Mark C. Miller   62   1992   Former Chairman of the Board, Stericycle, Inc.  

None

John Patience   70   1989   Chairman of the Board of Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc.; co-founder and partner, Crabtree Partners LLC; former vice chairman, Ventana Medical Systems, Inc.; former partner, McKinsey & Company  

•  Audit

Mike S. Zafirovski   64   2012   Former director, president and chief executive officer of Nortel Networks Corporation; former director, president and chief operating officer of Motorola, Inc.; former president and chief executive officer of General Electric Lighting  

•  Compensation

•  Nominating and Governance

 

Compensation Highlights

 

Our compensation program is performance oriented and designed to provide strong incentives to our executive officers to continue to improve our operating performance and thereby create value for all of our stockholders. The following table sets forth the 2017 compensation for each named executive officer as determined under the rules of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). See the notes accompanying the Summary Compensation Table on page 33 for more information.

 

Named Executive Officer  Salary   Option
Awards
   Stock
Awards
   Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
   All Other
Compensation
   Total
Compensation
Charles A. Alutto  $1,000,000   $1,317,342   $1,495,299   $   $3,000   $3,815,641
Joseph B. Arnold   550,000    489,363    555,444        3,000    1,597,807
Daniel V. Ginnetti   550,000    489,363    555,444        3,000    1,597,807
Brenda R. Frank   400,000    254,462    288,835        18,113    961,410
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih   370,000    234,882    266,608        41,579    913,069

 

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    5

 
Back to Contents

GENERAL INFORMATION

 

Why Did I Receive This Proxy Statement and Other Materials?

 

The Board of Directors (the “Board”) of Stericycle, Inc. is soliciting proxies to vote shares of our common stock at the 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”) to be held on Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at 2:00 p.m. Central Daylight Time, at the Hilton Garden Inn Chicago O’Hare, 2930 South River Road, Des Plaines, Illinois 60018.

 

This proxy statement and our annual report to stockholders (which includes a copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017), are first being made available to stockholders on or about April 13, 2018. Although both are made available together, our annual report to stockholders is not part of this proxy statement.

 

What Will Stockholders Vote on at the Annual Meeting?

 

Stockholders will vote on following matters at the Annual Meeting:

 

the election to the Board of the nine nominees for director named in this proxy statement (Item 1);
an advisory vote to approve executive compensation (the “say-on-pay” vote) (Item 2);
ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018 (Item 3);
a stockholder proposal entitled Special Shareholder Meeting Improvement (Item 4);
a stockholder proposal on vesting of equity awards upon a change in control (Item 5); and
any other matter that properly comes before the meeting.

 

What Are the Board’s Voting Recommendations?

 

The Board recommends that you vote your shares:

 

FOR each of the nine nominees for election to the Board (Item 1);
FOR the advisory vote to approve executive compensation (Item 2);
FOR ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018 (Item 3);
AGAINST the stockholder proposal entitled Special Shareholder Meeting Improvement (Item 4); and
AGAINST the stockholder proposal on vesting of equity awards upon a change in control (Item 5).

 

Who May Vote at the Annual Meeting?

 

Only stockholders of record as of the close of business on March 29, 2018 are entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting. Each outstanding share of common stock as of the record date is entitled to one vote on all matters that come before the meeting. There is no cumulative voting.

 

As of the close of business on the record date of March 29, 2018, there were 85,573,629 shares of our common stock issued and outstanding.

 

Why Did I Receive Only a One-Page Notice in the Mail Regarding the Internet Availability of Proxy Materials Instead of Receiving a Full Set of Printed Proxy Materials?

 

In accordance with the “notice and access” rules of the SEC, we have elected to provide access to our proxy materials, including this proxy statement and our annual report to stockholders, over the internet, and accordingly, we mailed our stockholders a Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials (the “Notice”) on or about April 13, 2018. This Notice contains instructions on how to access our proxy materials over the internet, how to request a printed or electronic copy of these materials and how to vote by internet, telephone or mail. The voting facilities over the internet or by telephone will remain open until 11:59 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time on May 22, 2018.

 

The Notice is not a proxy card and cannot be used to vote your shares.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    6

 
Back to Contents

What Is the Difference Between a Stockholder of Record and a Beneficial Owner of Shares Held in Street Name?

 

If your shares are registered directly in your name with our stock registrar and transfer agent, EQ Shareowner Services, you are considered the stockholder of record for those shares and have the right to vote those shares directly. You may vote in person at the Annual Meeting or by proxy.

 

If your shares are held in an account at a brokerage firm, bank or other nominee (for convenient reference, a “broker”), you are considered the beneficial owner of those shares, which are said to be held in “street name,” and the broker is considered the stockholder of record for voting purposes. As the beneficial owner you cannot vote the shares in your account directly, but you have the right to instruct the broker how to vote them.

 

As a beneficial owner, you are invited to attend the Annual Meeting, but because you are not a stockholder of record, you may not vote your shares at the Annual Meeting unless you obtain a valid proxy from your broker.

 

See “How Can I Attend the Annual Meeting?” below for further information and instructions.

 

If I Am a Stockholder of Record, How Do I Vote?

 

You may vote in several ways. You may vote in person at the Annual Meeting, or you may vote by proxy over the internet or by telephone by following the instructions provided in the Notice.

 

In addition, if you request copies of our proxy materials in printed form, you may vote by completing and signing the proxy card included in the materials and returning it in the postage-paid envelope provided.

 

If I Am a Beneficial Owner of Shares Held in Street Name, How Do I Instruct My Broker How to Vote?

 

If you are a beneficial owner of our common stock, the Notice was forwarded to you by your broker. You may instruct your broker how to vote over the internet or by telephone by following the instructions provided by your broker.

 

In addition, if you request copies of our proxy materials in printed form, you may instruct your broker how to vote by completing and signing the voting instruction card included in the materials and returning it in the postage-paid envelope provided.

 

What Happens if I am a Stockholder of Record and Sign and Return the Proxy Card But Do Not Make Any Voting Choices?

 

The proxy holders (the persons named as proxies) will vote your shares in accordance with the Board’s voting recommendations for Items 1-5 described in this proxy statement. See “What are the Board’s voting recommendations?” above.

 

We do not expect that any other matters will properly come before the Annual Meeting. If, however, any other matters do come before the meeting, the proxy holders will vote your shares in accordance with their judgment.

 

What Happens if I Am a Beneficial Owner of Shares Held in Street Name and Do Not Give Voting Instructions to My Broker?

 

Under the stock exchange and other rules governing brokers who are voting shares held in street name, brokers have authority to vote those shares at their discretion on “routine” matters but may not vote those shares on “non-routine” matters. The ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018 (Item 3) is considered a routine matter under the relevant rules. All of the other items to be voted on (Items 1, 2, 4 and 5) are considered non-routine matters.

 

A “broker non-vote” occurs when your broker returns a proxy card for your shares held in street name but does not vote on a particular matter because (i) the broker has not received voting instructions from you and (ii) the broker does not have authority to vote on the matter without instructions because the matter is of a non-routine nature. Broker non-votes will not have any effect on the result of the vote when they occur. There will be not be any broker non-votes on the ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018 (Item 3), because brokers will have discretionary authority to vote on this matter.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    7

 
Back to Contents

What Is the Quorum Required for the Annual Meeting?

 

Holders of a majority of our outstanding shares entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting who are present in person or represented by proxy will constitute a quorum to conduct business at the Annual Meeting.

 

If you are a stockholder of record and vote your shares by proxy, your shares will be counted for purposes of determining whether a quorum is present even if your voting choice is to abstain. Similarly, if you are a beneficial owner of shares held in street name and do not give voting instructions to your broker, your shares will be counted for purposes of determining whether a quorum is present if your broker votes your shares on any routine matter.

 

What Are My Choices in Voting on the Matters to Be Voted on at the Annual Meeting?

 

On Item 1 (the election of directors), you may vote “For” or “Against” each individual nominee or “Abstain” from voting on the nominee’s election.

 

On Item 2 (the say-on-pay vote), Item 3 (ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018), Item 4 (stockholder proposal entitled Special Shareholder Meeting Improvement) and Item 5 (stockholder proposal on the vesting of equity awards upon a change in control), you may vote “For” or “Against” the proposal or “Abstain” from voting on the proposal.

 

What Are the Voting Requirements to Approve the Matters to Be Voted on at the Annual Meeting?

 

Item 1 (election of directors): Each nominee for election as a director must receive more “For” votes than “Against” votes in order to be elected as a director. Abstentions and broker non-votes will not have any effect on the result of the vote.
Item 2 (the say-on-pay vote): This proposal requires for approval the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote. Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote “Against.” Broker non-votes will not have any effect on the result of the vote.
Item 3 (ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018): This proposal requires for approval the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote. Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote “Against.” Brokers will have discretionary authority to vote on Item 3, and therefore, there will not be any broker non-votes on this matter.
Item 4 (stockholder proposal entitled Special Shareholder Meeting Improvement): This proposal requires for approval the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote. Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote “Against.” Broker non-votes will not have any effect on the result of the vote.
Item 5 (stockholder proposal on the vesting of equity awards upon a change in control): This proposal requires for approval the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares present in person or represented by proxy and entitled to vote. Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote “Against.” Broker non-votes will not have any effect on the result of the vote.

 

Can I Change My Vote after I Have Voted?

 

If you are a stockholder of record, you may change your vote by voting again over the internet or by telephone (before those voting facilities are closed at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time on May 22, 2018) or by returning a new, properly completed proxy card bearing a later date than the date of your original proxy card. In addition, you may revoke your proxy by attending the Annual Meeting in person and requesting to vote. Attendance at the meeting in person will not, by itself, revoke your proxy. You may also revoke your proxy any time before the final vote at the Annual Meeting by filing a signed notice of revocation with the Secretary of the Company at 28161 North Keith Drive, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045.

 

If you are a beneficial owner of shares held in street name, you may revoke your proxy by following the instructions provided by your broker.

 

How Can I Find Out the Voting Results of the Annual Meeting?

 

The preliminary voting results will be announced at the Annual Meeting if available. The final voting results will be tallied by the inspector of elections and reported in a current report on Form 8-K which we will file with the SEC within four business days following the Annual Meeting.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    8

 
Back to Contents

Who Is Paying for the Cost of This Proxy Solicitation?

 

We will bear the cost of this proxy solicitation. Some of our officers and employees may solicit proxies by personal conversations, telephone, regular mail or email, but they will not receive any additional compensation for doing so. We will reimburse brokers and others for their reasonable charges and expenses in forwarding our proxy materials to stockholders who are beneficial owners of shares of our common stock.

 

Multiple Individuals Residing in My Home Are Beneficial Owners of Stericycle Common Stock. Why Did We Receive Only One Mailing?

 

We are sending only one envelope with multiple Notices to you if you share a single address with another stockholder, unless we have received instructions to the contrary from you. This practice, known as “householding,” is designed to eliminate duplicate mailings, conserve natural resources and reduce our printing and mailing costs. We will promptly deliver a separate Notice to you upon written or verbal request. If you wish to receive duplicate mailings in the future, you may contact Investor Relations, Stericycle, Inc., 28161 North Keith Drive, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045. If you currently receive multiple Notices, you can request householding by contacting our Investor Relations as described above. If you own your shares through a broker, you can request householding by contacting the holder of record.

 

How Can I Attend the Annual Meeting?

 

We encourage our stockholders to attend the Annual Meeting. If you plan to attend the meeting in person, please email your request to Investor@Stericycle.com. If you are the beneficial owner of shares held in street name, you must also provide confirmation of your stock ownership (for example, by providing a copy of a brokerage firm statement).

 

All requests for admission must be received by May 16, 2018. Admission is not transferable and will admit only the stockholder or stockholders to whom it was issued.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    9

 
Back to Contents

STOCK OWNERSHIP

 

Stock Ownership by Directors and Officers

 

The following table provides information about the beneficial ownership of shares of our common stock as of March 29, 2018 by (i) each of our directors, (ii) each of our named executive officers listed in the Summary Compensation Table on page 33, and (iii) all of our directors and executive officers as a group:

 

  Amount and Nature of
Beneficial Ownership
(1)  Percent of
Class
(2) 
Directors        
Mark C. Miller 1,088,388   1.3 %
Jack W. Schuler(3) 703,415   *  
Charles A. Alutto(4) 502,655   *  
John Patience(5) 205,013   *  
Thomas D. Brown 61,984   *  
Mike S. Zafirovski 36,017   *  
Thomas F. Chen 20,472   *  
Lynn D. Bleil 13,867   *  
Robert S. Murley 3,670   *  
Brian P. Anderson 2,670   *  
Named Executive Officers        
Daniel V. Ginnetti 132,794   *  
Joseph B. Arnold(6) 130,288   *  
Brenda R. Frank 12,034   *  
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih 57,687   *  
All directors and executive officers as a group (16 persons) 2,977,092   3.5 %
* Less than 1%.
(1) This column includes shares of common stock issuable upon the exercise of stock options exercisable as of or within 60 days after March 29, 2018. These shares are held as follows: Mr. Miller, 898,644 shares; Mr. Schuler, 30,813 shares; Mr. Alutto, 496,020 shares; Mr. Patience, 54,384 shares; Mr. Brown, 61,489 shares; Mr. Zafirovski, 32,602 shares; Mr. Chen, 19,977 shares; Ms. Bleil, 13,372; Mr. Anderson, 2,281 shares; Mr. Murley, 2,281 shares; Mr. Ginnetti, 125,442 shares; Mr. Arnold, 125,324 shares; Ms. Frank, 10,914 shares; and Ms. Abdulmassih, 55,551 shares. Includes 126,669 shares pledged by Mr. Patience and 616,142 shares pledged by Mr. Schuler, respectively, as security for lines of credit.
(2) Shares of common stock issuable under a stock option exercisable as of or within 60 days after March 29, 2018 are considered outstanding for purposes of computing the percentage of the person holding the option but are not considered outstanding for purposes of computing the percentage of any other person.
(3) The shares shown as beneficially owned by Mr. Schuler include 27,120 shares owned by trusts for his benefit and 29,340 shares owned by his wife, regarding the latter of which Mr. Schuler disclaims any beneficial ownership.
(4) Mr. Alutto is also a named executive officer as our President and Chief Executive Officer.
(5) The shares shown as beneficially owned by Mr. Patience include 1,000 shares owned by his wife, regarding which Mr. Patience disclaims any beneficial ownership.
(6) The shares shown as beneficially owned by Mr. Arnold include 15 shares owned by his son, regarding which Mr. Arnold disclaims any beneficial ownership.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    10

 
Back to Contents

Stock Ownership of Certain Stockholders

 

The following table provides information about the beneficial ownership of our common stock by each person who was known to us to be the beneficial owner as of the record date (March 29, 2018) of more than 5% of our outstanding common stock:

 

Name and Address of Beneficial Owner Amount and Nature of
Beneficial Ownership
  Percent of
Class
The Vanguard Group, Inc.(1)
100 Vanguard Boulevard
Malvern, Pennsylvania 19355
8,540,788   10.0%
T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.(2)
100 E. Pratt Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21202
8,570,538   10.0%
BlackRock, Inc.(3)
55 East 52nd Street
New York, New York 10055
5,910,355   6.9%
(1) Based on a Schedule 13G/A filed using the SEC on January 10, 2018, the Vanguard Group has sole voting power with respect to 115,589 shares, shared voting power with respect to 15,606 shares, sole dispositive power with respect to 8,412,973 shares and shared dispositive power with respect to 127,815 shares.
(2) Based on a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on March 12, 2018, T Rowe Price Associates, Inc. has sole voting power with respect to 3,397,090 shares and sole dispositive power with respect to 8,552,072 shares.
(3) Based on a Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC on February 8, 2018, BlackRock, Inc. has sole voting power with respect to 5,242,589 shares, sole dispositive power with respect to 5,909,811 shares and shared dispositive power with respect to 544 shares.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    11

 
Back to Contents
ITEM 1Election of Directors

 

Our Board is currently composed of 10 directors. Mr. Schuler, our current Lead Director, is not standing for re-election at the Annual Meeting. With the exception of Mark C. Miller, our former Chairman of the Board and CEO, and Charles A. Alutto, our President and Chief Executive Officer, all of our directors are outside directors (i.e., directors who are neither officers nor employees of ours). Mr. Miller transitioned from the role of Executive Chairman of the Board to Chairman of the Board immediately following our 2017 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and transitioned out of his role as Chairman of the Board in March 2018. Mr. Murley, one of our independent directors, was elected as Chairman of the Board in March 2018. Although Mr. Miller is no longer Chairman of the Board or an officer of the Company, because of his previous employment with us he is not considered an outside director. The Board has determined that all of our outside directors are independent under the applicable listing standards of the Nasdaq Global Select Market (“Nasdaq”).

 

Each director elected at the Annual Meeting will hold office until our 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders or until his or her successor is duly elected and qualified.

 

Voting in Uncontested Director Elections

 

Under our bylaws, a nominee for election as a director must receive a majority of the votes cast in order to be elected as a director in an uncontested election (an election in which the number of nominees for election is the same as the number of directors to be elected). In other words, the nominee must receive more “for” votes than “against” votes, with abstentions and broker non-votes not having any effect on the voting.

 

If a nominee for election as a director is an incumbent director and the nominee is not re-elected, Delaware law provides that the director continues to serve as a “holdover” director until his successor is elected and qualified or until he resigns. Under our bylaws, an incumbent director who is not re-elected is required to tender his resignation as a director. Our Nominating and Governance Committee will review the circumstances and recommend to the Board whether to accept or reject the director’s resignation or take any other action. The Board is required to act on this recommendation and publicly disclose its decision and the rationale behind its decision within 90 days from the date that the election results are certified.

 

Changes to Our Board of Directors

 

 

Mr. Schuler will not be standing for re-election at the Annual Meeting. The Company thanks Mr. Schuler for his many years of distinguished service to the Company. Should all director nominees be elected to the Board at the Annual Meeting, the number of directors constituting the Board will be decreased from 10 to 9 directors.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    12

 
Back to Contents

Nominees for Director

 

ROBERT S. MURLEY

 

Director since January 2017
Age 68

 

Experience: Robert S. Murley has served as our Chairman since March 2018 and as a director since January 2017. Mr. Murley is a Senior Adviser to Credit Suisse, LLC, a financial services company. From 1975 to April 2012, Mr. Murley was employed by Credit Suisse, LLC and its predecessors. In 2005, he was appointed Chairman of Investment Banking in the Americas. Prior to that time, Mr. Murley headed the Global Industrial and Services Group within the Investment Banking Division, as well as the Chicago investment banking office. He was named a Managing Director in 1984 and appointed a Vice Chairman in 1998. Mr. Murley is a member of the board of directors of Health Insurance Innovations Inc., of privately held Brown Advisory Incorporated, and of the board of advisors of Harbour Group. He was formerly on the board of directors of Stone Energy Corporation and Apollo Education Group, Inc. Mr. Murley is an Emeritus Charter Trustee of Princeton University, a Trustee and the former Chairman of the Board of the Educational Testing Service in Princeton, New Jersey, is Vice Chairman of the Board of the Ann & Robert Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago and Chair of the Board of the Lurie Children’s Foundation, is a Trustee of the Museum of Science & Industry in Chicago, Illinois, is Chairman of the Board of the UCLA Anderson Board of Advisors. Mr. Murley holds a Bachelor of Arts from Princeton University, a Master of Business Administration from the UCLA Anderson School of Management, and a Master of Science from the London School of Economics and Political Science.

 

Skills & Qualifications: Mr. Murley’s existing public company board experience, his deep knowledge of the capital markets and the economy, and his extensive experience leading and advising a range of businesses across multiple industries make him a valuable member of the Board.

 

CHARLES A. ALUTTO

 

Director since November 2012
Age 52

 

Experience: Charles A. Alutto has served as our President and Chief Executive Officer since January 2013 and as a director since November 2012. He joined us in May 1997 following our acquisition of the company where he was then employed. He became an executive officer in February 2011 and served as President, Stericycle USA. He previously held various management positions with us, including vice president and managing director of SRCL Europe and corporate vice president of our large quantity generator business unit. Mr. Alutto received a B.S. degree in finance from Providence College and an M.B.A. degree in finance from St. John’s University.

 

Skills & Qualifications: Mr. Alutto brings to the Board his substantial experience in sales and marketing, operations and general management of our industry.

 

BRIAN P. ANDERSON

 

Director since January 2017
Age 67

 

Experience: Brian P. Anderson has served as a director since January 2017. Mr. Anderson served Senior Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer of OfficeMax Incorporated from 2004 to 2005 and as Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Baxter International from 1997 to 2004. He joined Baxter in 1991, as Vice President, Corporate Audit, became Corporate Controller in 1993 and then Vice President, Finance in 1997. Before joining Baxter, he spent 15 years with Deloitte in the Chicago office and the Washington, D.C. office as an Audit Partner. He is a member of the Board of Directors of W. W. Grainger, Inc., PulteGroup, Inc., James Hardie Industries plc, and The Nemours Foundation. He currently serves as Chairman of The Nemours Foundation, Chairman of the Audit Committees of James Hardie Industries plc and PulteGroup, and is the former Lead Director and Audit Committee Chairman of W. W. Grainger, Inc. Mr. Anderson was recently elected to The Governing Board of the Center for Audit Quality and served on the Board of A.M. Castle & Co. from 2005 to 2016, as Audit Committee Chairman (2005-2010) and Chairman of the Board 2010-2016.

 

Skills & Qualifications: The specific skills and qualifications that Mr. Anderson brings to our Board include his significant experience as a chief financial officer of two large multinational companies, in-depth knowledge with respect to the preparation and review of complex financial reporting statements, and experience in risk management and risk assessment.

 

LYNN D. BLEIL

 

Director Since May 2015
Age 54

 

Experience: Lynn D. Bleil has served as a director since May 2015. Ms. Bleil was the leader of the West Coast Healthcare Practice of McKinsey & Company, a management consulting firm. Ms. Bleil was also a leader of McKinsey’s worldwide Healthcare Practice. She retired in November 2013 as a Senior Partner (Director) in the Southern California Office of McKinsey. During her more than 25 years with McKinsey, she worked exclusively within the healthcare sector, advising senior management and boards of leading companies on corporate and business unit strategy, mergers and acquisitions and integration, marketing and sales, public policy and organization. Ms. Bleil also serves as a director of DST Systems, Inc., a financial and health services information technology company, Sonova Holdings AG, a global leader in hearing aids and cochlear implants, and Intermountain Healthcare’s Park City Medical Center, a non-profit healthcare organization. Ms. Bleil holds a B.S.E. degree in Chemical Engineering from Princeton University and an M.B.A. degree from the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

 

Skills & Qualifications: Ms. Bleil brings to the Board significant experience in the healthcare industry, as well as commercial expertise and expertise in corporate strategy, mergers and acquisitions, and financial reporting, compliance and risk management.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    13

 
Back to Contents

THOMAS D. BROWN

 

Director Since May 2008
Age 70

 

Experience: Thomas D. Brown has served as a director since May 2008. From 1974 until his retirement in 2002, Mr. Brown held various sales, marketing and management positions at Abbott Laboratories, where he served as a senior vice president and president of the diagnostics division from 1998 to 2002 and as corporate vice president for worldwide commercial operations from 1993 to 1998. He is a director of Quidel Corporation and Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc., and formerly served as a director of Ventana Medical Systems, Inc. and Cepheid Inc. Mr. Brown received a B.A. degree from the State University of New York at Buffalo.

 

Skills & Qualifications: Mr. Brown has a strong record of operational success and extensive knowledge of the healthcare industry. He also has extensive executive leadership and governance experience, as well as governmental and regulatory, human resources, commercial and international business expertise.

 

THOMAS F. CHEN

 

Director Since May 2014
Age 68

 

Experience: Thomas F. Chen has served as a director since May 2014. Mr. Chen served as senior vice president and president of international nutrition of Abbott Laboratories before retiring in 2010. During his 22-year career at Abbott, Mr. Chen served in a number of roles with expanded responsibilities, primarily in Pacific/Asia/ Africa where he oversaw expansion into a number of emerging markets. Prior to Abbott, he held several management positions at American Cyanamid Company, which later merged with Pfizer. He is a director of Baxter International Inc. and formerly served as a director of Cyanotech Corporation. Mr. Chen received a Bachelor’s degree in International Business from National Cheng Chi University in Taipei, Taiwan, and an M.B.A. degree from Indiana University.

 

Skills & Qualifications: With his extensive international business experience, Mr. Chen provides our Board with a distinct global perspective. He also provides our Board with significant operational, strategy, mergers and acquisitions, healthcare industry, governmental and regulatory, and commercial expertise.

 

MARK C. MILLER

 

Director since May 1992
Age 62

 

Experience: Mark C. Miller served as our Chairman from May 2016 to March 2018 and prior to that he was our Executive Chairman since January 2013. Mr. Miller has been a director since May 1992. He became our Chief Executive Officer in May 1992 and Chairman of the Board of Directors in August 2008, and served in each of those roles until January 2013. From May 1989 until joining us, Mr. Miller served as vice president for the Pacific, Asia and Africa in the international division of Abbott Laboratories, a diversified health care company, which he joined in 1976 and where he held a number of management and marketing positions. Mr. Miller serves as a director of Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc., a developer of automated diagnostics systems, and formerly served as a director of Ventana Medical Systems, Inc., a developer and supplier of automated diagnostic systems. He received a B.S. degree in computer science from Purdue University, where he graduated Phi Beta Kappa.

 

Skills & Qualifications: Having previously served as our Chief Executive Officer, Chairman and Executive Chairman, Mr. Miller provides our Board with a wealth of knowledge of our industry. He also possesses substantial expertise in the areas of operations, strategy, mergers and acquisitions, government and regulatory, human resources, and international business.

 

JOHN PATIENCE

 

Director Since March 1989
Age 70

 

Experience: John Patience has served as a director since our incorporation in March 1989. He is a co-founder and partner of Crabtree Partners LLC, a private investment firm in Lake Forest, Illinois, which was formed in June 1995. He is currently the chairman of the board and a director of Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc., a developer of automated diagnostics systems. He formerly served as a director and vice chairman of the board of directors of Ventana Medical Systems, Inc., a public company prior to its being acquired in February 2008. From January 1988 to March 1995, he was a general partner in a venture capital firm which he co-founded and which led our pre-IPO funding. He was previously a partner in the consulting firm of McKinsey & Company, specializing in health care. Mr. Patience received B.A. and LL.B. degrees from the University of Sydney in Sydney, Australia, and an M.B.A. degree from the Wharton School of Business of the University of Pennsylvania.

 

Skills & Qualifications: Mr. Patience brings to our Board his substantial experience as a director with public and private healthcare companies, as well as commercial, international business, strategy, mergers and acquisitions and financial reporting, compliance and risk management expertise.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    14

 
Back to Contents

MIKE S. ZAFIROVSKI

 

Director Since November 2012
Age 64

 

Experience: Mike S. Zafirovski has served as a director since November 2012. Mr. Zafirovski is the founder and president of The Zaf Group LLC, a management consulting and investment firm established in November 2012. Mr. Zafirovski has also served as an executive advisor to The Blackstone Group, a private investment banking company, since October 2011. From November 2005 to August 2009, Mr. Zafirovski served as the president and chief executive officer and a director of Nortel Networks Corporation. Prior to that, he was the president and chief operating officer and a director of Motorola, Inc. from July 2002 to January 2005, and remained a consultant to and a director of Motorola until May 2005. He served as executive vice president and president of the personal communications sector of Motorola from June 2000 to July 2002. Prior to joining Motorola, Mr. Zafirovski spent nearly 25 years with General Electric Company, where he served in management positions, including 13 years as president and chief executive officer of five businesses in the consumer, industrial and financial services areas, his most recent being president and chief executive officer of GE Lighting from July 1999 to May 2000. Mr. Zafirovski also serves as a director of The Boeing Company and two private companies (Apria Healthcare Group Inc. and non-executive chairman of the board for DJO Global, Inc.). He received a B.A. degree in mathematics from Edinboro University in Pennsylvania.

 

Skills & Qualifications: Mr. Zafirovski provides guidance to the Board on a wide variety of strategic, operational and business matters based on his substantial experience leading enterprises with significant international operations. He also provides business transformation, information technology, mergers & acquisitions, healthcare industry, and government and regulatory expertise.

 

The Board of Directors recommends a vote “FOR” the election of these nine Director nominees. Proxies solicited by the Board will be so voted unless stockholders specify a different choice.

 

Director Qualifications

 

We believe that our nine director nominees possess the experience, qualifications and skills that warrant their election as directors. Our directors have in common, among other qualities, a breadth of business experience, seasoned judgment and an insistence on looking beyond the next quarter or the next year in directing and supporting our management. From their service on the boards of other public and private companies, our directors also bring to us the insights that they gain from the operating policies, governance structures and growth dynamics of these other companies.

 

When the Board elected Mr. Zafirovski as a director in November 2012, it was aware that Nortel Networks Corporation had filed for bankruptcy protection in January 2009 while Mr. Zafirovski was serving as its president and chief executive officer and a director. The Board concluded that this event did not impair Mr. Zafirovski’s ability to serve as one of the Company’s directors.

 

The Nominating and Governance Committee seeks to ensure an experienced, exceptionally qualified Board with deep expertise in areas relevant to Stericycle. When evaluating potential director nominees, the committee considers each individual’s professional expertise and background, in addition to his or her personal characteristics. The committee always conducts this evaluation in the context of the Board as a whole. The committee works with the Board to determine the appropriate mix of backgrounds and experiences that will foster and maintain a Board strong in its collective knowledge, and best able to perpetuate our long-term success. To assist in this objective, the Nominating and Governance Committee conducts annual evaluations of the Board and the Board’s committees assessing the experience, skills, qualifications, diversity and contributions of each individual and of the group as a whole.

 

The Nominating and Governance Committee regularly communicates with the Board to identify characteristics, professional experience and areas of expertise that will help meet specific Board needs, including:

 

leadership experience, as directors who have served in significant leadership positions possess strong abilities to motivate and manage others and to identify and develop leadership qualities in others;
public company Board service and governance expertise, which provides directors with a solid understanding of their extensive and complex oversight responsibilities and furthers our goals of greater transparency, accountability for management and the Board and protection of stockholder interests;
operational expertise, which gives directors specific insight into, and expertise that will foster active participation in, the development and implementation of our operating plan and business strategy;
financial reporting, compliance and risk management expertise, which enables directors to analyze our financial statements, capital structure and complex financial transactions and oversee our accounting, financial reporting and enterprise risk management; and
healthcare industry expertise, which is vital in understanding and reviewing our strategy.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    15

 
Back to Contents

The following table highlights each nominee’s specific skills, knowledge and experiences in these areas. A particular director may possess additional skills, knowledge or experience even though they are not indicated below:

 

    Alutto   Anderson   Bleil   Brown   Chen   Miller   Murley   Patience   Zafirovski
Leadership experience (public company CEO/COO)                              
Public company Board service/governance expertise                  
Operational expertise
(logistics/supply chain or capital intensive industry)
                         
Business transformation/IT expertise                                  
Corporate strategy/M&A capability                    
Financial reporting, compliance and risk management expertise                        
Healthcare industry expertise                  
Government/regulatory experience                          
Talent management/HR expertise                              
Commercial/go-to-market expertise                      
International business expertise                    
Gender, ethnic or other diversity                              
Tenure on Board
(years, as of May 2018)
  6   1.4   3   10   4   26   1.4   29   6

 

Committees of the Board

 

Our Board of Directors has three standing committees: Compensation, Audit, and Nominating and Governance Committees. All of the members of each committee are outside directors who are independent under the applicable Nasdaq listing standards.

 

Compensation Committee

 

The Compensation Committee determines the structure, award and public disclosure of all elements of compensation and benefits paid to our CEO and other executive officers. The committee reviews and approves financial and strategic performance objectives with respect to our annual and long-term incentive plans. Pursuant to the committee’s charter, the committee has responsibility for facilitating a risk review of incentive compensation programs and assessing if those incentives create risks that are reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on our company. At the request of the Board, the committee periodically reviews executive leadership development and CEO succession planning and makes recommendations to our Board of Directors.

 

Audit Committee

 

The Audit Committee assists the Board of Directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities relating to the integrity of our financial statements, the qualifications and experience of our independent accountants, the performance of our internal audit function and our independent accountants, and our compliance with legal and regulatory requirements.

 

The Audit Committee reviews our risk management policies and practices and reports any significant issues to the Board. Matters of risk management are brought to the committee’s attention by our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, our Executive Vice President and General Counsel or by our principal internal auditor. Our management reviews and reports on potential areas of risk at the committee’s request or at the request of other members of the Board.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    16

 
Back to Contents

Nominating and Governance Committee

 

The Nominating and Governance Committee develops, recommends to the Board and oversees the implementation of our corporate governance policies and practices. The committee monitors ongoing legislative and regulatory changes and initiatives pertaining to corporate governance principles, SEC disclosure rules and Nasdaq listing rules. The committee identifies and evaluates possible nominees for election to the Board of Directors and recommends to the Board a slate of nominees for election at the annual meeting of stockholders. The committee also recommends to the Board director assignments to the Board’s committees.

 

As discussed above, the Nominating and Governance Committee considers a variety of factors in evaluating a candidate for selection as a nominee for election as a director. These factors include the candidate’s personal qualities, with a particular emphasis on probity, independence of judgment and analytical skills, and the candidate’s professional experience, educational background, knowledge of our business and healthcare services generally and experience serving on the boards of other public companies. In evaluating a candidate’s qualification for election to the Board, the committee also considers whether and how the candidate would contribute to the Board’s diversity, which we define broadly to include gender and ethnicity as well as background, experience and other individual qualities and attributes. The committee has not established any minimum qualifications that a candidate must possess. In determining whether to recommend an incumbent director for re-election, the committee also considers the director’s preparation for and participation in meetings of the Board of Directors and the committee or committees of the Board on which the director serves.

 

In identifying potential candidates for selection in the future as nominees for election as directors, the Nominating and Governance Committee relies on suggestions and recommendations from the other directors, management, stockholders and others and, when appropriate, may retain a search firm for assistance. The committee will consider candidates proposed by stockholders and will evaluate any candidate proposed by a stockholder on the same basis that it evaluates any other candidate. Any stockholder who wants to propose a candidate should submit a written recommendation to the committee indicating the candidate’s qualifications and other relevant biographical information and providing preliminary confirmation that the candidate would be willing to serve as a director. Any such recommendation should be addressed to the Board of Directors, Stericycle, Inc., 28161 North Keith Drive, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045.

 

In addition to recommending director candidates to the Nominating and Governance Committee, stockholders may also, pursuant to procedures established in our bylaws, directly nominate one or more director candidates to stand for election at an annual meeting of stockholders. A stockholder wishing to make such a nomination must deliver written notice of the nomination to the secretary of the Company not less than 90 days nor more than 120 days prior to the first anniversary of the preceding year’s annual meeting of stockholders. If, however, the date of the annual meeting is more than 30 days before or after the first anniversary, the stockholder’s notice must be received no more than 120 days prior to such annual meeting nor less than the later of (x) 90 days prior to such annual meeting and (y) the close of business on the 10th day following the date on which notice or public disclosure of the date of the meeting was first given or made.

 

Stockholders may also submit director nominees to the Board to be included in our annual proxy statement, known as “proxy access.” Stockholders who intend to submit director nominees for inclusion in our proxy materials for the 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders must comply with the requirements of proxy access as set forth in our bylaws. The stockholder or group of stockholders who wish to submit director nominees pursuant to proxy access must deliver the required materials to the Company not less than 120 days nor more than 150 days prior to the anniversary of the date that the Company first mailed its proxy materials for the annual meeting of the previous year.

 

Committee Charters

 

The charters of the Compensation, Audit, and Nominating and Governance Committees are available on our investor relations website, http://investors.stericycle.com.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    17

 
Back to Contents

Committee Members and Meetings

 

The following table provides information about the current membership of the committees of the Board of Directors.

 

            Nominating and  
    Compensation   Audit   Governance  
Director   Committee   Committee   Committee  
Robert S. Murley            
Jack W. Schuler              
Charles A. Alutto              
Brian P. Anderson(1)            
Lynn D. Bleil          
Thomas D. Brown          
Thomas F. Chen          
Mark C. Miller              
John Patience            
Mike S. Zafirovski          
Member
Committee Chair
(1) The Board of Directors has determined that Mr. Anderson, the Chairman of the Audit Committee, is an “audit committee financial expert” as defined in the applicable SEC rules.

 

Our Board of Directors held 22 meetings in person or by telephone during 2017 and acted without a formal meeting on several occasions by the unanimous written consent of the directors. The Audit Committee held 28 meetings during the year. The Compensation Committee held 7 meetings during the year. The Nominating and Governance Committee held 4 meetings during the year. Each director attended 75% or more of the aggregate of the total number of Board meetings and the total number of meetings of all Board committees on which he or she served during his or her term of service.

 

We encourage our directors to attend the annual meeting of stockholders. Each of the director nominees attended the 2017 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, and we anticipate that all of our director nominees will attend this year’s Annual Meeting.

 

Board Leadership

 

Our Company’s Board of Directors does not have a current requirement that the roles of Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board be either combined or separated because the board believes it is in the best interest of our Company to make this determination based upon the position and direction of the Company and the constitution of the Board and management team. The Board regularly evaluates whether the roles of Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the board should be combined or separated.

 

As part of the evolution of the Board of Directors, in March 2018, Mr. Miller, who had served as our Chairman of the Board since May 2016, transitioned from his role as Chairman and Mr. Murley, one of our independent directors, was elected Chairman of the Board. Mr. Miller continues to serve as one of our directors.

 

The Chairman confers with our President and CEO on matters of general policy affecting the day-to-day management of our company’s business. The Chairman coordinates the scheduling and agenda of board meetings and the preparation and distribution of agenda materials. The Chairman presides at all meetings of the Board of Directors and may call special meetings of the Board when he considers it appropriate. In general, the Chairman oversees the scope, quality, and timeliness of the flow of information from our management to the Board and serves as an independent contact for stockholders wishing to communicate with the Board.

 

Our Board believes that an independent Chairman serves the Company and its stockholders well at this time. The combined experience and knowledge of Messrs. Alutto and Murley in their respective roles as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman provide the Board and the Company with continuity of leadership combined with independent oversight of the Board and management. Our non-management directors further facilitate the Board’s independence by meeting frequently as a group and fostering a climate of transparent communication. A high level of contact between our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer between board meetings also serves to foster effective board leadership.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    18

 
Back to Contents

Corporate Governance

 

Executive Sessions of the Board

 

Our Board of Directors excuses Mr. Alutto, our President and Chief Executive Officer, as well as any of our other executive officers who may be present by invitation, from a portion of each meeting of the Board in order to allow the Board, with our Chairman presiding, to review Mr. Alutto’s performance as President and Chief Executive Officer and to enable each director to raise any matter of interest or concern without the presence of management.

 

Board Evaluation

 

Our directors annually review the performance of the Board of Directors and its committees and the performance of their fellow directors by completing a confidential evaluation that is returned to Ms. Bleil as the Chairman of the Nominating and Governance Committee. At a subsequent meeting of the Board, Ms. Bleil leads a discussion with the full Board of any issues and suggestions for improvement identified in the review of the director evaluations.

 

Policy on Related Party Transactions

 

The Board of Directors has adopted a written policy requiring certain transactions with related parties to be approved in advance by the Audit Committee. For purposes of this policy, a related party includes any director or executive officer or an immediate family member of any director or executive officer. The transactions subject to review include any transaction, arrangement or relationship (or any series of similar transactions, arrangements and relationships) in which (i) we or one of our subsidiaries will be a participant, (ii) the aggregate amount involved exceeds $100,000 and (iii) a related party will have a direct or indirect interest. In reviewing proposed transactions with related parties, the Audit Committee considers the benefits to us of the proposed transaction, the potential effect of the proposed transaction on the director’s independence (if the related party is a director), and the terms of the proposed transaction and whether those terms are comparable to the terms available to an unrelated third party or to employees generally. There were no such transactions during the year ended December 31, 2017 that required the Audit Committee’s approval.

 

Succession Planning

 

The Board of Directors annually reviews and approves our succession planning for our Chief Executive Officer, our other executive officers and a number of other leaders.

 

Risk Oversight

 

The Board regularly devotes time during its meetings to review and discuss the most significant risks facing the Company, and management’s responses to those risks. During these discussions, the Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, General Counsel and other members of senior management present management’s assessment of risks, a description of the most significant risks facing the Company and any mitigating factors and plans or practices in place to address and monitor those risks.

 

Each Board committee addresses relevant risk topics as part of its committee responsibilities. The committees oversee the Company’s risk profile and exposures relating to matters within the scope of their authority and provide periodic reports to the full Board about their deliberations and recommendations. The Audit Committee reviews with management significant risks and exposures identified by management, our internal audit staff or the independent accountants, and management’s steps to address these risks. The Compensation Committee is responsible for overseeing the management of risks relating to the Company’s executive compensation plans and its overall compensation philosophy.

 

Responsibility for risk management flows to individuals and entities throughout our Company as described above, including our Board, Board committees and senior management. We believe our culture has facilitated, and will continue to facilitate, effective risk management across the Company.

 

Required Resignation on Change in Job Responsibilities

 

The Board of Directors has adopted a policy that a director must tender his resignation if the director’s principal occupation or business association changes substantially from the position that he held when originally elected to the Board. The Nominating and Governance Committee will then review the circumstances of the director’s new position or retirement and recommend to the full Board whether to accept or reject the director’s resignation in light of the contribution that he or she can be expected to continue to make to the Board.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    19

 
Back to Contents

Anti-Hedging and Anti-Pledging Policy

 

Our directors, executive officers and other designated employees are prohibited from engaging in certain transactions in respect of our common stock including hedging transactions, derivative transactions and short sales. In addition, executive officers and other designated employees are prohibited from holding our common stock in a margin account or otherwise pledging our common stock as collateral for a loan. Directors are prohibited from holding our common stock in a margin account or otherwise pledging our common stock as collateral for a loan unless they meet our stock ownership guidelines and have conferred with our General Counsel with respect to such pledge.

 

Clawback Policy

 

In order to encourage sound financial reporting and enhance individual accountability, we have adopted a clawback policy that allows us to recover from our executive officers certain performance-based compensation in the event of certain accounting restatements. If we are required to prepare a restatement of our financial statements due to material noncompliance with any financial reporting requirement under the securities laws, the Compensation Committee will seek to recover from a covered officer certain performance-based compensation if the covered officer is determined to have engaged in fraud or intentional misconduct that materially contributed to the need for the restatement or if otherwise required by applicable SEC or Nasdaq rules.

 

Code of Conduct

 

The board has adopted a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics that sets forth standards regarding matters such as honest and ethical conduct, compliance with law, and full, fair, accurate, and timely disclosure in reports and documents we file with the SEC and in other public communications. The Code of Business Conduct and Ethics applies to all our employees, officers and directors, including our principal executive officer, principal financial officer and principal accounting officer. The Code of Business Conduct and Ethics is available at our website, www.stericycle.com, and is available free of charge on written request to Investor Relations, Stericycle, Inc., 28161 North Keith Drive, Lake Forest, IL 60045. Any amendments to certain provisions of the Code of Business Conduct and Ethics or waivers of such provisions granted to certain executive officers will be disclosed promptly on our website.

 

Communications with the Board

 

Stockholders and other interested parties who would like to communicate with the Board may do so by writing to the Board of Directors, Stericycle, Inc., 28161 North Keith Drive, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045. Our Investor Relations department will process all communications received. Communications relating to matters within the scope of the Board’s responsibilities will be forwarded to the Chairman of the Board and, at his direction, to the other directors. Communications relating to ordinary day-to-day business matters that are not within the scope of the Board’s responsibilities will be forwarded to the appropriate officer or executive. Communications addressed to a particular committee of the Board will be forwarded to the chair of that committee and, at his or her direction, to the other members of the committee.

 

Director Compensation

 

Compensation in 2017

 

In February 2016, in consultation with an independent compensation consultant, the Board implemented a phased modification to our plan of compensation for outside directors (the “Director Compensation Plan”) to align the compensation of our outside directors with the changes made to the compensation of our executive officers and with the market generally. Our goal in making such changes was to provide compensation that aligned with the median compensation awarded by our peers to ensure we can continue to attract and retain a high caliber board of outside directors. These changes became effective in 2017.

 

For 2017, each outside director’s compensation consisted of an annual cash retainer of $40,000 and an annual equity retainer of $125,000. Unless deferred, the annual equity retainer was paid entirely in time-based RSU’s which vest on the first anniversary of the grant date. We also paid the Chair of the Audit Committee an additional $10,000 in cash and the chair of the Compensation Committee an additional $5,000 in cash for their service as committee chairs. Under the terms of the Director Compensation Plan, directors may elect to convert all or a portion of the annual cash retainer to time-based RSUs. Directors may also elect to defer

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    20

 
Back to Contents

receipt of any or a portion of their annual director compensation and convert such compensation to deferred stock units (DSU’s). DSUs are generally payable in the form of shares of our common stock within a certain period after a director’s death or other separation from service. We did not pay any other fees or other cash compensation to our directors who served during 2017 or provide them with any perquisites or other personal benefits. Directors are not paid separate fees for attending meetings of the Board or its committees, and no fees were paid to the Mr. Miller for his service as Chairman of the Board.

 

The following table provides information about the compensation paid to our directors in 2017. Neither Mr. Alutto nor Mr. Miller* received any additional compensation for their services as directors.

 

Name  Fees Earned
or Provided in
Cash
   Stock
Awards
   Total
Jack Schuler  $    $165,000   165,000
Brian P. Anderson   25,000    150,000    175,000
Lynn D. Bleil        165,000    165,000
Thomas D. Brown        170,000    170,000
Thomas F. Chen   20,000    145,000    165,000
Robert S. Murley   20,000    145,000    165,000
John Patience        165,000    165,000
Mike Zafirovski   20,000    145,000    165,000

 

* During 2017 Mr. Miller was compensated for his services as an employee. For his services during 2017, Mr. Miller received cash compensation of $50,000, a stock award with a grant date fair value of $449,923, and an option award with a grant date fair value of $176,181.

 

Compensation Plan for 2018

 

Beginning in 2018, as part of the second phase of the modifications to the Director Compensation Plan implemented in 2016, the directors’ annual cash retainer was increased to $80,000 and the annual equity award remained at $125,000, delivered entirely in time-based RSUs unless converted to DSUs. In addition, we will pay the following additional retainers beginning in 2018 to be more in line with our peer group:

 

Chair of the Audit Committee—$20,000
Chair of the Compensation Committee—$15,000
Chair of the Nominating and Governance Committee—$12,500
Chairman of the Board or Lead Director—$25,000

 

The Compensation Committee regularly reviews Director compensation to ensure it remains competitive with our peer group.

 

Stock Ownership Guidelines

 

Under our Director Compensation Plan, all directors are expected to hold a minimum position in our stock. Stericycle established this program to help align the long-term interests of directors with the interests of our stockholders. Each non-employee director is expected to hold four times the annual cash retainer in Stericycle, Inc. common stock.

 

Although there is no specific period of time in which directors are required to achieve the applicable ownership threshold, they are expected to make continuous progress toward that goal. To that end, each non-employee director must retain 75% of his or her stock or option awards until the minimum position requirement has been achieved.

 

Compliance with these ownership guidelines is measured following the same process as used for confirming stock ownership by executive officers. See “Stock Ownership Guidelines” under the Other Compensation Matters section.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    21

 
Back to Contents
ITEM 2 Advisory Vote to Approve Executive Compensation

 

Pursuant to Section 14A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”), we are asking our stockholders to approve, by means of a non-binding advisory vote, the compensation of our named executive officers as disclosed in this proxy statement.

 

This proposal, popularly known as “say-on-pay,” enables stockholders to express or withhold their approval of our executive compensation program in general. The vote is intended to provide an assessment by our stockholders of our overall executive compensation program and not of any one or more particular elements of that program. The Compensation Committee and the full Board intend to consider and take into account the outcome of this non-binding advisory vote in making future executive compensation decisions. Because this vote is advisory and non-binding, it will not necessarily affect or otherwise limit any future compensation of any of our named executive officers. This advisory vote to approve executive compensation will be held on an annual basis at least until the next advisory vote to determine the frequency of such vote, which is expected to be in 2023.

 

Our executive compensation program is described in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section of this proxy statement and the related tables and narrative discussion. Stockholders are strongly urged to read this material in its entirety, and in particular to read the “Executive Summary” on pages 23 and 24 to obtain an informed understanding of our executive compensation program.

 

We believe that our executive compensation program is firmly aligned with the long-term interests of our stockholders. Our executive compensation program has as its objectives (i) attracting, motivating and retaining highly qualified executive officers and (ii) structuring most of their compensation, aside from their base salaries, to be dependent on the Company’s attainment of measurable Company-wide performance targets and the sustained growth in our stock price, so that they benefit only if our stockholders benefit.

 

We believe that our executive compensation program satisfies these objectives. Our executive compensation program consists of cash compensation and long-term incentive compensation. For 2017, cash compensation was paid in the form of a base salary and long-term incentive compensation was paid in the form of stock options, time-based RSUs and performance-based RSUs. Annual cash performance bonuses are dependent on Company-wide performance. Stock options and RSUs are only granted at the closing market price on the date of grant and are dependent for their value on the subsequent growth in value of our stock. With respect to 2017, base salary represented 26% and equity compensation 74% of our CEO’s total direct compensation and base salary represented 37% and equity compensation represented 62% of our other NEO’s total direct compensation. At the request of management, the Compensation Committee determined to award no annual cash performance bonuses to our NEOs with respect to 2017 because we underperformed against our performance objectives.

 

For these reasons and the reasons elaborated more fully in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section and the related tables and narrative discussion, the Board of Directors requests stockholders to approve the following resolution:

 

Resolved, that the stockholders approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of the Company’s named executive officers as disclosed in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis section, the compensation tables, and the related narrative disclosure in this Proxy Statement.

 

The Board of Directors recommends a vote “FOR” the approval of this advisory resolution on the compensation of our Company’s named executive officers, as disclosed in this proxy statement. Proxies solicited by the Board will be so voted unless stockholders specify a different choice.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    22

 
Back to Contents

COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

 

Executive Summary

 

Our 2017 Named Executive Officers

 

This Compensation Discussion and Analysis explains our executive compensation program generally, and the compensation awarded to our CEO, CFO, and three other most highly compensated executives specifically. These executives, referred to as our “named executive officers” or “NEOs”, were:

 

Name Title
Charles A. Alutto President and Chief Executive Officer
Joseph B. Arnold Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Daniel V. Ginnetti Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Brenda R. Frank Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih Executive Vice President, Communication and Related Services

 

Stericycle’s Executive Compensation Philosophy

 

The executive compensation program at Stericycle is developed by the Compensation Committee and approved annually by the Board of Directors.

 

The compensation program for executive officers has two objectives:

 

1. To attract, motivate and retain highly qualified executive officers; and
   
2. To structure the bulk of executive compensation to be dependent on Stericycle’s attainment of measurable Company-wide performance targets and sustained growth in our stock price so that executives benefit only if our stockholders benefit.

 

Our executive compensation program has three components: base salary, short-term incentive awards, and long-term incentive awards. Base salary and annual performance bonuses are paid in cash, and long-term incentive compensation is paid in the form of stock options, time-based RSUs, and performance-based RSUs. We generally target our executive officers’ total direct compensation to be aligned with the median of our peer group. To ensure appropriate pay-for-performance alignment, the Compensation Committee may approve compensation levels for individual executive officers above and below target pay positions based on experience, individual contribution, and the Company’s performance relative to its peer group.

 

The Compensation Committee and the Board work to ensure that our executive compensation program is both market-competitive and performance-oriented. Our executive officers earn base salaries, but the majority of their target compensation comes in annual cash performance bonuses, stock options and time-based and performance-based RSUs. As a result, a substantial portion of our executive officers’ compensation is influenced, either positively or negatively, by Stericycle’s performance and by stockholder return.

 

Our Executive Compensation Best Practices

 

The Compensation Committee regularly reviews the executive compensation program to ensure that it is aligned with our compensation philosophy, our Company objectives, and stockholder interests. Highlights of key elements of and exclusions from our program are noted below.

 

What We Do:   What We Don’t Do:
   Deliver significant percentage of target annual compensation as variable compensation tied to performance      No re-pricing of underwater stock options
Align executives’ interests with stockholders’ interests through long-term incentive compensation paid in equity   No excessive perquisites or personal benefits
Maintain an executive compensation claw back policy   No employment contracts for NEOs
Cap annual and long-term incentive awards      
Retain an independent compensation consultant to advise the Compensation Committee      
Prohibit officers and directors from engaging in hedge or short sale transactions involving our securities      
Regular review of proxy advisor policies and corporate governance best practices      
Maintain stock ownership and retention guidelines      
Provide “double-trigger” vesting in connection with a change in control, of equity awards granted in 2018      

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    23

 
Back to Contents

Our Executive Compensation Program for 2017

 

Historically, our named executive officers received salaries significantly below those of comparable executives in our peer group of companies. Beginning in 2015, the Compensation Committee embarked on a four-year plan to move salaries of our executive officers toward the median of our peer group of companies. Subsequent to our acquisition of Shred-it in 2015, the Compensation Committee determined that this four year time table needed to be accelerated to reflect the increased responsibilities of the executives, to preserve internal equity, and to support retention. In 2017, our named executive officer salaries were adjusted upward and annual cash performance targets were adjusted downward moving our named executive officer direct cash compensation toward the median of our peer group companies.

 

For 2017, our named executive officers’ annual cash performance bonuses were based upon the achievement of Adjusted EBITA targets developed from our annual operating plan and budget and adjusted return on invested capital (Adjusted ROIC). Adjusted EBITA is defined as earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization excluding acquisition-related expenses and other various expenses that do not reflect the ongoing performance of the business. The approach used for Adjusted EBITA for executive compensation is consistent with that used for communicating the financial performance of the company and is reviewed quarterly by both the Audit Committee and Compensation Committee.

 

Adjusted ROIC excludes the impact of acquisitions within the current year. The calculation for Adjusted ROIC is net operating profit after taxes and amortization (NOPATA) excluding acquisition-related expenses and other various expenses that do not reflect the ongoing performance of the business divided by invested capital. In 2017, Adjusted ROIC excluded the impact of acquisition expenses, integration expenses, restructuring and plant conversion expenses, the change in fair value of contingent considerations, contract exit costs, asset impairment charges, litigation expenses, and insurance proceeds.

 

The Board believes these two metrics for the annual cash performance bonus provide strong incentives to our executive officers to improve our operating performance and the return on our capital employed, thereby creating value for our stockholders.

 

Our executives are also compensated with a long-term incentive program in the form of equity grants. For 2017, the award structure of the long-term incentive plan was equally divided among awards granted as stock options, awards granted as time-based RSUs, and awards granted as performance-based RSUs. These grants of equity were designed to incentivize our named executive officers to focus on long-term value creation.

 

The principal elements of Stericycle’s executive compensation program for 2017 are summarized below. These elements are discussed in more detail under “2017 Compensation Program Highlights.”

 

Compensation
Element
Form of
Compensation
Performance and
Vesting Criteria
Purpose
Base Salary Cash N/A Provide fixed compensation to attract and retain key executives and to offset external factors that may impact incentive pay
Annual Cash Bonus Cash Annual Adjusted EBITA and Adjusted ROIC objectives Incentivize executives to achieve annual performance goals and be rewarded commensurately
Long-term Incentives Stock Options (1/3) Time-based RSUs (1/3) Five year ratable vesting based on continuous service Incentivize long-term value creation and align management’s interests with those of our shareholders
  Performance-based RSUs (1/3) Vest, or not, in three equal annual installments depending on achievement of performance metric

 

The chart below illustrates how these components were allocated in actual total compensation received by our NEOs in 2017.

 

2017 CEO Compensation Mix 29% Time-based RSUs 35% Stock Options 10% Performance-based RSUs 0% Annual Bonus 26% Base Salary 2017 Other NEO Compensation Mix 25% Time-based RSUs 29% Stock Options 8% Performance-based RSUs 0% Annual Bonus 37% Base Salary

 

For 2017, approximately 79% of our CEO’s target total compensation and approximately 70% of our other NEO’s target total compensation was at risk.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    24

 
Back to Contents

Our Compensation-Setting Process

 

Compensation Committee

 

Compensation decisions for our executive officers are made by the Compensation Committee of our Board of Directors, subject in some instances to approval by the full Board. All of the Committee’s members are independent under the applicable Nasdaq listing standards.

 

Peer Group

 

Our peer group is composed of companies that are similar to us in terms of revenue, number of team members, services offered, and industries served. The Compensation Committee believes we compete with companies similar to the peer group for executive talent as well. The Compensation Committee refers to information about our peer group primarily for the purpose of benchmarking the NEOs’ total direct compensation packages, in addition to reviewing competitive industry pay trends and practices.

 

For 2017, the peer group consisted of the following companies:

 

Company Name  2016 Revenue
($MM)
  Employees  Industry Focus
ABM Industries Incorporated  $5,145  140,000  Business services
Charles River Laboratories International, Inc.   1,681  11,800  Medical laboratories & research
Chemed Corporation   1,577  14,613  Home health care
Cintas Corporation   4,796  42,000  Business services
Clean Harbors, Inc.   2,755  12,400  Waste management
CoreCivic, Inc.   1,850  13,755  REIT – Diversified
Covanta Holding Corporation   1,699  3,600  Waste management
Ecolab Inc.   13,153  48,000  Cleaning products
Equifax, Inc.   3,145  9,500  Credit services
Healthcare Services Group, Inc.   1,563  48,900  Business services
Iron Mountain Incorporated   3,511  24,000  Specialized REIT
J.B. Hunt Transportation Services, Inc.   6,555  22,190  Transportation services
Paychex, Inc.   2,952  14,000  Staffing and outsourcing services
Pitney Bowes, Inc.   3,407  14,700  Business equipment
Republic Services, Inc.   9,388  35,000  Waste management
Rollins, Inc.   1,573  12,153  Business services
Tetra Tech, Inc.   1,929  16,000  Technical services
Waste Connections, Inc.   3,376  15,283  Waste management
Stericycle, Inc.   3,562  25,000  Environmental and facility services
Median   3,048  14,992   

 

The Compensation Committee reviews annually and adjusts if necessary the composition of the peer group.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    25

 
Back to Contents

Decision-Making Processes

 

The Compensation Committee takes into account a number of factors in setting compensation and incentive award opportunities for our executive officers. These decisions are made with a view to reaching an overall result that the Committee believes is appropriate and fair to each NEO—both in absolute terms and relative to the compensation of the other executive officers—and fair as well to Stericycle and to our stockholders. The Committee also considers each executive officer’s role, contribution to our performance, and the officer’s compensation history in making compensation decisions.

 

Compensation decisions are made at the regular meeting of the Compensation Committee during the first quarter of the year—typically in February, when the results of our prior year’s performance are available. The Committee considers these results in determining the executive officers’ annual cash performance bonuses for the prior year and their base salaries and annual cash performance bonus targets for the current year.

 

Our Chief Executive Officer makes recommendations to the Compensation Committee regarding the compensation of our other NEOs, but management generally does not otherwise participate in the Committee’s decisions. The Committee provides a recommendation for the salary of our NEOs, but the Board must provide final approval.

 

Decisions regarding the annual stock option and RSU grants to our executive officers and to our employees generally are also made during the first Compensation Committee meeting of the year. However, the grant date for options or RSUs is set more than a year in advance of this meeting. The Committee determines the annual stock option and RSU grants to our executive officers taking into account (i) Stericycle’s overall operating performance, (ii) each executive officer’s individual responsibilities and performance, (iii) competitive market data, (iv) prior stock option and RSU grants, and (v) the goal of limiting stock option and RSU grants to no more than 10% of our fully-diluted shares over a trailing five-year period, thus averaging dilution of no more than 2% a year.

 

Compensation Consultant

 

The Compensation Committee has engaged Deloitte Consulting LLP, as its independent compensation consultant, to review our executive compensation philosophy and practices and the composition of our peer group of companies. After a review of the factors prescribed by SEC and Nasdaq rules regulations, the Compensation Committee determined that Deloitte Consulting LLP is independent. Taking the results of the consultant’s review over the past four years into consideration, the Compensation Committee has been executing plans to adjust our executive compensation program to be in alignment with peers, as described above under “Our Executive Compensation Program for 2017.”

 

2017 Compensation Program Highlights

 

Base Salaries

 

The table below illustrates the NEOs’ base salaries over the past three fiscal years.

 

   2017 Salary   2016 Salary   2015 Salary 
Mr. Alutto  $1,000,000   $585,000   $488,269 
Mr. Arnold   550,000    380,000    343,077 
Mr. Ginnetti   550,000    380,000    346,923 
Ms. Frank   400,000    325,000    n/a*
Ms. Abdulmassih   370,000    n/a**   n/a**
* Ms. Frank was not an NEO in 2015.
** Ms. Abdulmassih was not an NEO in 2016 or 2015.

 

With these increases, base salaries for our NEOs are in line with the median for our peer group. As discussed above under “Our Executive Compensation Program for 2017”, the Compensation Committee opted to accelerate the final phase of the four-year plan for base salary increases in 2017 to align our NEOs’ total direct compensation more closely with compensation awarded by our peer group.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    26

 
Back to Contents

Annual Cash Performance Bonuses

 

Our annual cash performance bonus program is intended to reward our executive officers for achieving our annual operating plans and budgets. Each executive officer is eligible for an annual cash performance bonus equal to a specified percentage of base salary.

 

Our executive officers earn annual cash performance bonuses based upon the achievement of Adjusted EBITA targets developed from our annual operating plan and budget and Adjusted ROIC targets. The Compensation Committee believes the Adjusted ROIC metric is an appropriate addition for determining a short-term incentive to reflect the value of investment decisions, especially acquisition investments.

 

As a result, 70% of each NEO’s 2017 annual cash performance bonus was tied to achievement of our Adjusted EBITA goal and 30% was tied to achievement of our Adjusted ROIC goal.

 

Performance Goals for 2017

 

Based upon our annual business plans, the Compensation Committee established minimum, target, and maximum achievement levels for the Adjusted EBITA portion of the annual cash performance bonus.

 

For 2017, the Adjusted EBITA target was $749 million. There was no payout for this metric if we failed to attain Adjusted EBITA of $708 million, and the payout for performance at or above the maximum goal of $783 million was capped at 200%.

 

As with the Adjusted EBITA portion of the bonus, the Compensation Committee fixed minimum, target, and maximum Adjusted ROIC performance goals and related payout percentages. For 2017, the Adjusted ROIC target was 7.57%. There was no payout for this metric if we failed to attain the minimum Adjusted ROIC of 6.57%, and the payout for performance at or above the maximum goal of 8.57% was capped at 200%.

 

The following table shows how different levels of actual Adjusted EBITA and Adjusted ROIC were designed to affect the payout.

 

   Adjusted EBITA  Adjusted ROIC
   Cash Bonus Program for 2017  Cash Bonus Program for 2017
   70% Total Cash Bonus  30% Total Cash Bonus
   Percentage of  Percent Adjusted  Adjusted EBITA  Percentage of  Adjusted
   Award Payout  EBITA Attainment  Target (in $ millions)  Award Payout  ROIC Target
Minimum  50%  95%  $ 708  50%  6.57%
Target  100%  100%  749  100%  7.57%
Maximum  200%  105% or more  783 or more  200%  8.57% or more

 

Both sets of performance targets allow for payout of the annual cash performance bonuses at levels that increase proportionally from the minimum tier (an annual cash performance bonus equal to the specified percentage of the executive officer’s base salary) to the maximum.

 

For 2017, the annual cash performance bonus percentages for our named executive officers were as follows:

 

       Cash Performance
   Base Salary   Bonus Percentage
Mr. Alutto  $1,000,000    100%
Mr. Arnold   550,000    75%
Mr. Ginnetti   550,000    75%
Ms. Frank   400,000    60%
Ms. Abdulmassih   370,000    65%

 

Performance Results for 2017

 

Our Adjusted EBITA for 2017 for purposes of the annual cash performance bonus program was $680.9 million and was below threshold. Our Adjusted ROIC performance in 2017 for purposes of the annual cash performance bonus program was 7.2% or 95.0% of target. These performance results would have led to an annual cash bonus payout equal to 24.0% of target, as illustrated below:

 

0% Adjusted EBITDA Payout x 70% 80% Adjusted ROIC Payout x 30% 24.0% Performance Bonus Payout Percentage

 

However, at the request of our executive officers, the Compensation Committee exercised downward discretion and determined not to award any annual cash performance bonuses to our NEOs for 2017.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    27

 
Back to Contents

Long-Term Equity Incentive Awards

 

The Compensation Committee’s first step when making long-term equity incentive awards is to determine the desired total grant date fair value of each NEO’s award in the manner described above under “Our Compensation-Setting Process.” For 2017, 1/3 of that total amount was awarded in the form of stock options, 1/3 of that total amount was awarded in the form of time-based RSUs and the remaining 1/3 was awarded in the form of performance-based RSUs.

 

Stock Option Grants for 2017

 

Until 2016, executive officers’ long-term incentive awards were entirely in the form of stock options. With the addition of time-based RSUs and performance-based RSUs to the long-term incentive program, stock options constituted approximately one third of our NEOs’ long-term compensation in 2017.

 

The Compensation Committee believes stock options provide strong performance incentives. Our stock options are always granted at the closing price of our stock on the date of the grant.

 

Options vest over a period of five years and must be exercised within eight or ten years, depending on the grant, so their value to our executive officers depends entirely on the growth in the value of our stock in the years after the options are issued. Accordingly, the executive officers’ stock options provide an incentive for sustained levels of superior performance that contribute to our overall success as reflected in the market price of our stock, which benefits all of our stockholders.

 

The 2017 stock option awards for our named executive officers were as follows:

 

   Number of   Grant Date
   Stock Options   Fair Value
Mr. Alutto   67,280   $  1,317,342
Mr. Arnold   24,993    489,363
Mr. Ginnetti   24,993    489,363
Ms. Frank   12,996    254,462
Ms. Abdulmassih   11,996    234,882

 

Time-based Restricted Stock Units for 2017

 

Based on a review of market practices and with input from its consultant, the Compensation Committee decided to incorporate time-based RSU awards as 1/3 of the long-term incentive component of our executive compensation program effective in 2017. The number of RSUs awarded to an NEO is determined based on the target grant date fair value of the NEO’s total equity award. Time-based RSUs granted to executive officers vest in equal annual installments over five years, beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date.

 

During 2017, the Compensation Committee granted time-based RSU awards to our named executive officers as follows:

 

   Time-based    
   Restricted   Grant Date
   Stock Units   Fair Value
Mr. Alutto   13,455   $  1,121,474
Mr. Arnold   4,998    416,583
Mr. Ginnetti   4,998    416,583
Ms. Frank   2,599    216,627
Ms. Abdulmassih   2,399    199,957

 

Performance-based Restricted Stock Units for 2017

 

Based on a review of market practices and with input from the independent compensation consultant, the Compensation Committee decided to incorporate performance-based RSU awards as the final third of the long-term incentive component of our executive compensation program effective in 2017. The number of performance-based RSUs awarded to an NEO is determined based on the target grant date fair value of the NEO’s total equity award. Performance-based RSUs granted to executive officers vest, if at all, in equal installments over three years, depending on achievement during each year of the applicable annual EPS performance goal.

 

During 2017, the Compensation Committee granted performance-based RSU awards to our named executive officers as follows:

 

   Performance-based    
   Restricted   Grant Date
   Stock Units   Fair Value
Mr. Alutto   13,455    $  373,825
Mr. Arnold   4,998    138,861
Mr. Ginnetti   4,998    138,861
Ms. Frank   2,599    72,209
Ms. Abdulmassih   2,399    66,652

 

The first performance period ended December 31, 2017 and no performance-based RSUs were earned.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    28

 
Back to Contents

Our Executive Compensation Program for 2018

 

Compensation Program for 2018

 

Based on benchmark data provided by Deloitte, the Compensation Committee made changes to our executive compensation program in January 2017 to further the Compensation Committee’s goals established in 2015. These changes were designed to address a substantial disparity between the total direct compensation awarded to Stericycle’s NEOs and the total direct compensation awarded to executives with similar responsibilities in our peer group. Deloitte’s market data regarding compensation packages for our NEOs indicated that compensation was generally below the median of our peer group.

 

To remedy the market disparity in our NEOs’ compensation, beginning in 2015, Stericycle initiated base salary increases that were intended to be phased in over a four-year period. However, in 2017, the Compensation Committee determined it was necessary to accelerate the four-year phase-in and implement the remaining compensation plan changes immediately to reflect increased responsibilities of the executives, to preserve internal equity, and to support retention.

 

We believe these changes made in 2017 are consistent with our compensation philosophy, which stresses that compensation for our NEOs must be performance-based, but also aligned with the median compensation awarded by our peers to ensure we can continue to attract and retain a consistent pipeline of high caliber executive talent. The equity awards granted in March 2018 provide for “double-trigger” vesting in connection with a change in control. As noted below, the Committee did not make additional significant structural changes to the program for 2018.

 

Plan Impacted   Key Changes   Reasons
Base salary   NEO salaries were unchanged compared to 2017   To keep base salaries aligned with the median of our peer group
Annual cash bonus   NEO cash bonus opportunities were unchanged compared to 2017   To keep target cash compensation aligned with the median of our peer group and reflect company performance
    Replaced Adjusted EBITA metric with Adjusted EBITDA   To better reflect normal operating results without being subject to valuation assumptions
    Maintained metric weightings at 70% Adjusted EBITDA and 30% Adjusted ROIC   To maintain the emphasis on the value generated from investment decisions
Stock options   Maintained the stock option component of the total long-term incentive award at one third   To allow for a more balanced long-term incentive mix
Time-based RSUs   Maintained the time-based RSU component of the total long-term incentive award at one third   To allow for a more balanced long-term incentive mix
Performance-based RSUs   Maintained the performance-based RSU component of the long-term incentive award at one third.

Performance-based RSUs vest, or not, in three equal annual installments based on annual EPS performance goals
  To maintain the rigor and stockholder focus of the long-term equity incentive program by tying a significant portion of the award to EPS
Peer group   Removed two companies – Paychex, Inc and Chemed Corporation. Added three companies – Advanced Disposal Services, Inc., The Brink’s Company and Unifirst Corporation   To improve comparability of peer group and provide a more robust data set

 

The Committee did not implement any changes in executive compensation during 2017 as a direct result of the stockholders’ advisory vote. The most recent vote regarding “say on pay” for our executive compensation program indicated that our stockholders support the Compensation Committee’s strategy of awarding competitive compensation featuring rigorous performance-based incentive opportunities. During the 2017 “say on pay vote,” we received 93% support “for” the executive compensation plan.

 

2018 Executive Compensation Plans

 

In order to maintain competitiveness with the market but reflect our company’s overall performance, the Committee approved compensation plans for our NEOs that included no increase in base salary, no increase in the cash performance incentive, and a three-part equity program. The compensation plans for our named executive officers in 2018 are as follows:

 

     Cash Performance    Granted  Granted   Granted 
   Base Salary  Bonus Percentage   Stock Options  Performance-Based RSUs  Time-based RSUs 
Mr. Alutto  $ 1,000,000  100%  75,946  18,986  18,986 
Mr. Arnold  550,000  75%  28,394  7,098  7,098 
Mr. Ginnetti  550,000  75%  28,394  7,098  7,098 
Ms. Frank  400,000  60%  14,869  3,717  3,717 
Ms. Abdulmassih  370,000  65%  13,802  3,450  3,450 

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    29

 
Back to Contents

Executive Severance and Change in Control Plan

 

Upon the recommendation of the Compensation Committee, the Board of Directors adopted a plan for executive severance, including following a change in control. The plan, which went into effect on September 1, 2016, applies to all the named executive officers. Stericycle introduced this plan in order to be competitive with the market and enhance retention.

 

Under the plan, named executive officers are entitled to benefits in the event of a termination of employment by Stericycle other than for “Cause”, “Death” or “Disability” (as each is defined in the plan). A covered executive will receive the following benefits so long as the executive executes and honors a full waiver and release of claims against Stericycle, as well as non-competition, non-solicitation, confidentiality and other restrictive covenants that Stericycle may deem necessary to protect its interests:

 

An amount equal to the actual annual incentive the executive would have been paid had the executive remained employed on the payment date applicable to then current employees, prorated based on the executive’s period of service through the executive’s termination date.
An amount equal to the sum of the executives’ base salary and target annual incentive, each determined as of the termination date, multiplied by the applicable “severance multiple.”
  For the Chief Executive Officer, the severance multiple is 2.
  For all other executives, the severance multiple is 1.
Non-qualified deferred compensation benefits and employee welfare benefits pursuant to the terms of the applicable plans and policies.
Payment of or reimbursement for the cost of COBRA premiums in connection with the executive’s medical, vision, prescription and dental coverage in effect as of the date of termination, to the extent such premiums exceed the premiums paid for similar provided coverage by active employees, for up to twenty-four months.
Reimbursement for outplacement benefits up to $25,000.

 

For involuntary termination (other than for “Cause”) associated with a change in control, which includes voluntary termination for “Good Reason” (as defined in the plan) within 24 months after a change in control, the benefits above remain in place but the annual incentive payment and the severance multiple changes, as follows:

 

An amount equal to the executive’s target annual incentive, prorated based on the executive’s period of service through the executive’s termination date.
An amount equal to the sum of the executives’ base salary and target annual incentive, each determined as of the termination date, multiplied by the applicable “severance multiple.”
  For the Chief Executive Officer, the severance multiple is 3.
  For all other executives, the severance multiple is 2.

 

In situations involving voluntary termination other than for Good Reason during the 24 month post-change period or termination for cause, Stericycle would only be required to pay accrued obligations to the employee.

 

Other Compensation Matters

 

Retirement Plans and Deferred Compensation Arrangements

 

Our Board of Directors adopted the Stericycle, Inc. Supplemental Retirement Plan effective for deferrals of compensation on and after April 1, 2017. Our named executive officers are eligible to participate in the plan. The Plan is unfunded and designed to be a nonqualified deferred compensation plan in compliance with Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code.

 

Under the Plan, a bookkeeping account will be created for each participant. Each year, Stericycle will credit a participant’s account with the designated portion of the participant’s compensation that the participant elected to defer for that year (the “Elective Deferral Contributions”) and may credit the participant’s account with a discretionary amount declared by Stericycle for that year (the “Company Discretionary Contributions”). Earnings on the credited amounts will be based on the performance of various investment funds available under the Plan (and as directed by the participant).

 

The Plan permits participants to elect to receive distributions, which generally become payable upon a termination of employment or a specified date prior to termination of employment, in either a lump sum or in installments over a period of up to fifteen years. All distributions from the Plan are in cash. The participant will always be fully vested in that portion of the participant’s account attributable to the Elective Deferral Contributions, and will be vested in Stericycle Discretionary Contributions, if any, five years from the date the first Employer Discretionary Contribution is credited to the participant’s account subject to the participant’s continued service. Vesting will be accelerated upon a participant’s termination of service due to death or disability or a change in control while the participant is still in service.

 

The unvested portion of a participant’s account will generally be forfeited upon termination of employment. A participant’s vested interests under the Plan will be forfeited upon a termination of employment for Cause.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    30

 
Back to Contents

Perquisites and Personal Benefits

 

We provide limited perquisites and personal benefits to our executive officers. See “2017 Summary Compensation Table – All Other Compensation” and the related footnotes.

 

Stock Ownership Guidelines

 

All of our executive officers and members of the Board of Directors are expected to hold a minimum position in our stock. Stericycle established this program to help align the long-term interests of our executive officers and non-employee directors with those of our stockholders.

 

   Stock Ownership Guideline
Chief Executive Officer  Four times his or her annual base salary
Other NEOs  Three times their respective annual base salaries
Non-Employee Directors  Four times their respective annual cash retainers

 

Although there is no specific period of time in which the executive officers and non-employee directors are required to achieve the applicable ownership threshold, they are expected to make continuous progress toward that goal, and to comply with the following retention ratios until such guidelines have been achieved:

 

The CEO must hold 75% of his or her Net Profit Shares until the minimum position requirement has been achieved; and
The other NEOs must hold 50% of their respective Net Profit Shares until the minimum position requirement has been achieved.
The non-employee directors must retain 75% of his or her Net Profit Shares until the minimum position requirement has been achieved.

 

Shares that will count toward achievement of the stock ownership guidelines include:

 

Shares owned outright (including ESPP shares and securities convertible into shares of common stock on an as-converted basis) by the executive officer or director or any of such person’s immediate family members residing in the same household;
Shares held in trust for the benefit of the executive officer or director or such person’s family;
Shares held in Stericycle’s employee benefit plans, including the 401(k) Savings Plan;
Shares obtained through stock option exercises and the in-the-money value of vested and unvested stock options; and
Shares of unvested restricted stock and RSUs.

 

Compliance with these stock ownership guidelines is measured periodically by the internal team at Stericycle responsible for handling executive compensation matters, and the results of such measurement are reported to the Compensation Committee at least once per year. On each measurement date, compliance is measured using each executive officer’s base salary then in effect, and the average trailing 180-day trading price per share of Stericycle common stock on the Nasdaq Stock Market on such date. Once an executive officer has achieved the applicable ownership threshold, that person will be considered in compliance, regardless of any change in the price of Stericycle common stock, so long as such person continues to own at least the number of shares of Stericycle common stock and other awards owned at the time of achieving that threshold.

 

Anti-Hedging and Anti-Pledging; Clawbacks

 

See “Corporate Governance — Anti-Hedging and Anti-Pledging Policy” and “Clawback Policy” for a discussion of Company policies with respect to these matters.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    31

 
Back to Contents

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

 

The Compensation Committee has reviewed and discussed the Compensation Discussion and Analysis with the Company’s executive management. Based on this review and discussion, the Committee recommended to the Board of Directors that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in this proxy statement.

 

  Compensation Committee
   
  Thomas D. Brown, Chairman
  Lynn D. Bleil
  Mike S. Zafirovski

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    32

 
Back to Contents

2017 SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

 

The following table summarizes the compensation paid or earned for the fiscal years noted in the table by our principal executive officer, principal financial officer and three other most highly compensated executive officers (the “named executive officers”):

 

                   Non-Equity      
             Option  Stock  Incentive Plan  All Other   
Name and     Salary  Bonus   Awards(1)  Awards(2)  Compensation(3)  Compensations(4)  Total
Principal Position  Year  ($)  ($)   ($)  ($)  ($)  ($)  ($)
Charles A. Alutto  2017   $1,000,000  $   $1,317,342  $1,495,299  $  $3,000  $3,815,641
President and Chief  2016   585,000       2,136,579   780,840   112,978   2,000   3,617,397
Executive Officer  2015   488,269       2,510,200      465,327   1,750   3,465,546
Joseph B. Arnold  2017   550,000       489,363   555,444      3,000   1,597,807
Executive Vice President  2016   380,000       903,940   330,249   48,925   2,000   1,665,114
and Chief Operating Officer  2015   343,077       1,026,900      234,871   1,750   1,606,598
Daniel V. Ginnetti  2017   550,000       489,363   555,444      3,000   1,597,807
Executive Vice President  2016   380,000       903,940   330,249   48,925   2,000   1,665,114
and Chief Financial Officer  2015   346,923       1,026,900      234,871   1,750   1,610,444
Brenda R. Frank  2017   400,000       254,462   288,835      18,113   961,410
Executive Vice President  2016   325,000   775,000(5)    279,402   389,908   31,383      1,800,693
and Chief People Officer                                
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih  2017   370,000       234,882   266,608       41,579   913,069
Executive Vice President,                                
Communications and                                
Related Services                                
(1) The amounts shown represent the aggregate grant date fair value of the awards for fiscal years 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively. We calculated these amounts in accordance with the provisions of FASB ASC Topic 718, excluding the effect of the expected forfeiture rate, utilizing the assumptions discussed in Note 12 to our financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017, and in Note 6 to our financial statements for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2016 and December 31, 2015.
(2) The amounts shown represent the aggregate grant date fair value of the awards for fiscal years 2017 and 2016, respectively, determined in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, based on the closing price of our common stock on the date of the grant. The grant date fair value of time-based RSUs granted in 2017 and performance-based RSUs granted in 2017 are as follows:

 

Name  Time-Based RSUs   Performance-Based RSUs
Charles A. Alutto  $1,121,474   $373,825
Joseph B. Arnold   416,583    138,861
Daniel V. Ginnetti   416,583    138,861
Brenda R. Frank   216,627    72,209
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih   199,957    66,652

 

  Because the performance-related component of the performance-based RSUs is based on separate measurements of our performance for each year in the three-year performance cycle, FASB ASC Topic 718 requires the grant date fair value to be calculated with respect to one-third of the total performance-based RSUs in each year of the three-year performance cycle. For 2017, the grant date fair value of the performance-based RSUs, as measured in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, is based on our closing stock price on the grant date of February 16, 2017 of $83.35 and the probable outcome of target performance of the annual performance-related component for 2017. With respect to the performance-based RSUs, target performance and maximum performance are the same.
(3) The amounts shown represent the gross amounts of the named executive officer’s annual cash performance bonus for the applicable fiscal year before any conversion of the bonus into an option pursuant to our conversion program. No cash performance bonuses were paid and no bonus amounts were converted with respect to 2017.
(4) With respect to Mr. Alutto, Mr. Arnold and Mr. Ginnetti, represents only our matching 401(k) plan contributions for the fiscal years noted. With respect to Ms. Frank, represents $3,000 for 401(k) matching contributions and $15,113 for commuting and travel expenses reimbursed by the Company. With respect to Ms. Abdulmassih, represents $3,000 for 401(k) matching contributions and $38,579 for commuting and travel expenses reimbursed by the Company. With respect to such commuting and travel expenses, the aggregate incremental cost to our company is determined by the amounts paid to third-party providers.
(5) Represents a bonus paid to Ms. Frank as part of the transition from her former employment agreement with Shred-it.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    33

 
Back to Contents

2017 GRANTS OF PLAN-BASED AWARDS

 

The following table provides information about the plan-based awards for our named executive officers during 2017.

 

     

Estimated Future Payouts Under
Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards(1)
  Estimated Future Payouts Under
Equity Incentive Plan Awards(2)
  All Other
Stock
Awards:
Number of
Shares of
Stock or
Units(3)
(#)
  All Other
Option
Awards:
Number of
Securities
Underlying

Options(4)
(#)
  Exercise
or Base
Price of
Option
Awards
$/share
  Grant Date
Fair Value
of Stock
and Option
Awards(5)
($)
Name  Grant
Date
  Threshold
($)
  Target
($)
  Maximum
($)
  Threshold
(#)
  Target
(#)
  Maximum
(#)
   
Charles     500,000  1,000,000  2,000,000                   
A. Alutto  2/16/2017                       67,280  83.35  1,317,342
   2/16/2017                    13,455        1,121,474
   2/16/2017           3,363  13,455  13,455           373,825
Joseph     206,250  412,500  825,000                     
B. Arnold  2/16/2017                       24,993  83.35  489,363
   2/16/2017                    4,998        416,583
   2/16/2017           1,249  4,998  4,998           138,861
Daniel     206,250  412,500  825,000                     
V. Ginnetti  2/16/2017                       24,993  83.35  489,363
   2/16/2017                    4,998        416,583
   2/16/2017           1,249  4,998  4,998           138,861
Brenda     120,000  240,000  480,000                     
R. Frank  2/16/2017                       12,996  83.35  254,462
   2/16/2017                    2,599        216,627
   2/16/2017           649  2,599  2,599           72,209
Ruth-Ellen     120,250  240,500  481,000                     
Abdulmassih  2/16/2017                      11,996  83.35   234,882
   2/16/2017                    2,399        199,957
   2/16/2017           599  2,399  2,399           66,652
(1) These amounts consist of the threshold, target and maximum cash award levels set in 2017 under the annual cash performance bonus program. No cash performance bonuses were paid to the named executive officers for 2017. Please see “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” for further information regarding the annual cash performance bonus program.
(2) The amounts shown at target represent the aggregate number of performance-based RSUs that may be earned under the long-term incentive plan. The performance-based RSUs vest, if at all, in three annual installments based on annual EPS performance goals. The earnout percentage may range from 0% to 100% of the target performance-based RSUs granted, with a range of 25%-100% earned at threshold to maximum performance.
(3) The amounts represent the time-based RSUs granted under the long-term incentive plan to the named executive officers. The time-based RSUs vest in equal annual installments over five years, beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date, provided that the executive is still employed by the Company on the vesting date. Please see “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” for further information regarding these restricted stock unit grants.
(4) These amounts represent stock options granted under the long-term incentive plan to the named executive officers. These options vest in equal annual installments over five years, beginning on the first anniversary of the grant date, provided that the executive is still employed by the Company on the applicable vesting date. Please see “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” for further information regarding these stock option awards.
(5) The grant date fair value of each time-based RSU award was computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718 based on the closing stock price of $83.35 on the February 16, 2017 grant date. Because the performance-related component of the performance-based RSUs is based on separate measurements of our performance for each year in the three-year performance cycle, FASB ASC Topic 718 requires the grant date fair value to be calculated with respect to one-third of the total performance-based RSUs in each year of the three-year performance cycle. For 2017, the grant date fair value of the performance-based RSUs, as measured in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718, is based on our closing stock price on the grant date of February 16, 2017 of $83.35 and the probable outcome of target performance of the annual performance-related component for 2017. With respect to the performance-based RSUs, target performance and maximum performance are the same. The grant date fair value of each option award was calculated in accordance with the provisions of FASB ASC Topic 718, excluding the effect of the expected forfeiture rate, utilizing the assumptions discussed in Note 12 to our financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    34

 
Back to Contents

2017 OUTSTANDING EQUITY AWARDS AT FISCAL YEAR-END

 

The following table provides information about the outstanding equity awards held by the named executive officers as of December 31, 2017.

 

   Option Awards  Stock Awards
Name  Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
(#)
Exercisable
  Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
(#)
Unexercisable
  Option
Exercise
Price
($)
  Option
Expiration
Date(1)
  Number of
Shares or
Units of
Stock that
Have Not
Vested(2)
(#)
  Market Value
of Shares or
Units that
Have Not
Vested(3)
($)
  Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Number of
Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested(4)
(#)
  Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Market or
Payout Value
of Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested(3)
($)
Charles A.  27,000    54.59  6/18/2018            
Alutto  6,984    63.00  7/30/2020            
   31,890    85.00  2/8/2021            
   71,400  47,600  115.69  2/11/2022            
   60,000    86.24  2/13/2022            
   44,000  66,000  130.19  2/6/2023            
   118,571  29,100  95.87  2/20/2023            
   1,873    115.69  2/11/2024            
   2,435    130.19  2/6/2025            
   21,082  84,324  111.12  2/5/2024            
   1,007    115.54  2/26/2026  5,622  382,240  3,363  228,650
     67,280  83.35  2/16/2025  13,455  914,805      
     341  82.93  2/24/2027            
Joseph B.  5,061    46.83  2/10/2019            
Arnold  404    47.24  3/2/2019            
   11,500    51.55  2/9/2020            
   792    55.57  3/1/2020            
   11,200    85.00  2/8/2021            
   629    83.88  3/1/2021            
   9,000  6,000  115.69  2/11/2022            
   11,200    86.24  2/13/2022            
   711    86.89  2/28/2022            
   4,500  3,000  110.14  4/14/2022            
   18,000  27,000  130.19  2/6/2023            
   11,640  2,910  95.87  2/20/2023            
   448    97.36  3/7/2023            
   337    130.19  2/6/2025            
   8,919  35,676  111.12  2/5/2024            
   508    115.54  2/26/2026  2,378  161,680  1,249  84,920
     24,993  83.35  2/16/2025  4,998  339,814      
     147  82.93  2/24/2027            

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    35

 
Back to Contents
   Option Awards  Stock Awards
Name  Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
(#)
Exercisable
  Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
(#)
Unexercisable
  Option
Exercise
Price
($)
  Option
Expiration
Date(1)
  Number of
Shares or
Units of
Stock that
Have Not
Vested(2)
(#)
  Market Value
of Shares or
Units that
Have Not
Vested(3)
($)
  Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Number of
Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested(4)
(#)
  Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Market or
Payout Value
of Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested(3)
($)
Daniel V.  10,000    46.83  2/10/2019            
Ginnetti  12,000    51.55  2/9/2020            
   10,700    85.00  2/8/2021            
   9,000  6,000  115.69  2/11/2022            
   11,200    86.24  2/13/2022            
   4,500  3,000  116.81  8/1/2022            
   18,000  27,000  130.19  2/6/2023            
   11,640  2,910  95.87  2/20/2023            
   8,919  35,676  111.12  2/5/2024            
   508    115.54  2/26/2026  2,378  161,680  1,249  84,920
     24,993  83.35  2/16/2025  4,998  339,814      
     147  82.93  2/24/2027            
Brenda R.  2,800  4,200  124.32  11/2/2023            
Frank  2,757  11,027  111.12  2/5/2024  3,235  219,948  649  44,126
     12,996  83.35  2/16/2025  2,599  176,706      
Ruth-Ellen  554    55.57  3/1/2020            
Abdulmassih  8,700    85.00  2/8/2021            
   4,800  3,200  115.69  2/11/2022            
   8,700    86.24  2/13/2022            
   711    86.89  2/28/2022            
   2,000    85.57  4/11/2022            
   756    97.36  3/7/2023            
   4,800  7,200  130.19  2/6/2023            
   7,761  1,939  95.87  2/20/2023            
   1,500  1,000  111.63  4/22/2022            
   1,192    136.285  3/5/2025            
   1,021    116.01  3/11/2026            
     11,996  83.35  2/16/2025            
   2,109  8,432  111.12  2/5/2024  3,561  242,112  599  40,726
(1) Other than options listed with expiration dates of February 11, 2022, April 14, 2022, February 5, 2024, November 2, 2023, and February 6, 2025 and February 24, 2027 which have 8-year terms and expire on the eighth anniversary of the option grant date, these options have 10-year terms and expire on the tenth anniversary of the option grant date. Options generally vest at the rate of one-fifth (20%) of the option shares on each of the first five anniversaries of the option grant date.
(2) Represents time-based RSUs that were granted on February 5, 2016 and February 16, 2017 and vest in 20% increments on each of the first through fifth year anniversaries of the date of grant.
(3) Market value is based on the share price of $67.99 as of December 29, 2017.
(4) The numbers shown represent performance-based RSUs, which vest, if at all, in three equal annual installments based on annual EPS performance goals. Pursuant to SEC rules, the amounts shown reflect the number of units that may be earned over the three-year period if the threshold level of EPS is achieved in each of the years. The first performance period ended December 31, 2017 and no performance-based RSUs were earned.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    36

 
Back to Contents

2017 OPTION EXERCISES AND STOCK VESTED

 

The following table summarizes information regarding restricted stock unit awards to the named executive officers that vested during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017. Our named executive officers did not exercise any stock options during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017.

 

  Stock Awards
Name Number of Shares
Acquired Upon
Vesting (#)
  Value
Realized
on Vesting ($)
Charles A. Alutto 1,405   103,562
Joseph B. Arnold 3,094   239,259
Daniel V. Ginnetti 3,094   239,259
Brenda R. Frank 183   13,489
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih 1,490   114,802
   
(1) Represents the market value of the shares issued in settlement of restricted stock unit awards on the date the awards vested, calculated using the closing sale price reported on the Nasdaq Global Select Market on the vesting date.

 

POTENTIAL PAYMENTS UPON TERMINATION OR CHANGE IN-CONTROL

 

The Board of Directors adopted a plan for executive severance, including but not limited to following a change in control, which went into effect on September 1, 2016. For further discussion of the executive severance plan, see “Executive Severance and Change in Control Plan” in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section above.

 

Additionally, the Company’s long-term incentive plans and award agreements provide for the following treatment of awards:

 

Upon a change in control, stock options and time-based RSU awards will vest in full and performance-based RSU awards will vest at target level and any restrictions on shares underlying the awards shall lapse.
Upon a termination of employment due to death, stock options and time-based RSU awards will vest in full and performance-based RSU awards will vest at target level, without regard to satisfaction of performance targets. In the case of stock options, the vested portion of the option will expire upon the earlier of (i) the first anniversary of the executive’s death or (ii) the option’s expiration date.
For terminations of employment other than by reason of death, any unvested portion of an award shall lapse and be canceled as of the executive’s termination date. In the case of stock options, the vested portion of the option will expire upon the earlier of (i) 90 days after the executive’s termination date or (ii) the option’s expiration date.

 

Payments upon a Termination Following a Change in Control

 

Name   Severance(1)   Pro-Rated
Annual
Incentive(2)
  Stock
Options(3)
   RSUs(4)   Continued
Welfare and
Other Benefits(5)
   Total
Charles A. Alutto  $6,000,000       $2,211,851  $64,100  $8,275,951
Joseph B. Arnold   1,925,000        841,308   64,100   2,830,408
Daniel V. Ginnetti   1,925,000        841,308   64,100   2,830,408
Brenda R. Frank   1,280,000        573,360   64,100   1,917,460
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih   1,221,000        405,220   64,100   1,690,320

 

Payments upon a Termination other than for Cause, Disability or Death (Without a Change in Control)

 

Name   Severance(6)   Pro-Rated
Annual
Incentive(2)
  Stock
Options
   RSUs   Continued
Welfare and
Other Benefits(5)
   Total
Charles A. Alutto  $4,000,000          $64,100  $4,064,100
Joseph B. Arnold   962,500           64,100   1,026,600
Daniel V. Ginnetti   962,500           64,100   1,026,600
Brenda R. Frank   640,000           64,100   704,100
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih   610,500           64,100   674,600

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    37

 
Back to Contents
(1) In accordance with the executive severance plan, amounts in this column represent severance payments equal to three times for Mr. Alutto and two times for the other named executive officers the sum of the executive officer’s base salary and target annual incentive.
(2) In accordance with the executive severance plan, the executive will receive a prorated annual incentive for the year in which the termination occurs, calculated based on actual performance during the year. No annual incentive awards were paid to our NEOs with respect to 2017.
(3) Stock options will vest in full upon (i) a change in control regardless of a termination or (ii) death. The value shown for stock options is zero given that all unvested option shares that would vest following a qualifying termination, change in control or death were granted at an option price higher than the closing stock price of $67.99 per share on December 29, 2017.
(4) Time-based RSUs will vest in full and performance-based RSUs will vest at target level upon (i) a change in control regardless of a termination or (ii) death. The value shown for RSUs was determined by multiplying the closing stock price of $67.99 per share on December 29, 2017 by the number of unvested time-based and performance-based RSUs that would vest upon a qualifying termination, change in control or death.
(5) In accordance with the executive severance plan, amounts in this column represent $25,000 in outplacement services plus approximately $39,100 for the continuation of medical, dental, and life insurance for a period of 24 months.
(6) In accordance with the executive severance plan, amounts in this column represent severance payments equal to two times for Mr. Alutto and one time for the other named executive officers the sum of the executive officer’s base salary and target annual incentive.

 

NONQUALIFIED DEFERRED COMPENSATION

 

Our Board of Directors adopted the Stericycle, Inc. Supplemental Retirement Plan effective for deferrals of compensation on and after April 1, 2017. The Plan applies to directors, management and highly compensated employees of Stericycle, or an applicable Company subsidiary. The Plan is unfunded and designed to be a nonqualified deferred compensation plan in compliance with Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code.

 

Under the Plan, a bookkeeping account will be created for each participant. Each year, Stericycle will credit a participant’s account with the designated portion of the participant’s compensation that the participant elected to defer for that year (the “Elective Deferral Contributions”) and may credit the participant’s account with a discretionary amount declared by Stericycle for that year (the “Company Discretionary Contributions”). Participants may defer up to 80% of salary, bonus and commissions. Earnings on the credited amounts will be based on the performance of various investment funds available under the Plan (and as directed by the participant). Participants may change investment choices daily.

 

The Plan permits participants to elect to receive distributions, which generally become payable upon a termination of employment or a specified date prior to termination of employment, in either a lump sum or in installments over a period of up to fifteen years. All distributions from the Plan are in cash. The participant will always be fully vested in that portion of the participant’s account attributable to the Elective Deferral Contributions, and will be vested in Stericycle Discretionary Contributions, if any, five years from the date the first Employer Discretionary Contribution is credited to the participant’s account subject to the participant’s continued service. Vesting will be accelerated upon a participant’s termination of service due to death or disability or a change in control while the participant is still in service.

 

The unvested portion of a participant’s account will generally be forfeited upon termination of employment. A participant’s vested interests under the Plan will be forfeited upon a termination of employment for Cause.

 

The following table summarizes information with respect to the participation of the named executive officers in the Stericycle, Inc. Supplemental Retirement Plan for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017.

 

Name  Executive
Contributions in
FY 2017 ($)(1)
  Stericycle
Contributions in
FY 2017 ($)
  Aggregate
Earnings in
FY 2017 ($)(2)
  Aggregate
Withdrawals/
Distributions in
FY 2017 ($)
  Aggregate
Balance at
12/31/17 ($)(3)
Charles A. Alutto  7,308    549    7,857
Joseph B. Arnold         
Daniel V. Ginnetti         
Brenda R. Frank         
Ruth-Ellen Abdulmassih         

(1) The amount reported in this column is reported as “Salary” in the Summary Compensation Table for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017.
(2) The amounts reported in this column were not reported in the Summary Compensation Table as part of an individual’s compensation for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017 because none of the earnings is considered to be “above market”.
(3) None of the amounts shown in this column were previously reported as compensation in the Summary Compensation Table in previous years.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    38

 
Back to Contents

In fiscal year 2017, the investment options available under the Supplemental Retirement Plan and their respective notional rates of return were as follows:

 

    Fiscal
    Year 2017
    Cumulative
Deemed Investment Option   Return
AB Discovery Growth Fund   32.81%
American Balanced Fund   15.43%
American Capital Income Builder   14.15%
American Capital World Bond Fund   7.28%
American Growth Fund of America   26.09%
American New Economy Fund   34.31%
Columbia Midcap Index Fund   16.00%
Columbia Small Cap Index Fund   13.09%
Deutsche Real Estate Securities Fund   6.43%
Franklin Small Cap Growth Fund   21.28%
Franklin Small Cap Value Fund   10.96%
Goldman Sachs Commodity Strategy Fund   4.28%
Invesco Comstock Fund   18.21%

 

    Fiscal
    Year 2017
    Cumulative
Deemed Investment Option   Return
Invesco Equally Weighted S&P 500 Fund   18.56%
Lazard International Strategic Equity Portfolio   27.85%
MFS International Value Fund   27.16%
MFS Massachusetts Investors Growth Stock Fund   28.98%
MFS Mid Cap Value Fund   13.65%
Oppenheimer Global Opportunities Fund   52.93%
Oppenheimer International Growth Fund   26.90%
Virtus Vontobel Emerging Markets Opportunities Fund   34.47%
Blackrock High Yield Bond Fund   8.20%
Columbia US Government Fund   3.24%
Loomis Sayles Core Plus Bond Fund   5.22%
Lord Abbett Income Fund   7.16%
Western Asset Inflation Indexed Plus Bond Fund   3.82%

 

CEO Pay Ratio for 2017

 

We are required to disclose (i) the median of the annual total compensation of our employees (other than our CEO), (ii) the annual total compensation of our CEO, and (iii) the corresponding pay ratio.

 

We believe our pay ratio is a reasonable estimate, calculated in compliance with the requirements set forth in Item 402(u) of Regulation S-K. We identified the median employee using our employee population as of December 1, 2017. We are a global company with complex operations. As of our measurement date of December 1, 2017, we had 23,200 employees in over 20 countries. We have extremely small employee populations in some of these locations, which in the aggregate make up less than 5% of our total workforce. As a result, we excluded employee populations in the following locations:

 

Australia - 61 employees   Japan - 100 employees
Austria - 1 employee   Netherlands - 35 employees
Belgium - 18 employees   South Korea - 316 employees
France - 91 employees   Singapore - 17 employees
Germany - 110 employees   South Africa - 64 employees
Ireland - 135 employees   United Arab Emirates - 24 employees

 

After excluding employees in the above locations, our pay ratio includes 22,228 of our 23,200 employees as of the measurement date.

 

We used a consistently applied compensation measure across this employee population to identify the median employee. For our consistently applied compensation measure, we used base salary paid during 2017. The majority of our employees receive base salary (paid on an hourly, weekly, biweekly or monthly basis) and do not participate in any variable incentive plans. Consequently, base salary provides an accurate depiction of total earnings for the purpose of identifying our median employee. We then calculated the median employee’s annual total compensation in the same manner as the CEO in the Summary Compensation Table, except that for both the median employee compensation and CEO compensation we included $14,884 related to the Company’s portion of health care insurance premiums and company contributions to HSA accounts.

 

Our median employee compensation was 57,642. Our CEO compensation was $3,830,525. Accordingly, our CEO to median employee pay ratio is 67:1.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    39

 
Back to Contents
ITEM 3 Ratification of the Appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as Our Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm for 2018

 

The Audit Committee is directly responsible for the appointment, compensation, retention and oversight of the independent registered public accounting firm retained to audit our Company’s financial statements. The Audit Committee has appointed Ernst & Young LLP as our Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2018. Representatives of Ernst & Young are expected to be present at the Annual Meeting to respond to appropriate questions and will have the opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do so.

 

In considering Ernst & Young’s appointment for the 2018 fiscal year, the Audit Committee reviewed the firm’s qualifications and competencies, including the following factors:

 

Ernst & Young’s historical performance and its recent performance during its engagement for the 2017 fiscal year;
Ernst & Young’s capability and expertise in handling engagements with the breadth and complexity of Stericycle’s operations, including its approach to resolving significant accounting and auditing matters and consultations with the firm’s national office;
The qualification and experience of key members of the engagement, including the lead audit partner;
The quality of Ernst & Young’s communication with the Audit Committee regarding the conduct of the audit and with respect to issues identified in the audit;
External data on audit quality and performance, including the most recent Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) reports on Ernst & Young and its peer firms;
The appropriateness of Ernst & Young’s fees, on both an absolute basis and as compared to its peer firms; and
Ernst & Young’s reputation for integrity and competence in the fields of accounting and auditing.

 

Ernst & Young has served as our independent registered public accounting firm since 1991. The Audit Committee is responsible for the audit fee negotiations associated with our Company’s retention of Ernst & Young LLP. In order to assure continued auditor independence, the Audit Committee periodically considers whether there should be regular rotation of the independent registered public accounting firm. In conjunction with the required rotation of Ernst & Young LLP’s lead engagement partner, the Audit Committee and its Chairman are directly involved in the selection of Ernst & Young’s new lead engagement partner.

 

If our stockholders do not ratify the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP, our Board may reconsider their appointment.

 

We are asking our stockholders to ratify the selection of Ernst & Young LLP, as our independent registered public account firm. Although ratification is not required by our bylaws or otherwise, our Board is submitting the selection of Ernst & Young LLP to our stockholders as a matter of good corporate governance. The members of the Audit Committee, and the Board believe that the continued retention of Ernst & Young LLP to serve as our Company’s independent registered public accounting firm is in the best interests of our Company and its stockholders.

 

The Board of Directors recommends a vote “FOR” ratification of Ernst & Young LLP as our Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2018. Proxies solicited by the Board will be so voted unless stockholders specify a different choice.

 

Fees Paid to Independent Auditors

 

The following table shows the aggregate fees paid to Ernst & Young LLP by us for the services it rendered during the fiscal years ended December 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016. All numbers shown in millions of dollars

 

Description of Fees  FY 2017     FY 2016
Audit Fees(1)  $8,343,000   $9,200,000
Audit-Related Fees(2)   1,750,000    200,000
Tax Fees(3)   191,000    400,000
All Other Fees(4)   7,000    
TOTAL  $10,291,000   $9,800,000

 

(1) Includes fees for the audits of annual consolidated financial statements and internal control over financial reporting, reviews of interim financial statements included in our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, certain statutory audits and assistance with and review of certain documents and letters filed with the SEC.
(2) Includes fees related to transaction audit and integration services.
(3) Includes fees related to tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning services.
(4) Includes fees related to access to online research tools.

 

Audit Committee Pre-Approval Policies

 

In accordance with policies adopted by the Audit Committee, all audit and non-audit related services to be performed for us by the independent registered public accounting firm must be approved in advance by the Audit Committee. All of the services Ernst & Young LLP performed for us during 2017 and 2016 were pre-approved by the Audit Committee.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    40

 
Back to Contents

AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

 

The Audit Committee assists the Board of Directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities relating to the integrity of the Company’s financial statements, the qualifications and experience of the Company’s independent auditor, the performance of the Company’s internal audit function and independent auditor, and the Company’s compliance with applicable legal and regulatory requirements. The Audit Committee operates pursuant to a written charter, which is available on the Company’s investor relations website, http://investors.stericycle.com. The Audit Committee is comprised of four directors, all of whom are independent and one of whom (Brian P. Anderson, the Chairman), has been determined by the Board of Directors to be an “audit committee financial expert” as defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

In regard to our role, we note that it is the responsibility of the Company’s management to prepare financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States, and that it is the responsibility of the Company’s independent auditor to audit those financial statements. The Audit Committee’s responsibility is one of oversight, and we do not provide expert or other special assurance regarding the Company’s financial statements or the quality of the audits performed by the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm.

 

In carrying out our oversight responsibility, we review and discuss with both management and the independent auditor, all quarterly and annual financial statements prior to their issuance. We reviewed and discussed with both management and the independent auditor the quarterly and annual financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017. Our reviews and discussions with the independent auditor included discussions of the matters required to be discussed pursuant to the applicable Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (“PCAOB”) standards, including among other items, the quality, not just the acceptability, of the Company’s accounting principles, the reasonableness of significant judgments and the clarity of disclosures in the Company’s financial statements. In addition, the Audit Committee received the written disclosures and the letter from Ernst & Young LLP required by applicable requirements of the PCAOB regarding Ernst & Young LLP’s communications with the Audit Committee concerning independence and has discussed with Ernst & Young LLP its independence from management and the Company. The Audit Committee considered the compatibility of non-audit services with Ernst & Young LLP’s independence.

 

The Committee discussed with management significant risks and exposures identified by management, the internal auditors or Ernst & Young LLP, and management’s steps to address such risks.

 

In addition, we continued to monitor the scope and adequacy of the Company’s internal controls, including staffing levels and requirements, and we reviewed programs and initiatives to strengthen the effectiveness of the Company’s internal controls and steps taken to implement recommended improvements.

 

The meetings of the Audit Committee are designed to facilitate and encourage communication among the Audit Committee, the Company, the Company’s internal audit function and the Company’s independent auditor. The Audit Committee discussed with the internal and independent auditors the overall scope and plans for their respective audits. The Audit Committee met with the internal and independent auditors, with and without management present, to discuss the results of their examinations, their evaluations of the accounting and financial controls, and the overall quality of the Company’s financial reporting. The Audit Committee met individually with members of management in executive session. The Audit Committee held 28 meetings during fiscal year 2017.

 

The Audit Committee recognizes the importance of maintaining the independence of the Company’s independent auditor, both in fact and appearance. Each year, the Audit Committee evaluates the qualifications, performance and independence of the Company’s independent auditor and determines whether to re-engage the current independent auditor. In doing so, the Audit Committee considers the quality and efficiency of the services provided by the auditors, the auditors’ global capabilities and the auditors’ technical expertise and knowledge of the Company’s operations and industry. Based on this evaluation, the Audit Committee has retained Ernst & Young LLP as the Company’s independent auditor for 2018. Ernst & Young LLP has been the independent auditor for the Company for a number of years. The members of the Audit Committee and the Board believe that, due to Ernst & Young’s knowledge of the Company and of the industries in which the Company operates, it is in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders to continue retention of Ernst & Young LLP to serve as the Company’s independent auditor. Although the Audit Committee has the sole authority to appoint the independent auditors, the Audit Committee will continue to recommend that the Board of Directors ask the stockholders, at the Annual Meeting, to ratify the appointment of the independent auditors.

 

In reliance on the reviews and discussions referred to above, we recommended to the Board of Directors that the Board approve the inclusion of the Company’s audited financial statements in the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017 for filing with the SEC.

 

Audit Committee

 

Brian P. Anderson, Chairman

Thomas F. Chen

Robert S. Murley

John Patience

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    41

 
Back to Contents
ITEM 4 Stockholder Proposal Entitled Special Shareholder Meeting Improvement

 

John Chevedden, 2215 Nelson Avenue, No. 205, Redondo Beach, California 90278, a beneficial owner of 50 shares of our common stock, has submitted the following resolution for consideration by stockholders:

 

Resolved, Shareowners ask our board to take the steps necessary (unilaterally if possible) to amend our bylaws and each appropriate governing document to give holders in the aggregate of 10% of our outstanding common stock the power to call a special shareowner meeting (or the closest percentage to 10% according to state law). This proposal does not impact our board’s current power to call a special meeting.

 

Special meetings allow shareowners to vote on important matters, such as electing new directors that can arise between annual meetings. This proposal topic won more than 70%-support at Edwards Lifesciences and SunEdison in 2013.

 

Scores of Fortune 500 companies allow a more practical 10% of shares to call a special meeting compared to the entrenchment requirement of Stericycle. SRCL shareholders do not have the full right to call a special meeting that is available under state law.

 

In fact we now have a sad joke of a right to call a special meeting.

 

At Stericycle it would take 25% of shares (instead of the 10% called for in Delaware law) and then all shares held for less than one continuous year would be disqualfied. Thus in order to obtain the 25% requirement it could take the holders of 51% of SRCL shares (minus perhaps 26% of shares that were held for less than one continuous year) to obtain the 25% that represented one-year of continuous holdings. In other words, it could take 51% of shares to go to the onerous trouble to initiate a special meeting in which 51% of shares would be needed to take action.

 

A more practical shareholder right to call a special meeting would put shareholders in a better position to ask for improvement in our board of directors after the 2018 annual meeting.

 

For instance, 3 directors had long-tenure of 25 to 28 years. Long-tenure can impair the independence of a director no matter how well qualified. Independence is a priceless attribute in a director.

 

John Patience, with 28-years long-tenure, received the shareholder dissatisfaction of 32% in negative votes. This is 32-times the negative votes compared to at least one other Stericycle director. Mr. Patience was also on our Audit Committee and our Nomination Committee. Thomas Chen was on these same 2 committees and received 27% in negative votes. Jack Schuler, our Lead Director with 27-years long-tenure, received 13% in negative votes.

 

A more practical shareholder right to call a special meeting would put shareholders in a better position to question the Stericycle practice of assigning more responsibioity to directors with long-tenure and/or high negative votes – for instance a position on an important board committee or the added role of Lead Director.

 

Please vote to increase management accountability to shareholders:

Special Shareholder Meeting Improvement – Proposal 4

 

THE COMPANY’S STATEMENT IN OPPOSITION

 

The Board of Directors has carefully considered this proposal and believes this proposal is unnecessary and not in the best interests of our stockholders. The Board regularly reviews the Company’s governance practices and believes that we have solid and efficient mechanisms in place to allow stockholders to communicate with the Board and bring items to its attention, including at annual and special stockholders’ meetings. Consequently, the Board of Directors recommends that you vote AGAINST this proposal for the reasons described below.

 

Stericycle’s current ownership threshold balances the preservation of this important stockholder right with the financial and administrative burdens that would result from misuse of the process by a small minority of stockholders with narrow interests.

 

Convening a special meeting of stockholders is a significant undertaking that requires a substantial commitment of time and financial resources. The Board and management would also be required to divert time from the business to prepare for and conduct the meeting. Because of these burdens and costs, special stockholder meetings should be extraordinary events that occur only when there are urgent and important strategic matters or profound fiduciary concerns. The current threshold of at least 25% of our company’s issued and outstanding shares of common stock strikes the appropriate balance, as it allows for stockholders to call a special meeting when such an extraordinary matter arises, without enabling a small minority of stockholders to call unnecessary meetings for less significant matters. If the proposal were adopted, a small minority of stockholders – potentially with narrow, short-term interests – could call special meetings to present proposals with little likelihood of success, without regard to how the costs and other burdens might impact the Company’s future success or the interests of the vast majority of stockholders.

 

Stericycle is committed to stockholder engagement and sound governance practices.

 

Company leaders meet regularly with stockholders to discuss our strategy, operational performance and business practices. We also meet with stockholders to share perspectives on corporate governance, executive compensation and sustainability matters, among other topics. We strongly believe that this commitment to ongoing dialogue with our stockholders, together with practices such as annual Director elections, a “proxy access” right for nominating Directors, no supermajority voting provisions, and stockholders existing right to call special meetings protects stockholder rights without the expense and risk associated with a lower special meeting threshold.

 

Stericycle has made a number of recent corporate governance enhancements.

 

Our company has made a number of corporate governance enhancements in recent years. The Board added two new directors, both with deep financial experience, in the last year and has added

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    42

 
Back to Contents

four new directors in the last four years. The Board appointed new chairs of the Audit, Compensation and Nominating & Governance Committees in 2016 and 2017. Our Board enhanced its diversity through the addition of several diverse members over the last four years. The Board of Directors is also leveraging a new competency and skills matrix to guide evolution of the composition of the Board. In addition, our Nominating & Governance Committee regularly evaluates the structure of the Board of Directors and makes recommendations to the Board of Directors regarding potential governance changes.

 

For the reasons set forth above, the proposal is neither necessary nor in stockholders’ best interests.

 

Therefore, your Board of Directors recommends that you vote AGAINST this proposal.

 

ITEM 5 Stockholder Proposal on Vesting of Equity Awards upon a Change in Control

 

The Teamsters General Fund of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, 25 Louisiana Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20001, a beneficial owner of 55 shares of our common stock, has submitted the following resolution for consideration by stockholders:

 

RESOLVED: The shareholders ask the Board of Directors of Stericycle Inc., to adopt a policy that in the event of a change in control (as defined under any applicable employment agreement, equity incentive plan or other plan), there shall be no acceleration of vesting of any equity award granted to any senior executive officer, provided, however, that the Board’s Compensation Committee may provide in an applicable grant or purchase agreement that any unvested award will vest on a partial, pro rata basis up to the time of the named executive officer’s termination, with such qualifications for an award as the Committee may determine.

 

For purposes of this Policy, “equity award” means an award granted under an equity incentive plan as defined in Item 402 of the SEC’s Regulation S-K, which addresses elements of executive compensation to be disclosed to shareholders. This resolution shall be implemented so as not to affect any contractual rights in existence on the date this proposal is adopted, and it shall apply only to equity awards made under equity incentive plans or plan amendments that shareholders approve after the date of the 2018 annual Meeting.

 

SUPPORTING STATEMENT:

 

Stericycle Inc. (“Company”) allows senior executives full vesting of all unvested stock options and restricted stock units upon a change of control. We do not question that some form of severance payments may be appropriate in that situation. We are concerned, however, that current practices at the Company may permit windfall awards that have nothing to do with an executive’s performance.

 

We are unpersuaded by the argument that executives somehow “deserve” to receive unvested awards. To accelerate the vesting of unearned equity on the theory that an executive was denied the opportunity to earn those shares seems inconsistent with a “pay for performance” philosophy worthy of the name.

 

We do believe, however, that an affected executive should be eligible to receive an accelerated vesting of equity awards on a pro rata basis as of his or her termination date, with the details of any pro rata award to be determined by the Compensation Committee.

 

Other major corporations, including Apple, Chevron, ExxonMobil, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, and Occidental Petroleum, have limitations on accelerated vesting of unearned equity, such as providing pro rata awards or simply forfeiting unearned awards. Research from James Reda & Associates found that over one-third of the largest 200 companies now pro rate, forfeit or only partially vest performance shares upon a change of control. At last year’s shareholder meeting, this proposal won support from 48.9% of shares cast for or against the resolution.

 

THE COMPANY’S STATEMENT IN OPPOSITION

 

The Board of Directors has carefully considered this proposal and believes that this proposal is unnecessary and is not in the best interests of our stockholders. Consequently, the Board of Directors recommends a vote “AGAINST” this proposal, for the reasons described below.

 

The stockholder proposal would result in a competitive disadvantage in attracting and retaining executives.

 

Due to the common practices among the companies with which we compete for executive talent, the proposed policy could jeopardize the objective of our compensation program to attract, retain, reward and incentivize exceptional, talented employees who will lead the Company in the successful execution of its strategy and maximize stockholder value.

 

Many of the companies with which we compete for executive talent are not restricted in their ability to attract and retain key executives through the use of change in control equity vesting triggers, and in fact, routinely provide for accelerated vesting of equity-based awards upon a change in control, either on a “single-trigger” or “double-trigger” basis. “Single-trigger” refers to the accelerated vesting of equity awards immediately upon a change in control. “Double-trigger” refers to the accelerated vesting of equity awards upon a change in control plus some other event, which is usually the termination of the executive within a certain time period following a change in control. The equity-based awards to our executive officers that were made in March, 2018 provide for “double-trigger” accelerated vesting. Other of our equity-based awards to our executive officers provide for “single-trigger” accelerated vesting.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    43

 
Back to Contents

Beginning with equity grants made in 2018, vesting of unvested stock options and restricted stock units is not automatic upon a change in control.

 

Beginning with the equity grants approved in March, 2018, we implemented “double-trigger” vesting upon a change in control. As discussed above, with double-trigger vesting, accelerated vesting of equity awards is limited to circumstances where there is a change in control and an executive experiences some other event, such as a termination of employment without cause following the change in control. This change replaces the prior single-trigger approach. The Board believes that this approach promotes stability and focus during an uncertain time by ensuring executives do not risk a substantial loss by supporting a transaction that is in the best interests of stockholders but could cause them to lose their jobs or suffer a material financial loss through no fault of their own.

 

The stockholder proposal could disrupt the alignment of interests between management and our stockholders.

 

One of the essential purposes of providing executives with equity-based awards is to align their interests with those of our stockholders. The Board believes that our practice of accelerating the vesting of equity awards in the event of a change in control serves to align the interests of our executive officers with those of our stockholders and will incentivize our executive officers to remain objective, avoid conflicts of interest and stay focused on executing a strategic change that could maximize stockholder value. Putting executives’ compensation at risk in the event of a change in control could create a conflict of interest if the Board believed a potential change in control transaction was in the best interests of our stockholders. As described under the heading “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” in this proxy statement, a significant percentage of each named executive officer’s long term compensation opportunity is in the form of stock options and restricted stock units, and at any time, our named executive officers’ unvested equity-based awards represent a significant portion of their total compensation. The stockholder proposal would eliminate our ability to provide reasonable assurance to our named executive officers that they can realize the full expected value of their equity-based awards in the event of a change in control.

 

In addition, we believe that our existing acceleration of vesting practice will motivate our employees, including our executive officers, to continue to work for us, even if they perceive that a change in control is imminent, which prevents the potential loss of key personnel at a time when retaining such employees could have a critical impact on the successful execution of a change in control transaction that would benefit our stockholders. The risk of job loss, coupled with the loss of significant equity awards, may present an unnecessary distraction for our executive officers and could lead to our executive officers beginning to seek new employment while a change in control transaction is being negotiated or is pending. The Board believes that the proponent’s proposal, which would have us adopt a policy under which equity awards of executive officers would vest on an accelerated basis using a vague, pro rata formula, would frustrate our retention objectives in a change in control situation.

 

The stockholder proposal would result in undue restriction on the Compensation Committee’s structuring of executive compensation.

 

Our Board believes that stockholders’ interests are best served by recognizing that the Compensation Committee, comprised of independent, non-management directors, supported by an independent compensation consultant, is in the best position to set the terms of executive compensation arrangements. Our stockholders have evidenced their overwhelming support of the Compensation’s Committee’s actions, with approximately 96% to 97% of shares present and entitled to vote casting advisory votes approving our Company’s executive compensation at the last five annual meetings of stockholders. The Board believes that the Company’s treatment of equity-based awards upon a change in control, as summarized under the heading “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” in this proxy statement, appropriately balances the interests of all parties and does not grant windfall awards.

 

The proponent’s proposal seeks to substitute the Compensation’s Committee’s ability to exercise its informed business judgment to determine whether, and on what conditions, the acceleration of vesting of equity awards is in our and our stockholders’ best interests with the proponent’s view that the amount of time an executive officer is employed represents the extent to which an equity award is “earned.”

 

The Compensation Committee should continue to retain the flexibility to design and administer competitive compensation programs that reflect market conditions. Permitting the Compensation Committee to accelerate vesting of equity awards can incentivize management to maximize stockholder value, further aligning the interests of management with our stockholders. Conversely, adopting the rigid policy advanced by the proponent would frustrate the purpose of the Compensation Committee and interfere with the objective of our compensation program.

 

Accordingly, the Board of Directors recommends a vote “AGAINST” this proposal.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    44

 
Back to Contents

OTHER MATTERS

 

As of the date of this proxy statement, our Board of Directors does not know of any other business to come before the Annual Meeting for consideration by our stockholders. If any other business should properly come before the meeting, the persons named as proxies in the accompanying proxy card will vote the shares of stock represented by the proxy in accordance with their judgment.

 

STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR THE 2019 ANNUAL MEETING

 

Any stockholder who wishes to present a proposal for consideration at our 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, and to have the proposal included in our proxy statement for the meeting, must submit the proposal to us by December 14, 2018. Stockholder proposals for inclusion in our proxy statement must comply with the rules of the SEC in order to be included and should be sent to Investor Relations, Stericycle, Inc., 28161 North Keith Drive, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045.

 

In accordance with our bylaws, any stockholder who wishes to present a proposal from the floor for consideration at our 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, without inclusion of such matters in our proxy materials, must submit proper notice to us no earlier than January 23, 2019 and no later than February 22, 2019.

 

Stockholders who intend to submit director nominees for inclusion in our proxy materials for the 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders must comply with the requirements of proxy access as set forth in our bylaws. The stockholder or group of stockholders who wish to submit director nominees pursuant to proxy access must deliver the required materials to the Secretary of the Company no earlier than the close of business on November 14, 2018, and no later than the close of business on December 14, 2018.

 

SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

 

Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act requires our directors, executive officers and persons beneficially owning more than 10% of our outstanding common stock to file periodic reports of stock ownership and stock transactions with the SEC. On the basis of a review of copies of these reports, we believe that all filing requirements for 2017 were satisfied in a timely manner.

 

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

 

We will provide a copy of our annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017 without charge to each stockholder as of the record date who sends a written request to Investor Relations, Stericycle, Inc., 28161 North Keith Drive, Lake Forest, Illinois 60045. Copies of this proxy statement and our Form 10-K as filed with the SEC are available in .pdf format on our investor relations website, http://investors.stericycle.com. Copies of this proxy statement and our Form 10-K also may be accessed directly from the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov.

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    45

 
Back to Contents
APPENDIX A Definition and Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures

 

Adjusted Earnings Before Interest, and Tax (“Adjusted EBIT”) is Income from operations excluding specified items outlined in the table below. Management believes the adjusted financial measures represent the amounts directly related to the ongoing operations of the business and uses these measures in evaluating performance. All adjusted financial measures are intended to supplement the applicable U.S. GAAP measures and should not be considered in isolation from, or a replacement for, financial measures prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP and may not be comparable to, or calculated in the same manner as Non-GAAP financial measures published by other companies.

 

The company calculates Adjusted Return on Invested Capital (“ROIC”) by dividing Adjusted Net Operating Profit after Tax (“NOPAT”) by the average of the prior two year ending amounts for Invested Capital. Stericycle uses the following calculation for Invested Capital: Total Assets less Cash and Equivalents, less Short Term Investments, less Current Liabilities, less purchase price of current year acquisitions, plus Current Portion of Long Term Debt. “NOPAT” is calculated by reducing “Adjusted EBIT” (referenced above) by Intangible Amortization and current year acquisitions and multiplying by (1 – Adjusted Tax Rate) plus Intangible Amortization. The adjusted tax rate is calculated by dividing the Pre-tax Book Income excluding specified items outlined in table below by Income Tax Benefit/(Expense) plus the tax impact of the specified items (referenced above). In order to normalize the “ROIC” equation for the fact that Intangible Amortization is added back to “NOPAT”, the Accumulated Amortization of Intangible Assets is also added back to the average Invested Capital.

 

Adjusted Earnings Before Interest and Tax (“Adjusted EBIT”)                              
                               
    Q1     Q2     Q3     Q4     Total  
Income from Operations US GAAP   114.5     (192.4 )   93.6     (23.4 )   (7.6 )
Business Transformation   0.0     0.0     4.2     27.1     31.3  
Intangible Amortization   29.1     29.5     29.9     29.9     118.4  
Acquisition and Integration   11.5     11.2     10.8     7.2     40.7  
Operational Optimization   10.9     25.5     16.0     18.7     71.1  
Divestitures   0.0     3.6     9.1     (3.2 )    9.5  
Litigation, Settlements, and Regulatory Compliance   1.9     301.7     1.4     22.7     327.6  
Impairment   0.0     0.0     0.0     65.0     65.0  
Other   2.5     3.9     10.9     7.5     24.8  
Income from Operations (Adjusted)   170.4     183.1     175.9     151.6     680.9  

 

Adjusted Return on Invested Capital (“ROIC”)    
     
  2017 Total  
Net Operating Profit After Tax (“NOPAT”)    
Income from Operations US GAAP (7.6 )
Business Transformation 31.3  
Acquisition and Integration 40.7  
Operational Optimization 71.1  
Divestitures 9.5  
Litigation, Settlements, and Regulatory Compliance 327.6  
Impairment 65.0  
Other 24.8  
Current Year Acquisitions (5.7 )
Net Operating Profit Before Tax 556.8  
Pre-tax Book Income (107.9 )
Adjustments 688.5  
Pre-tax Book Income (adjusted) 580.6  
Tax (Benefit)/Expense (150.9 )
Tax Impact of Adjustments 354.9  
Adjusted Tax Benefit/(Expense) 204.0  
Tax Rate As Reported 139.8 %
Tax Rate Adjusted 35.1 %
Net Operating Profit After Tax 361.1  
Intangible Amortization 118.4  
NOPAT 479.5  

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    46

 
Back to Contents
Invested Capital        
         
   2016 Total   2017 Total 
Total Assets   6,980.1    6,988.3 
less: Cash   (44.2)   (42.2)
less: Short Term Investments   (0.1)   (0.1)
less: Current Liabilities   (542.9)   (969.4)
plus: Current Portion of Long Term Debt   72.8    119.5 
Invested Capital   6,465.8    6,096.1 
Purchase Price Current Year Acquisitions       (79.7)
Average Invested Capital (2016 and 2017)       6,280.9 
plus: Accumulated Amortization       392.5 
Invested Capital       6,673.5 
Return on Invested Capital (“ROIC”)       7.2%

 

Stericycle, Inc. - 2018 Proxy Statement    47

 
Back to Contents

2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

Stericycle’s Global
Sustainability Highlights

 

Stericycle provides essential sustainability services that help protect communities from harmful wastes, enable recycling and alternative use opportunities, and lead to greater consumer safety and satisfaction. Here is sample of the global annual impact we make to protect what matters:

 

Medical Waste Management 1.7 BILLION POUNDS of Medical Waste Safely Treated Pharmaceutical Waste Disposal 70.3 MILLION POUNDS of Drugs Safely Disposed Sharps Management 48.3 MILLION POUNDS of Plastic Diverted from Landfills Maritime Solutions 61 MILLION POUNDS of Maritime Wastes Diverted from Landfills Secure Information Destruction 1.5 BILLION POUNDS of Paper Recycled Hazardous Waste Service 1 BILLION POUNDS of RCRA Wastes Properly Managed Sustainable Solutions 52.7 MILLION POUNDS of Wastes Diverted from Landfills

 

Learn more about our sustainability efforts at
stericycle.com/about-us/sustainability.

 

 
Back to Contents

 
Back to Contents