UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

 

Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

(Amendment No.     )

 

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þ Definitive Proxy Statement
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  IDACORP, INC.
  (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
   
   
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IDACORP, INC.

2018 PROXY STATEMENT AND
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING

 

May 17, 2018 | Boise, Idaho

 

 

 

 

 

 

April 2, 2018

 

Dear Fellow Shareholders:

 

You are cordially invited to attend the 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders of IDACORP, Inc. The Annual Meeting will be held on Thursday, May 17, 2018, at 10:00 a.m. (Mountain Time) at the IDACORP, Inc. corporate headquarters building located at 1221 West Idaho Street in Boise, Idaho.

 

The matters to be acted upon at the meeting are described in our proxy materials, which are being furnished to our shareholders over the Internet, other than to those shareholders who requested a paper copy. In addition, at the Annual Meeting we will discuss the company’s financial results, operational matters, and several of the company’s strategic initiatives. During the meeting, our shareholders will have the opportunity to ask questions of management. Our directors and officers also will be available to visit with you before and after the formal meeting. For those unable to attend in person, we will be providing a live listen-only audio (with slides) webcast of the Annual Meeting from the IDACORP Investor Relations website, www.idacorpinc.com/investor-relations.

 

Whether or not you attend the Annual Meeting, it is important that your shares be represented and voted at the meeting. Therefore, we urge you to promptly vote and submit your proxy via the Internet, by telephone, or by mail, in accordance with the instructions included in the proxy statement.

 

We appreciate your continued interest in and support of our company.

 

Sincerely,

 

   

Darrel T. Anderson

President and Chief Executive Officer

Robert A. Tinstman

Chairman of the Board of Directors

 

 

IDACORP, Inc.

1221 W. Idaho Street

Boise, Idaho 82702

 

 

 

 

NOTICE OF 2018 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

 

Date and Time:   Thursday, May 17, 2018 at 10:00 a.m. Mountain Time
     
Place:   IDACORP, Inc. Corporate Headquarters Building
    1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702-5627
     
Items of Business:   •  To elect 10 directors nominated by the board of directors for one-year terms;
     
    •  To vote on an advisory resolution to approve executive compensation;
     
    •  To ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2018; and
     
    •  To transact such other business that may properly come before the meeting and any adjournments or postponements of the meeting.
     
    As of the date of this notice, the company has received no notice of any matters, other than those listed above, that may properly be presented at the annual meeting. If any other matters are properly presented for consideration at the meeting, the persons named as proxies on the proxy card that accompanies this proxy statement, or their duly constituted substitutes, will be deemed authorized to vote the shares represented by proxy or otherwise act on those matters in accordance with their judgment.
     
Record Date:   Holders of record of IDACORP common stock at the close of business on March 27, 2018, are entitled to notice of and to vote at the annual meeting or any adjournment or postponement of the annual meeting.
     
Attendance:   You are invited to attend the meeting in person. Shareholders interested in attending in person must register by calling (800) 635-5406 prior to the close of business on May 16, 2018. Proof of share ownership will also be required to enter the meeting. Any shareholder voting a proxy who attends the meeting may vote in person by revoking that proxy before or at the meeting.
     
How to Vote:   Please vote your shares at your earliest convenience. Registered holders may vote (a) by Internet at www.proxypush.com/ida; (b) by toll-free telephone by calling (866) 702-2221; or (c) by mail (if you received a paper copy of the proxy materials by mail) by marking, signing, dating, and promptly mailing the enclosed proxy card in the postage-paid envelope. If you hold your shares through an account with a brokerage firm, bank, or other nominee, please follow the instructions you receive from them to vote your shares.

 

Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders: Our 2018 proxy statement and our annual report for the year ended December 31, 2017, are available free of charge on our website at www.idacorpinc.com.

 

By Order of the Board of Directors

 

 

Patrick A. Harrington

Corporate Secretary

April 2, 2018

 

 

 

CONTENTS

 

    Page
PROXY STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS   i
     
PART 1 – INFORMATION ABOUT THIS PROXY STATEMENT AND THE ANNUAL MEETING   1
General Information   1
Questions and Answers About the Annual Meeting, this Proxy Statement, and Voting   2
     
PART 2 – CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AT IDACORP   6
     
PART 3 – BOARD OF DIRECTORS   14
PROPOSAL NO. 1: Election of Directors   14
Committees of the Board of Directors   20
Director Compensation   22
     
PART 4 – EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION   24
Compensation Discussion and Analysis   24
Compensation Committee Report   40
Our Compensation Policies and Practices as They Relate to Risk Management   41
Compensation Tables   42
2017 Summary Compensation Table   42
Grants of Plan-Based Awards in 2017   43
Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End 2017   45
Option Exercises and Stock Vested During 2017   46
Pension Benefits for 2017   47
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation for 2017   51
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control   52
PROPOSAL NO. 2: Advisory Resolution to Approve Executive Compensation   60
CEO Pay Ratio   61
     
PART 5 – AUDIT COMMITTEE MATTERS   62
PROPOSAL NO. 3: Ratification of Appointment of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm   62
Independent Accountant Billings   62
Policy on Audit Committee Pre-Approval of Audit and Non-Audit Services   62
Report of the Audit Committee   63
     
PART 6 – OTHER MATTERS   64
Other Business   64
Shared-Address Shareholders   64
2019 Annual Meeting of Shareholders   64
Annual Report and Financial Statements   64
     
APPENDICES   A-1
APPENDIX A – Compensation Survey Data Companies   A-1
 

 

PROXY STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS

 

2018 Annual Meeting Information:
In the Proxy Statement Highlights, we have included highlights of some of the matters discussed in more detail later in the proxy statement. As it is only a summary, please refer to the complete proxy statement and the 2017 Annual Report on Form 10-K for more information before you vote.
         
  Date and Time:   May 17, 2018 at 10:00 a.m. Mountain Time
         
  Meeting Place:   IDACORP, Inc. Corporate Headquarters Building
1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702-5627
           
  Live Webcast:   www.idacorpinc.com/investor-relations
(Archived for one year after the meeting)
 
           
  Eligibility:   You are eligible to vote if you were a shareholder of record at the close of business on March 27, 2018.
         
  Your Vote:   You may cast your vote in any of the following ways:

 

 
Internet Telephone Mail In-Person
For registered holders, visit www.proxypush.com/ida. If your shares are held in street name, follow the instructions delivered to you by your bank or broker. You will need the control number included in your proxy card, voter instruction form, or Notice of Internet Availability. For registered holders, call 1-866-702-2221. If your shares are held in street name, call the number on your voter instruction form. You will need the control number included in your proxy card, voter instruction form, or Notice of Internet Availability. Send your completed and signed proxy card or voter instruction form to the address on your proxy card or voter instruction form. If you are a shareholder of record or have a proxy executed in your favor, you can attend the meeting and cast your vote in-person.

 

Agenda and Voting Matters:

 

Summary Description of Voting Matters   Board Voting Recommendation
1. Election of ten director nominees for a one-year term   ü FOR each director nominee
2. Advisory resolution to approve our executive compensation   ü FOR
3. Ratification of the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018   ü FOR

 

Information on Our Director Nominees:

 

Our board of directors has nominated 10 directors for election at the 2018 Annual Meeting. You are being asked to vote on the election of each of the 10 nominees. Please see Part 3 – “Board of Directors” in this proxy statement for more information about each nominee.

 

        Committee Memberships
Director Nominee Director
Since
Age Independent Audit Compensation Corp. Gov.
and Nomin.
Executive
Darrel T. Anderson 2013 60         ©
Thomas E. Carlile 2014 66 ü ü      
Richard J. Dahl 2008 66 ü ©     ü
Annette G. Elg 2017 61 ü ü      
Ronald W. Jibson 2013 65 ü   ü    
Judith A. Johansen 2007 59 ü   ü ü  
Dennis Johnson 2013 63 ü     ü  
Christine King 2006 68 ü   ©   ü
Richard J. Navarro 2015 65 ü ü      
Robert A. Tinstman (BC) 1999 71 ü     © ü

(BC)-Board Chairperson

©-Committee Chairperson

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   i

 

 

Snapshot of 2018 Director Nominees 

 

 

ii   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Governance Highlights and Investor Engagement:

 

We seek to adopt and implement corporate governance practices that we believe are in the interests of our shareholders and that reflect best practices. Some of our governance practices include the following:

 

ü Annual election of all directors
   
ü 9 of our 11 current directors, and 9 of our 10 director nominees, are independent
   
ü Independent chairperson
   
ü Regular board and committee executive sessions by non-management and independent directors
   
ü Mandatory director retirement age of 72
   
ü Stock ownership requirement for directors and officers
   
ü Prohibition on hedging and pledging of securities for directors and officers
   
ü Annual self-evaluations of the board and committees
ü Majority vote resignation policy for directors in uncontested elections
   
ü Compensation clawback policy
   
ü Stock retention requirement for officers
   
ü Mandatory continuing education requirements for our directors
   
ü No shareholder rights plan
   
ü Independent audit, compensation, and corporate governance and nominating committees
   
ü Robust codes of conduct and ethics, reviewed by our directors
   
ü Significant participation by the board in succession planning


 

Our relationship with our shareholders and the investment community is of great importance to our company. To that end, shareholder engagement is a consideration in the performance evaluation of members of our executive team. Aside from our normal corporate communications, we engage with shareholders, the investment community, and interest groups through our participation in various utility and investment conferences, mini road shows, and one-on-one meetings and telephone discussions with investors. During those meetings, we solicit input on topics such as corporate governance, executive leadership, dividends, disclosure and corporate communications, transparency, and sustainability.

 

Our 2017 Performance Highlights

 

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   iii

 

 

We had a successful year during 2017 in a number of respects:

 

Our earnings per diluted share were $4.21, representing our tenth consecutive year of earnings growth.
   
We provided a 15 percent cumulative annual total shareholder return over the past three years, including share price appreciation and dividends paid, ranking in the 85th percentile among our peer companies in the Edison Electric Institute (EEI) Index of U.S. Shareholder-Owned Electric Utilities (EEI Utilities Index).
   
Our board of directors voted to increase the quarterly dividend, from $0.55 per share to $0.59 per share. We have increased our quarterly dividend a total of approximately 97 percent since the fourth quarter of 2011, reflecting our continued commitment to our previously adopted dividend policy.
   
Our customer count grew 2.0 percent, and sales volumes to industrial customers increased 3.2 percent in 2017 compared to 2016.
   
Our all-time system peak demand of 3,422 megawatts (MW) was set on July 7, 2017, and on January 6, 2017, Idaho Power tied its highest all-time winter peak demand of 2,527 MW.
   
Idaho Power ranked second in JD Power’s Electric Business Customer Satisfaction Study in its West Midsize segment.
   
We established a process approved by the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (IPUC) and Public Utility Commission of Oregon for recovery of costs related to Idaho Power’s plan to end participation in coal-fired operations at the North Valmy coal-fired power plant units 1 and 2 in 2019 and 2025, respectively.
   
We executed on business optimization initiatives, focusing on improving operations and controlling expenditures, which have resulted in no significant increase to total other operations and maintenance (O&M) expenses over the past six years.
   
We reached milestones on key transmission projects as the U.S. Bureau of Land Management issued a record of decision on the siting of the Boardman-to-Hemingway project and a final environmental assessment on the remaining transmission line segments of the Gateway West 500-kV transmission project.
   
We continued to achieve our CO2 emissions intensity reduction goals and extended the goal into future years. Preliminary analysis of the CO2 emissions intensity for calendar year 2017 indicates that our average CO2 emissions intensity over the eight-year period from 2010 through 2017 is more than 20 percent below our 2005 emissions intensity level.
   
We reached agreement on a settlement stipulation in Idaho establishing the reasonableness of Hells Canyon Complex relicensing costs incurred through December 2015.

 

Executive Compensation Program Design Highlights:

 

We believe strong performance by our executive officers is essential to achieving long-term growth in shareholder value and to delivering superior service to our utility customers. We seek to accomplish this by making the majority of our executive officers’ pay “at risk,” meaning we tie much of our executive officers’ target compensation to our financial and operational performance. In order to be earned, a substantial portion of our executives’ compensation requires that we achieve successful results over one- and three-year performance periods. As an executive’s level of responsibility increases, so does the percentage of total compensation at risk, which we believe aligns the interests of our executives who have the highest level of decision-making authority with the interests of our shareholders.

 

For 2017, approximately 75 percent of our President and CEO’s target compensation was “at risk.”

Our executive compensation policy provides that various elements of our compensation for executive officers should target combined short- and long-term incentive compensation comprising 35 percent to 75 percent of total target compensation.

 

iv   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

We seek to establish performance metrics for incentive compensation that reward our executive officers for achieving objectives that align with our shareholders’ interests, and we use both operational and financial metrics for our incentive compensation. Our long-term incentive metrics are measures of the creation of shareholder value, rewarding appreciation in stock price and total shareholder return. Because of the diversity of our performance metrics, our executive officers’ annual compensation can vary considerably depending on our actual performance in any period. For 2017, we used the following metrics:

 

Short-Term Incentive (One-Year) Long-Term Incentive (Three-Year)
   
   

 

* Please see Part 4 - “Executive Compensation” in this proxy statement for more information on the calculation of this measure.

 

We have a number of compensation policies and practices that we use to help align the interests of management with our shareholders, including the following:

 

ü We use a number of financial and operational performance metrics for executive compensation and have a policy that a significant percentage of our executives’ target compensation be “at-risk”
   
ü We have solely independent directors on our compensation committee
   
ü Our compensation committee retains an independent consultant
   
ü We impose minimum stock ownership and retention obligations
ü We have adopted a clawback policy
   
ü We impose a maximum cap on incentive compensation
   
ü We do not provide employment agreements
   
ü We do not permit hedging or pledging of our stock by executive officers
   
ü We provide only limited perquisites
   
ü We do not provide stock options
   
ü Low burn rate on equity for incentive awards


 

Since our first advisory vote on executive compensation in 2011, IDACORP has received strong support for its executive compensation programs, with over 93 percent of votes cast each year in favor of the programs.

 

Please see Part 4 – “Executive Compensation” in this proxy statement for a more detailed discussion of our compensation programs.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   v

 

 

 

PROXY STATEMENT

 

IDACORP, Inc. – 1221 W. Idaho Street – Boise, Idaho 83702-5627

 

PART 1 – INFORMATION ABOUT THIS PROXY STATEMENT AND THE ANNUAL MEETING

 

General Information

 

This proxy statement contains information about the 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders (“Annual Meeting”) of IDACORP, Inc. (“IDACORP”). The Annual Meeting will be held on Thursday, May 17, 2018, at 10:00 a.m. local time at the IDACORP corporate headquarters building, located at 1221 West Idaho Street in Boise, Idaho 83702-5627.

 

References in this proxy statement to the “company,” “we,” “us,” or “our” refer to IDACORP. We also refer to Idaho Power Company (“Idaho Power”) in this proxy statement. Idaho Power is an electric utility engaged in the generation, transmission, distribution, sale, and purchase of electric energy and is our principal operating subsidiary.

 

This proxy statement is being furnished to you by our board of directors to solicit your proxy to vote your shares at the Annual Meeting and any adjournment of the Annual Meeting. All returned proxies that are not revoked will be voted in accordance with your instructions.

 

You are entitled to attend the Annual Meeting only if you are an IDACORP shareholder as of the close of business on March 27, 2018, the record date, or hold a valid proxy for the meeting. In order to be admitted to the Annual Meeting, you must present proof of ownership of IDACORP common stock on the record date. This can be (a) a brokerage statement or letter from a bank or broker indicating ownership on the record date; (b) the Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials (“Notice of Internet Availability”); (c) a printout of the proxy distribution email (if you received your materials electronically); (d) a proxy card; (e) a voting instruction form; or (f) a legal proxy provided by your broker, bank, or nominee. Any holder of a proxy from a shareholder must present the proxy card, properly executed, and a copy of the proof of ownership. Shareholders and proxy holders must also present a form of photo identification such as a driver’s license. Finally, shareholders interested in attending in person must register by calling (800) 635-5406 prior to the close of business on May 16, 2018. We may not admit anyone who does not satisfy these requirements or who refuses to comply with our security procedures.

 

We make our proxy materials and our annual report to shareholders available on the Internet as our primary distribution method. Most shareholders will only be mailed a Notice of Internet Availability. The scheduled mailing date of the Notice of Internet Availability is on or about April 2, 2018. The Notice of Internet Availability specifies how to access proxy materials on the Internet, how to submit your proxy vote, and how to request a hard copy of the proxy materials. On or about April 2, 2018, we also began mailing printed copies of our proxy materials to our shareholders who had previously requested paper copies of our proxy materials.

 

Note About Forward-Looking Statements: Statements in this proxy statement that relate to future plans, objectives, expectations, performance, events, and the like, including statements regarding future financial and operational performance (whether associated with compensation arrangements or otherwise), may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (“Exchange Act”). Forward-looking statements may be identified by words including, but not limited to, “anticipates,” “believes,” “intends,” “estimates,” “expects,” “targets” “should,” and similar expressions. Shareholders are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. We assume no obligation to update any such forward-looking statement, except as required by applicable law. Shareholders should review the risks and uncertainties listed in our most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and other reports we file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), including the risks described therein, which contain factors that may cause results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   1

 

 

Questions and Answers About the Annual Meeting, this Proxy Statement, and Voting

 

Why did I receive a notice in the mail regarding the Internet availability of proxy materials instead of a full set of proxy materials?

 

Pursuant to rules adopted by the SEC, we have elected to provide access to our proxy materials on the Internet. Accordingly, we are sending the Notice of Internet Availability to most of our shareholders. All shareholders will have the ability to access the proxy materials on a website referred to in the Notice of Internet Availability or may request a printed set of the proxy materials at no charge. Shareholders may request to receive proxy materials in printed form by mail or electronically by email on an ongoing basis by following the instructions provided in the Notice of Internet Availability.

 

Who is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting?

 

You are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting if you owned shares of our common stock at the close of business on March 27, 2018. This is referred to as the “record date.” As of the record date, we had 50,420,017 outstanding shares of common stock entitled to one vote per share on all matters.

 

What matters are before the Annual Meeting, and how does the IDACORP Board of Directors recommend I vote?

 

At the Annual Meeting, our shareholders will consider and vote on the matters listed below. In determining how to vote, please consider the detailed information regarding each proposal as discussed in this proxy statement.

 

Proposal
Number
  Description of Proposal   Board
Recommendation
  Page
Reference
1   Elect to the board of directors the ten nominees who are named in this proxy statement to serve until the 2019 annual meeting of shareholders, and until their successors are elected and qualified   FOR each director nominee   14
2   Advisory resolution to approve our executive compensation   FOR   60
3   Ratification of the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2018   FOR   62

 

Will any other business be conducted at the Annual Meeting or will other matters be voted on?

 

As of the date of this proxy statement, we are unaware of any matters, other than those listed in the Notice of 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders, that may properly be presented at the Annual Meeting. If any other matters are properly presented for consideration at the meeting, including, among other things, consideration of a motion to adjourn the meeting to another time or place, the persons named as proxies, or their duly constituted substitutes, will be deemed authorized to vote those shares for which proxies have been given or otherwise act on such matters in accordance with their judgment.

 

What is the difference between holding shares as a shareholder of record and as a beneficial owner?

 

If your shares are registered directly in your name with our transfer agent, EQ Bank Shareowner Services, you are considered the “shareholder of record” with respect to those shares. If your shares are held by a stock brokerage account or by a bank or other nominee, you are considered the “beneficial owner” of the shares, and those shares are referred to as being held in “street name.” As the beneficial owner of those shares, you have the right to direct your broker, bank, or nominee how to vote your shares, and you should receive separate instructions from your broker, bank, or other holder of record describing how to vote your shares. You also are invited to attend the Annual Meeting in person. However, because a beneficial owner is not the shareholder of record, you may not vote these shares in person at the Annual Meeting unless you obtain a “legal proxy” from the broker, bank, or nominee that holds your shares, giving you the right to vote the shares at the Annual Meeting.

 

How can I vote my shares before the Annual Meeting?

 

If you hold shares in your own name as a shareholder of record, you may vote by internet or telephone before the Annual Meeting by following the instructions contained in the Notice of Internet Availability. Under Idaho law, proxies granted according to those instructions will be valid. If you request printed copies of the proxy materials by mail, you may also cast your vote by completing, signing, and dating the proxy card provided to you and returning it in the postage-paid envelope provided to you. Your vote by internet or telephone or through your mailed proxy card will authorize the individuals named on the proxy card to serve as your proxy to vote your shares at the Annual Meeting in the manner you indicate.

 

If you are a beneficial owner of shares held in street name, your broker, bank, or other nominee should provide you with materials and instructions for voting your shares. Please check with your broker or bank and follow the voting procedures your broker or bank provides to vote your shares.

 

Submitting a proxy or voting through the telephone or the Internet will not affect your right to attend the Annual Meeting.

 

2   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

If I am the beneficial owner of shares held in street name by my bank or broker, how will my shares be voted?

 

If you complete and return the voting instruction form provided to you by your bank or broker, we expect that your shares will be voted in accordance with your instructions. If you do not provide voting instructions, brokerage firms only have authority under applicable New York Stock Exchange rules to vote shares on discretionary matters. The ratification of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018 is the only matter included in the proxy statement that is considered a discretionary matter. When a proposal is not discretionary and the brokerage firm has not received voting instructions from its customers, the brokerage firm cannot vote the shares on that proposal. Those shares are considered “broker non-votes.” Please promptly follow the instructions you receive from your bank or broker so your vote can be counted.

 

If I am a shareholder of record, how will my shares be voted?

 

All proxies will be voted in accordance with the instructions you submitted via the Internet, by toll-free telephone, or, if you requested printed proxy materials, by completing, signing, and returning the proxy card provided to you. If you completed and submitted your proxy (and do not revoke it) prior to the Annual Meeting, but do not specify how your shares should be voted for one or more of the voting proposals, the shares of IDACORP common stock represented by the proxy will be voted in accordance with the recommendation of our board of directors, for those proposals for which you did not vote.

 

Can I vote in person at the Annual Meeting?

 

Yes. If you hold shares in your own name as a shareholder of record, you may attend the Annual Meeting and cast your vote at the meeting by properly completing and submitting a ballot. If you are the beneficial owner of shares held in street name, you must first obtain a legal proxy from your broker, bank, or other nominee giving you the right to vote those shares and submit that proxy along with a properly completed ballot at the meeting. Shareholders interested in attending in person must register by calling (800) 635-5406 prior to the close of business on May 16, 2018.

 

What do I need to bring to be admitted to the Annual Meeting?

 

In order to be admitted to the Annual Meeting, you must present proof of ownership of IDACORP common stock on March 27, 2018, the record date. This can be (a) a brokerage statement or letter from a bank or broker indicating ownership on the record date; (b) your Notice of Internet Availability; (c) a printout of your proxy distribution email (if you received your materials electronically); (d) your proxy card; (e) a voting instruction form; or (f) a legal proxy provided by your broker, bank, or nominee. If a shareholder desires to vote shares held in street name in person at the meeting, the shareholder must obtain a legal proxy in the shareholder’s name from the broker, bank, or other nominee who holds those shares in street name. Any holder of a proxy from a shareholder must present the proxy card, properly executed, and a copy of the proof of ownership. Shareholders and proxy holders must also present a form of photo identification such as a driver’s license. Shareholders interested in attending in person must register by calling (800) 635-5406 prior to the close of business on May 16, 2018. We may not admit anyone who does not present the foregoing, fails to register, or refuses to comply with our security procedures.

 

Are shareholders who listen to the Annual Meeting through the live audio webcast deemed present at the Annual Meeting?

 

Shareholders accessing the Annual Meeting through the live audio webcast will not be considered present at the Annual Meeting and will not be able to vote through the webcast or ask questions.

 

May I change or revoke my proxy?

 

You may change or revoke your proxy before it is voted at the Annual Meeting by (1) granting a subsequent proxy through the Internet or by telephone, or (2) delivering to us a signed proxy card with a date later than your previously delivered proxy. If you attend the meeting and wish to vote in person, you may revoke your proxy by oral notice at that time. You may also revoke your proxy by mailing your written revocation to IDACORP’s corporate secretary at 1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702-5627. We must receive your written revocation before the Annual Meeting for it to be effective.

 

What is the “quorum” for the Annual Meeting and what happens if a quorum is not present?

 

The presence at the Annual Meeting, in person or by proxy, of a majority of the shares issued and outstanding and entitled to vote as of March 27, 2018, is required to constitute a “quorum.” The existence of a quorum is necessary in order to take action on the matters scheduled for a vote at the Annual Meeting. If you vote by Internet or telephone, or submit a properly executed proxy card, your shares will be included for purposes of determining the existence of a quorum. Proxies marked “abstain” and “broker non-votes” also will be counted in determining the presence of a quorum. If the shares present in person or represented by proxy at the Annual Meeting are not sufficient to constitute a quorum, the chairman of the meeting or the shareholders may, by a vote of the holders of a majority of votes present in person or represented by proxy, without further notice to any shareholder (unless a new record date is set), adjourn the meeting to a different time and place to permit further solicitations of proxies sufficient to constitute a quorum.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   3

 

 

What is an “abstention”?

 

An “abstention” occurs when a shareholder sends in a proxy with explicit instructions to decline to vote regarding a particular matter. An abstention with respect to a matter submitted to a vote will not be counted for or against the matter. Consequently, an abstention with respect to any of the proposals to be presented at the Annual Meeting will not affect the outcome of the vote.

 

What is a “broker non-vote”?

 

A broker non-vote occurs when a broker or other nominee who holds shares for another person does not vote on a particular proposal because that holder does not have discretionary voting power for the proposal and has not received voting instructions from the beneficial owner of the shares. If no voting instructions have been provided by the beneficial owner, brokers will have discretionary voting power to vote shares with respect to the ratification of the appointment of the independent registered public accounting firm, but not with respect to any of the other proposals. A broker non-vote will have the same effect as an abstention and, therefore, will not affect the outcome of the vote.

 

What vote is required to approve each proposal?

 

The following votes are required for approval of each proposal at the Annual Meeting:

 

Proposal
Number
  Vote Requirement   Effect of Withholding, Abstentions and
Broker Non-Votes
1   Our directors are elected by a plurality of the votes cast by the shares entitled to vote in the election of directors.   No effect, though a “withhold” vote is relevant under our director resignation policy
2   The advisory resolution on executive compensation is approved if the votes cast in favor exceed the votes cast against the resolution.   No effect
3   The ratification of the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018 is approved if the votes cast in favor exceed the votes cast against ratification.   Abstentions will have no effect; uninstructed shares are subject to a discretionary vote by a broker or other nominee

 

What happens if, under Proposal No. 1, a director receives a greater number of votes “withheld” than votes “for” such director?

 

As noted above, a plurality of votes cast by shareholders present, in person or by proxy, at the Annual Meeting is required for the election of our directors. “Plurality” means that the nominees receiving the largest number of votes cast for his or her election are elected for the number of director positions that are to be filled at the meeting. However, under our director resignation policy, if a director nominee in an uncontested election receives a greater number of votes “withheld” from his or her election than votes “for” such election, the director must promptly tender a resignation to the board of directors. The board of directors will then decide whether to accept the resignation within 90 days following certification of the shareholder vote (based on the recommendation of the corporate governance and nominating committee, which is comprised exclusively of independent directors). We will publicly disclose the board of directors’ decision and its reasoning with regard to the offered resignation.

 

Who will count the votes?

 

An independent tabulator will tabulate the votes cast by mail, Internet, or telephone. Our corporate secretary will tabulate any votes cast at the Annual Meeting and will act as inspector of election to certify the results.

 

Where can I find the voting results?

 

We expect to report the voting results on a Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC within four business days following the Annual Meeting.

 

Are the votes of specific shareholders confidential?

 

It is our policy that all proxies for the Annual Meeting that identify shareholders, including employees, are to be kept confidential from the public. Proxies will be forwarded to the independent tabulator who receives, inspects, and tabulates the proxies. We do not intend to disclose the voting decisions of any shareholder to any third party except (a) as required by law or order or directive of a court or governmental agency, (b) to allow the inspector of election inspectors to review and certify the results of the shareholder vote, (c) in the event of a dispute as to the vote or voting results, or (d) in the event of a matter of significance where there is a proxy solicitation in opposition to the board of directors, based on an opposition proxy statement filed with the SEC.

 

4   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Who will pay the cost of this solicitation and how will these proxies be solicited?

 

We will pay the cost of soliciting your proxy. Our officers and employees may solicit proxies, personally or by telephone, fax, mail, or other electronic means, without extra compensation. In addition, D.F. King & Co., Inc. will solicit proxies from brokers, banks, nominees, and institutional investors or other shareholders at a cost of approximately $6,500 plus out-of-pocket expenses. We will reimburse banks, brokerage firms, and other custodians, nominees, and fiduciaries for their expenses in providing our proxy materials to beneficial owners.

 

What if I have further questions not addressed in this proxy statement?

 

If you have any questions about voting your shares or attending the Annual Meeting, please call our Shareowner Services Department at (800) 635-5406.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   5

 

 

PART 2 – CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AT IDACORP

 

   

Overview of Our Corporate Governance Practices

 

The goals of our corporate governance principles and practices are to promote the long-term interests of our shareholders, as well as to maintain appropriate checks and balances and compliance systems, to strengthen management accountability, engender public trust, and facilitate prudent decision making. We evaluate our corporate governance principles and practices and modify existing, or develop new, policies and standards when appropriate. Some of our notable corporate governance practices include the following:

 

ü    Annual election of all directors

 

ü    9 of our 11 current directors, and 9 of our 10 director nominees, are independent

 

ü    Independent chairperson

 

ü    Regular board and committee executive sessions by non-management and independent directors

 

ü    Mandatory director retirement age of 72

 

ü    Stock ownership requirement for directors and officers

 

ü    Prohibition on hedging and pledging of securities for directors and officers

 

ü    Annual self-evaluations of the board and committees

 

ü    Majority vote resignation policy for directors in uncontested elections

 

ü    Compensation clawback policy

 

ü    Stock retention requirement for officers

 

ü    Mandatory continuing education requirements for our directors

 

ü    No shareholder rights plan

 

ü    Independent audit, compensation, and corporate governance and nominating committees

 

ü    Robust codes of conduct and ethics, reviewed by our directors

 

ü    Significant participation by the board in succession planning

 

 

Business Strategy

 

We are committed to our focus on competitive total returns and generating long-term value for shareholders. Our business strategy emphasizes Idaho Power as our core business, as Idaho Power’s regulated utility operations are the primary driver of our operating results. Our board of directors has reviewed and affirmed its and Idaho Power’s long-term strategy, which is focused on the following areas and related initiatives:

 

Focus Area Initiatives
Grow to Enhance Financial Strength Enhance Business Development Initiatives
  Find New Revenue Opportunities
  Promote and Engage in Electrification
  Optimize Wholesale Transmission and Energy Sales
Improve the Core Business Upgrade Infrastructure for Growth, Technology Changes, Renewable Energy Integration, and Flexibility
  Evaluate and Control Expenditures and Continue Efficient Operations
  Use Technology to Enhance the Grid, System Reliability, and Safety
  Implement Rate Structures that are Fair and Reasonable to All Customers
Enhance Idaho Power’s Brand Enhance Idaho Power’s Customers’ Experience and Interactions
  Continue Environmental Stewardship and Emission Reductions
  Continue Constructive Regulatory Relationships and a Regulatory Compliance Mindset
Focus on Safety & Employee Engagement Continue Idaho Power’s Strong Focus on Safety and Reducing Injuries
  Focus on Employee Engagement and Leadership Development

 

In executing the focus areas above, we seek to balance the interests of shareholders, Idaho Power customers, employees, and other stakeholders. Idaho Power is working to continue to provide safe, affordable, reliable service to its customers from a diversified source of generation resources, with a continued commitment to strong, sustainable financial results and strong credit ratings.

 

6   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Director Independence and Executive Sessions

 

Our board of directors has adopted a policy, contained in our Corporate Governance Guidelines (available at www.idacorpinc.com/governance/governance-documents), that the board of directors will be composed of a majority of independent directors. The board of directors reviews annually the relationships that each director has with the company (either directly or as a partner, shareholder, or officer of an organization that has a relationship with the company). Following the annual review, only those directors who the board of directors affirmatively determines have no material relationship with the company and can exercise independent judgment will be considered independent directors, subject to additional qualifications prescribed under the listing standards of the New York Stock Exchange and under applicable laws.

 

All members of our board of directors are non-employees, except Darrel T. Anderson, who is our president and chief executive officer (“CEO”). The board of directors has determined that all members of our board of directors, other than J. LaMont Keen, who retired as our president and CEO in April 2014, and Mr. Anderson, are independent based on all relevant facts and circumstances and under the New York Stock Exchange listing standards and our Corporate Governance Guidelines.

 

Our non-employee directors meet in executive session at each regular meeting of the board of directors. Additionally, our independent directors meet separately in executive session periodically, and not less frequently than annually. The independent chairman of the board of directors presides at board meetings and at regularly scheduled executive sessions of independent and non-management directors.

 

Codes of Business Conduct

 

We have a Code of Business Conduct that applies to all of our officers and employees. We also have a separate Code of Business Conduct and Ethics for directors. These are posted on our website at www.idacorpinc.com/governance/governance-documents. We will also post on that website any amendments to, or waivers of, our Codes of Business Conduct, as required by SEC rules or New York Stock Exchange listing standards.

 

Board Leadership Structure

 

The board of directors separated the positions of chairman of the board of directors and CEO in 1999. Our CEO is responsible for leadership, overall management of our business strategy, and day-to-day operations, while our chairman presides over meetings of our board of directors and provides guidance to our CEO regarding policies and procedures approved by our board of directors. Separating these two positions allows our CEO to focus on our day-to-day business and operations, while allowing the chairman of the board of directors to lead the board of directors in its fundamental role of providing advice to, and independent oversight of, management. The board of directors recognizes the time, effort, and energy that the CEO is required to devote to his position, as well as the increasing commitment required of the chairman position, particularly as the board of directors’ oversight responsibilities continue to grow.

 

While our bylaws and Corporate Governance Guidelines do not mandate that our chairman and CEO positions be separate, the board of directors believes for the reasons outlined above that having separate positions and having an independent director serve as chairman is the appropriate leadership structure for the company at this time. The board of directors believes that this issue is part of the succession planning process and that it is in the best interests of the company for the board of directors to make a determination as to the advisability of continuing to have separate positions when it appoints a new CEO.

 

The Board of Directors’ Role in Risk Oversight and Succession Planning

 

Our management team is responsible for the day-to-day management of risks the company faces. Our senior vice president and general counsel and our director of compliance, risk, and security, together with our director of audit services, are responsible for overseeing and coordinating risk assessment processes and mitigation efforts on an enterprise wide basis. These leaders administer processes intended to identify key business risks, assist in appropriately assessing and managing these risks within stated limits, enforce policies and procedures designed to mitigate risk, and report on these items to other members of senior management and the board of directors. These leaders report regularly to the board of directors and appropriate board committees regarding risks the company faces and how the company is managing those risks.

 

While our senior vice president and general counsel, our director of compliance, risk and security, and our director of audit services, together with other members of our senior leadership team, are responsible for the day-to-day management of risk, our board of directors is responsible for ensuring that an appropriate culture of risk management exists within our company, for setting the right “tone at the top,” and assisting management in addressing specific risks that our company faces. The board of directors has the responsibility to oversee the risk management processes designed and implemented by management and confirm the processes are adequate and functioning as designed.

 

While the full board of directors is ultimately responsible for high-level risk oversight at our company, it is assisted by the executive committee, the audit committee, the compensation committee, and the corporate governance and nominating committee in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities in certain areas of risk. The executive committee assists the board of directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities with respect to the company’s risk management processes generally. The audit committee assists the board of directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   7

 

 

with respect to major financial risk exposures and our energy risk management practices (including hedging transactions and collateral requirements) and, in accordance with the listing standards of the New York Stock Exchange, discusses policies with respect to risk assessment and risk management. Representatives from our independent registered public accounting firm attend audit committee meetings, regularly make presentations to the audit committee, comment on management presentations, and engage in private sessions with the audit committee, without members of management present, to raise any concerns they may have with our risk management practices. The audit committee also assists the board of directors in monitoring management’s risk management framework for cyber security and physical security. The compensation committee assists the board of directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities with respect to risks arising from our compensation policies and practices. The corporate governance and nominating committee undertakes periodic reviews of processes for management of risks associated with our company’s organizational structure, governing instruments, and policies. In fulfilling their respective responsibilities, the committees meet regularly with our officers and members of senior management, as well as our internal and external auditors. Each committee has full access to management, as well as the ability to engage and compensate its own independent advisors.

 

The board of directors receives regular reports from the executive committee, audit committee, compensation committee, and corporate governance and nominating committee relating to the oversight of risks in their areas of responsibility. Based on this and information provided by management, the board of directors evaluates our risk management processes and considers whether any changes should be made to those processes or the board of directors’ risk oversight function. We believe that this division of risk oversight ensures that oversight of each type of risk the company faces is allocated, at least initially, to the particular directors most qualified to oversee it. It also promotes board efficiency because the committees are able to select the most timely or important risk-related issues for the full board of directors to consider.

 

We believe that one of the risks our company faces is related to our expectation that a significant number of long-term employees will be retiring from our company in the coming years. As a result, our board of directors is actively involved in monitoring our succession planning. The board of directors reviews the succession plans developed by members of senior management at least annually, with a focus on ensuring a talent pipeline at the officer level and for specific critical roles. We seek to ensure that our directors are exposed to a variety of members of our leadership team, and not just the senior-most officers, on a regular basis, through formal presentations and informal events. Our board of directors is also informed of general workforce trends, expected retirement levels or turnover, and recruiting and development programs, of particular importance given Idaho Power’s specialized workforce and recent high rate of employee retirements.

 

Board Meetings and Director Attendance

 

The members of our board of directors are expected to attend board meetings and meetings of board committees on which they serve, and to spend the time needed and to meet as frequently as necessary to properly discharge their responsibilities. The board of directors held five meetings in 2017, with all of our directors attending 100 percent of those meetings. Each director also attended 100 percent of the meetings of the committees in 2017 on which he or she was a member in 2017, with the exception of one director who attended seven of the eight (87 percent) meetings of the audit committee on which he is a member. Our Corporate Governance Guidelines provide that all directors are expected to attend our annual meeting of shareholders and be available, when requested by the chairman of the board of directors, to answer any questions shareholders may have. All then serving members of the board of directors attended our 2017 annual meeting of shareholders.

 

Board Committee Charters

 

Our standing committees of the board of directors are the executive committee, the audit committee, the compensation committee, and the corporate governance and nominating committee. We have:

 

  charters for the audit committee, compensation committee, and corporate governance and nominating committee; and
     
  Corporate Governance Guidelines, which address issues including the responsibilities, qualifications, and compensation of the board of directors, as well as board leadership, board committees, director resignation, and self-evaluation.

 

Our committee charters and our Corporate Governance Guidelines may be accessed on our website at http://www.idacorpinc.com/governance/governance-documents. Information on our committees of the board of directors is included in Part 3 – “Board of Directors-Committees of the Board of Directors.”

 

Board Membership Criteria and Consideration of Diversity

 

We believe that directors should possess the highest personal and professional ethics, integrity, and values and be committed to representing the long-term interests of our shareholders. Directors must also have an inquisitive and objective perspective, practical wisdom, and mature judgment. We also consider a nexus to Idaho Power’s service area a desirable trait. Although the corporate governance and nominating committee and the board of directors do not have a formal policy for considering diversity in identifying director nominees, we endeavor to have a board representing diverse experience at policy-making levels in business, finance, and accounting and in areas that are relevant to our business activities. We believe our current directors bring a strong diversity of experiences to the board of directors as leaders in business, finance, accounting, regulation, and the utility industry.

 

8   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Under the oversight of the corporate governance and nominating committee, the board of directors conducts an annual self-evaluation of its performance and utilizes the results to assess and determine the characteristics and critical skills required of directors. Each of our audit, compensation, and corporate governance and nominating committees also performs an annual self-assessment. In addition, our Corporate Governance Guidelines and the corporate governance and nominating committee charter provide that the corporate governance and nominating committee will annually review board committee assignments and consider the rotation of the chairman and members of the committees with a view toward balancing the benefits derived from continuity against the benefits derived from the diversity of experience and viewpoints of the various directors.

 

In addition, we require that:

 

  at least one member of our audit committee be an “audit committee financial expert”;
     
  our directors automatically retire immediately prior to the first annual meeting of shareholders after they reach age 72; and
     
  a majority of board members be independent under our Corporate Governance Guidelines and applicable New York Stock Exchange listing standards.

 

Director Resignation Policy

 

We have a policy that provides that if any director nominee in an uncontested election receives a greater number of votes “withheld” from his or her election than votes “for” such election, the director nominee must tender his or her resignation to the board of directors promptly after the voting results are certified. The corporate governance and nominating committee, comprised entirely of independent directors and which will specifically exclude any director who is required to tender his or her own resignation, will consider the tendered resignation and make a recommendation to the board of directors, taking into account all factors deemed relevant. These factors include, without limitation, the underlying reasons why shareholders withheld votes from the director (if ascertainable) and whether the underlying reasons are curable, the length of service and qualifications of the director whose resignation has been tendered, the director’s contributions to our company, whether by accepting the resignation we will no longer be in compliance with any applicable law, rule, regulation, or governing document, and whether or not accepting the resignation is in the best interests of our company and our shareholders. Our board of directors will act upon the corporate governance and nominating committee’s recommendation within 90 days following certification of the shareholder vote and will consider the factors considered by the corporate governance and nominating committee and any additional information and factors as the board of directors believes to be relevant. We will publicly disclose the board of directors’ decision and rationale with regard to any resignation offered under the director resignation policy.

 

Process for Determining Director Nominees

 

In determining the composition of our board of directors, we seek a balanced mix of local experience, which we believe is specifically relevant for a utility, and national or public company experience, among other factors of experience. As a utility company with operations predominantly in Idaho and Oregon, we believe it is important for our company and our local directors to be involved in and otherwise support local community and charitable organizations.

 

Our corporate governance and nominating committee is responsible for selecting and recommending to the board of directors candidates for election as directors. Our Corporate Governance Guidelines contain procedures for the committee to identify and evaluate new director nominees, including candidates our shareholders recommend in compliance with our Corporate Governance Guidelines. The corporate governance and nominating committee begins the process of identifying and evaluating potential nominees for director positions and keeps the full board of directors informed of the nominating process. The corporate governance and nominating committee reviews candidates recommended by shareholders and may hire a search firm to identify other candidates.

 

The corporate governance and nominating committee gathers additional information on the candidates to determine if they qualify to be members of our board of directors. The corporate governance and nominating committee examines whether the candidates are independent, whether their election would violate any federal or state laws, rules, or regulations that apply to us, and whether they meet all requirements under our Corporate Governance Guidelines, committee charters, bylaws, codes of business conduct and ethics, and any other applicable corporate document or policy. The corporate governance and nominating committee also considers whether the nominees will have potential conflicts of interest, and whether they will represent a single or special interest, before finalizing a list of candidates for the full board of directors to consider for nomination.

 

Process for Shareholders to Recommend Candidates for Director

 

Our Corporate Governance Guidelines set forth the requirements that you must follow if you wish to recommend director candidates to our corporate governance and nominating committee. If you recommend a candidate for director, you must provide the following information:

 

  the candidate’s name, age, business address, residence address, telephone number, principal occupation, the class and number of shares of our voting stock the candidate owns beneficially and of record, a statement as to how long the candidate has held such stock, a description of the candidate’s qualifications to be a director, whether the candidate would be an independent director, and any other information you deem relevant with respect to the recommendation; and

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   9

 

 

  your name and address as they appear on our stock records, the class and number of shares of voting stock you own beneficially and of record, and a statement as to how long you have held the stock.

 

Recommendations must be sent to our corporate secretary at the address provided below. Our corporate secretary will review all written recommendations and send those conforming to the requirements described above to the corporate governance and nominating committee for review and consideration. The corporate governance and nominating committee evaluates the qualifications of candidates properly submitted by shareholders in the same manner as it evaluates the qualifications of director candidates identified by the committee or the board of directors.

 

Shareholders who wish to nominate persons for election to the board of directors, rather than recommend candidates for consideration, must follow the procedures set forth in our bylaws. Copies of our bylaws may be obtained by writing to our corporate secretary at IDACORP, Inc., 1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702-5627, or by calling our corporate secretary at (208) 388-2200. See also the section entitled 2019 Annual Meeting of Shareholders in Part 6 – “Other Matters” in this proxy statement.

 

Communications with the Board of Directors and Audit Committee

 

Shareholders and other interested parties may communicate with members of the board of directors by:

 

  calling (866) 384-4277 if they have a concern to bring to the attention of the board of directors, our chairman of the board of directors, or our non-employee directors as a group; or
     
  logging on to www.idacorp.ethicspoint.com and following the instructions to file a report if the concern is of an ethical nature.

 

Our general counsel receives all such communications. These communications are distributed to the board of directors, or to the chairperson or specific directors as appropriate, depending on the facts and circumstances of the communication. Communications may include the reporting of concerns related to governance, corporate conduct, business ethics, financial practices, legal issues, and accounting or audit matters. If a report concerns questionable accounting practices, internal accounting controls, or auditing matters, our general counsel will also forward your report to the chairman of the audit committee. The acceptance and forwarding of communication to any director does not imply that the director owes or assumes any fiduciary duty to the person submitting the communication, all such duties being only as prescribed by applicable law.

 

Environmental and Sustainability Initiatives

 

Our board of directors is responsible for the oversight of our sustainability initiatives and is regularly informed of the goals, measures, and results of our sustainability programs. We publicly released our inaugural sustainability report in May 2012 and have issued sustainability reports annually thereafter. In connection with our sustainability initiatives, we recognize and have taken actions aligned with the importance of environmental, social, and governance issues and policies, as discussed in those reports. We generally publish our most current sustainability report on Idaho Power’s website, www.idahopower.com, together with other information on environmental, social, and governance issues that we believe may be of interest. The sustainability reports and related website content are not incorporated by reference into this proxy statement.

 

Certain Relationships and Related Transactions

 

Our related person transactions policy defines a related person transaction as a transaction between a related person and our company in which the amount exceeds $120,000.

 

The related person transactions policy defines a “related person” as any:

 

  officer, director, or director nominee of IDACORP or any subsidiary;
     
  person known to be a greater than 5% beneficial owner of IDACORP voting securities;
     
  immediate family member of the foregoing persons, or person (other than a tenant or employee) sharing the household of the foregoing persons; or
     
  firm, corporation, or other entity in which any person named above is a partner, principal, executive officer, or greater than 5% beneficial owner, or where such person otherwise has a direct or indirect material interest.

 

The following types of transactions are excluded from the related person transactions policy:

 

  transactions available to all employees generally;
     
  the purchase or sale of electric energy at rates fixed in conformity with law or governmental authority;
     
  transactions involving compensation, employment agreements, or special supplemental benefits for directors or officers that are reviewed and approved by the compensation committee; and
     
  transactions between or among companies within the IDACORP family.

 

10   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

The corporate governance and nominating committee administers the policy, which includes procedures to review related person transactions, approve or disapprove related person transactions, and ratify unapproved transactions. The policy, which is in writing, also specifically requires prior corporate governance and nominating committee approval of proposed charitable contributions or pledges of charitable contributions in excess of $120,000 in any calendar year to a charitable or not-for-profit organization identified as a related person, except those nondiscretionary contributions made pursuant to our matching contribution program. The board of directors may approve a proposed related person transaction after reviewing the information considered by the corporate governance and nominating committee and any additional information it deems necessary or desirable:

 

  if it determines in good faith that the transaction is in, or is not inconsistent with, the best interests of our company and the shareholders; and
     
  if the transaction is on terms comparable to those that could be obtained in an arm’s-length dealing with an unrelated third party.

 

Steven R. Keen, our and Idaho Power’s senior vice president, chief financial officer (“CFO”), and treasurer, is the brother of J. LaMont Keen, a member of our board of directors. Mr. Steven Keen is one of our “named executive officers” for 2017, and thus his compensation for 2017 is described in Part 4 – “Executive Compensation” in this proxy statement. The corporate governance and nominating committee and board of directors reviewed and approved the related person transaction, and the compensation committee and board of directors reviewed and approved all elements of Mr. Steven Keen’s 2017 compensation.

 

Jeffrey L. Malmen, our and Idaho Power’s Senior Vice President of Public Affairs, is married to Erika Eaton Malmen, a partner at the law firm of Perkins Coie LLP, a law firm that Idaho Power has engaged for over 40 years. Idaho Power’s relationship with Perkins Coie, LLP began prior to Mr. Malmen’s employment with the companies and Ms. Malmen’s partnership at the law firm. In 2017, Perkins Coie LLP was paid approximately $189,000 for legal services provided to IDACORP and Idaho Power. Ms. Malmen is among the lawyers at Perkins Coie LLP who provided such legal services. This work was performed under the supervision of Idaho Power’s general counsel and the compensation arrangements were comparable to other national law firms providing legal services to Idaho Power. Mr. Malmen does not participate in decisions with respect to whether we hire Perkins Coie, LLP as outside counsel. In February 2018, the corporate governance committee and the board of directors reviewed, ratified and approved the potential related party transaction involving Perkins Coie LLP.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   11

 

 

Security Ownership of Directors, Executive Officers, and Five-Percent Shareholders

 

The table that follows sets forth the number of shares of our common stock beneficially owned on March 17, 2018, by our directors and nominees, by our named executive officers listed in the 2017 Summary Compensation Table included in Part 4 – “Executive Compensation” of this proxy statement, and by our directors and executive officers as a group. Under SEC rules, “beneficial ownership” for purposes of this table takes into account shares as to which the individual has or shares voting and/or investment power as well as shares that may be acquired within 60 days. This table does not take into account units held by the individuals. The beneficial owners listed have sole voting and investment power with respect to shares beneficially owned, including shares they own through the Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan and our Dividend Reinvestment and Stock Purchase Plan, except as to the interests of spouses or as otherwise indicated.

 

Name of Beneficial Owner  Title of Class  Amount and
Nature of
Beneficial
Ownership1
   Percent
of Class
 
Non-Employee Directors          
Thomas Carlile2  Common Stock   8,137    * 
Richard J. Dahl  Common Stock   12,916    * 
Annette G. Elg  Common Stock   2,531    * 
Ronald W. Jibson  Common Stock   6,933    * 
Judith A. Johansen3  Common Stock   15,829    * 
Dennis L. Johnson4  Common Stock   7,663    * 
J. LaMont Keen5  Common Stock   52,760    * 
Christine King  Common Stock   16,281    * 
Richard J. Navarro  Common Stock   5,508    * 
Robert A. Tinstman6  Common Stock   23,286    * 
Named Executive Officers             
Darrel T. Anderson  Common Stock   102,168    * 
Steven R. Keen  Common Stock   28,408    * 
Lisa A. Grow  Common Stock   16,401    * 
Brian R. Buckham  Common Stock   2,664    * 
Lonnie G. Krawl  Common Stock   11,040    * 
All directors and executive officers as a group (20 persons)7  Common Stock   359,663    0.71%

 

* Less than 1%.
1 Includes shares of common stock subject to forfeiture and restrictions on transfer granted pursuant to the IDACORP 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan. Share numbers are rounded to the nearest whole share. There were no stock options for IDACORP common stock outstanding as of March 17, 2018.
2 Includes 4,137 stock units and dividend equivalents for deferred annual stock awards. The deferred compensation is payable in stock upon separation from service from the board of directors.
3 Includes 15,829 stock units and dividend equivalents for deferred annual stock awards. The deferred compensation is payable in stock upon separation from service from the board of directors.
4 Includes 4,017 stock units and dividend equivalents for deferred annual stock awards. The deferred compensation is payable in stock upon separation from service from the board of directors.
5 Mr. Keen maintains a brokerage account with a margin feature. At March 17, 2018, 39,930 shares of IDACORP common stock were included in the account. Pursuant to our Corporate Governance Guidelines and our company policy, Mr. Keen will be required to exclude IDACORP shares from the margin feature if and when the margin feature is used and there is a material risk that IDACORP shares could be sold due to a margin call or foreclosure.
6 Includes 12,431 stock units and dividend equivalents for deferred annual stock awards. The deferred compensation is payable in stock upon separation from service from the board of directors.
7 Includes 48,976 shares owned by five persons who are executive officers of Idaho Power but not of IDACORP.

 

12   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

The table below sets forth information with respect to each person known to us to be the beneficial owner of more than five percent of our outstanding common stock as of March 17, 2018.

 

Name and Address of Beneficial Owner Amount and Nature of
 Beneficial Ownership
Percent of Class
BlackRock, Inc.
55 East 52nd Street
New York, NY 10055
7,983,3051 15.8%
The Vanguard Group, Inc.
100 Vanguard Blvd.
Malvern, PA 19355
4,816,7792 9.55%
FMR LLC
245 Summer Street
Boston, MA 02210
3,224,5463 6.398%

 

1 Based on a Schedule 13G/A filed on January 19, 2018, by BlackRock, Inc. BlackRock, Inc. reported sole voting power as to 7,853,500 shares and sole dispositive power as to 7,983,305 shares as the parent holding company or control person of BlackRock Life Limited; BlackRock International Limited; BlackRock Advisors, LLC; BlackRock (Netherlands) B.V.; BlackRock Fund Advisors; BlackRock Institutional Trust Company, National Association; BlackRock Asset Management Ireland Limited; BlackRock Financial Management, Inc.; BlackRock Japan Co., Ltd.; BlackRock Asset Management Schweiz AG; BlackRock Investment Management, LLC; BlackRock Investment Management (UK) Limited; BlackRock Asset Management Canada Limited; BlackRock Asset Management Deutschland AG; and BlackRock Investment Management (Australia) Limited.
2 Based on a Schedule 13G/A filed on February 9, 2018, by The Vanguard Group, Inc. The Vanguard Group, Inc. reported sole voting power as to 64,673 shares, shared voting power as to 17,499, sole dispositive power as to 4,748,294 shares, and shared dispositive power as to 68,485 shares. Vanguard Fiduciary Trust Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of The Vanguard Group, Inc., is the beneficial owner of 50,986 shares as a result of its serving as investment manager of collective trust accounts. Vanguard Investments Australia, Ltd., a wholly owned subsidiary of The Vanguard Group, Inc., is the beneficial owner of 31,186 shares as a result of its serving as investment manager of Australian investment offerings.
3 Based on a Schedule 13G/A filed on February 13, 2018, by FMR LLC. FMR LLC reported sole voting power as to 136,845 shares and sole dispositive power as to 3,224,546 shares.

 

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

 

Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act requires our directors and executive officers, and persons who beneficially own more than 10 percent of our common stock, to file reports of beneficial ownership and changes in beneficial ownership with the SEC. Our directors, executive officers, and holders of more than 10 percent of our outstanding common stock are required by SEC rules to furnish us with copies of all Section 16(a) reports that they file. We file Section 16(a) reports on behalf of our directors and executive officers to report their initial and subsequent changes in beneficial ownership of our common stock. To our knowledge, based solely on a review of the reports we filed on behalf of our directors and executive officers and written representations from these persons that no other reports were required and all reports were provided to us, all Section 16(a) filing requirements applicable to our directors and executive officers were complied with for 2017.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   13

 

 

PART 3 – BOARD OF DIRECTORS

 

PROPOSAL NO. 1: Election of Directors

 

One member of our board of directors, J. Lamont Keen, will retire from the board of directors effective immediately prior to the Annual Meeting. After Mr. Keen’s retirement, the board of directors will consist of 10 members. Upon the recommendation of our Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee, our board of directors has nominated the 10 individuals listed below to serve as directors. All of the nominees served as members of our board of directors during 2017. The nominees consist of nine independent directors, as defined by the rules of the New York Stock Exchange, and our current President and CEO (Darrel Anderson).

 

Each director’s term runs from the date of his or her election until our next annual meeting of shareholders or until his or her successor (if any) is elected or appointed. While we expect that all of the nominees will be able to qualify for and accept office, if for any reason one or more should be unable or unwilling to do so, the individuals named as proxies may vote for a substitute nominee chosen by the present board of directors to fill the vacancy. Alternatively, the board of directors could decide to reduce the size of the board, or the proxies could be voted for the remaining nominees, leaving a vacancy on the board.

 

Under the resignation policy adopted by the board of directors and included in our Corporate Governance Guidelines, if a director nominee in an uncontested election receives a greater number of votes “withheld” from his or her election than votes “for” such election, the director must promptly tender his or her resignation to the board of directors. The board of directors will then decide whether to accept the tendered resignation within 90 days following certification of the shareholder vote (based on the recommendation of the corporate governance and nominating committee, which is comprised exclusively of independent directors). In accordance with our policy, we will publicly disclose the board of directors’ decision and its reasoning with regard to the offered resignation.

 

There are no family relationships between any director, director nominee, or executive officer, except that J. LaMont Keen, the retiring member of our board of directors, is the brother of Steven R. Keen, our and Idaho Power’s senior vice president, CFO, and treasurer.

 

The composition of our board of directors is identical to the composition of Idaho Power’s board of directors.

 

Nominees for Election

 

 

Darrel T. Anderson

Age: 60

Director Since: 2013

Committees:

Executive

 

Professional Experience: Mr. Anderson has been the president and CEO of Idaho Power since January 2014 and president and CEO of IDACORP since May 2014. He was previously the executive vice president – administrative services and CFO of IDACORP from 2009 to 2014, president and CFO of Idaho Power from 2012 to 2013, and executive vice president-administrative services and CFO of Idaho Power from 2009 to 2011. Mr. Anderson has also been employed in a number of other officer and senior management roles with IDACORP, Idaho Power, and its subsidiaries since 1996.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: None

 

Subsidiary Directorships: IDACORP Energy Resources Co.

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: As IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s president and CEO, Mr. Anderson provides the board of directors with real-time information on IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s financial condition and operations. Through his long tenure at IDACORP and Idaho Power, he has developed a strong understanding and working knowledge of the companies’ industry and operations, strategy, regulatory environment, finance and external reporting, and administration.

 

14   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

 

Thomas Carlile

Age: 66

Director Since: 2014

Committees:

Audit

 

Professional Experience: Mr. Carlile served as the CEO of Boise Cascade Company, one of the largest producers of plywood and engineered wood products in North America and a leading U.S. wholesale distributor of building products, from 2013 to 2015, and as the CEO and a director of Boise Cascade LLC, a predecessor to Boise Cascade Company, from 2009 to 2013. He has served as a director of Boise Cascade Company since 2013 and has been chairman of the board of Boise Cascade Company since 2015.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: Boise Cascade Company; Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: None

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: Mr. Carlile brings financial, operational, and executive experience to our board of directors. Mr. Carlile acquired his extensive financial background through his former positions at Boise Cascade. An Idaho native, he also brings to the board of directors his knowledge of economics and finance and experience operating a company within Idaho Power’s service area, offering him the ability to provide the board of directors with insight into local, state, and regional issues.

     

 

Richard J. Dahl

Age: 66

Director Since: 2008

Committees:

Audit; Executive

 

 

Professional Experience: Mr. Dahl has served as the chairman of the board of James Campbell Company, LLC, a privately held real estate investment and development company, since 2010, and served as the president and CEO from 2010 to 2016. From March 2017 to September 2017, Mr. Dahl was interim CEO of DineEquity, Inc., which franchises and operates restaurants under the Applebee’s Grill & Bar and IHOP brands. He has served as a director of DineEquity, Inc. since 2004, and currently serves as chairman of the board. He was also formerly the chairman of the board of International Rectifier Corp., a power management technology company, from 2008 through its sale in 2015. Mr. Dahl also previously served in a number of executive officer roles and as a director at Dole Food Company, Inc. and Bank of Hawaii Corp.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: DineEquity, Inc.; Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc.; Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: International Rectifier Corp.

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: Mr. Dahl’s financial, operational, and executive experience make him an outstanding asset to our board of directors. Mr. Dahl acquired his extensive financial background through his former positions at major corporations, as well as with the Ernst & Young accounting firm. His service on other public company boards, including as former chairman of the board of International Rectifier Corp. and as chairman and an audit committee member of DineEquity’s board, as well as an audit committee member of Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc., enables him to provide valuable experience to our board of directors and to our audit committee, of which he is the chairman. Mr. Dahl has significant connections to the state of Idaho and is a member of the board of the University of Idaho Foundation, Inc.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   15

 

 

 

Annette G. Elg

Age: 61

Director Since: 2017

Committees:

Audit

 

Professional Experience: Ms. Elg served as the senior vice president and chief financial officer for the J.R. Simplot Company, a privately-held food and agribusiness company, from 2002 to 2016. During her 27-year career with J.R. Simplot Company, Ms. Elg held various positions, including vice president and corporate controller and vice president and controller for the food group.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: Cascade Bancorp

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: A considerable number of Idaho Power’s large customers are in the agricultural and food processing industries, and Ms. Elg brings extensive financial and operational experience in the agribusiness industry to our board of directors. Ms. Elg acquired her extensive financial experience through a number of officer positions at J.R. Simplot Company, and by serving as a director for Cascade Bancorp. Prior to joining Simplot, Ms. Elg spent ten years with the accounting firm Arthur Andersen LLP where she served clients in a variety of industries. An Idaho native, she contributes to our board of directors and company her knowledge of agriculture as it lends itself to commercial principles, customer satisfaction, and advanced technology, and serves as the Chairman of the University of Idaho College of Business and Economics Advisory Board.

     

 

Ronald W. Jibson

Age: 65

Director Since: 2013

Committees:

Compensation

 

 

Professional Experience: Mr. Jibson was formerly the president and CEO of Questar Corporation, a natural gas-focused energy company, from 2010 to 2016 and chairman of the board from 2012 to 2016. He also served as chairman of the board of Questar Pipeline Company from 2012 to 2016, president and CEO of Wexpro Company from 2010 to 2016, and president and CEO of Questar Gas Company from 2008 to 2016.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: Dominion Energy, Inc.; Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: Questar Corporation; National Fuel Gas Co.

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: Mr. Jibson has extensive experience in the regulated utility and natural gas industries, and was formerly the chairperson of the board of the American Gas Association and the Western Energy Institute. Through his industry and executive experience, Mr. Jibson provides our board of directors with valuable industry insight and strong working knowledge of rate regulation, as well as strong leadership skills and an understanding of finance and accounting. Mr. Jibson also has prior experience with hydrology and water rights issues, which is valuable given Idaho Power’s hydroelectric generation assets in the Snake River basin.

 

16   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

 

Judith A. Johansen

Age: 59

Director Since: 2007

Committees:

Corp. Gov. &

Nominating;

Compensation

 

Professional Experience: Ms. Johansen was the president of Marylhurst University, Oregon, a private Catholic university, from 2008 to 2013. She was also the president and CEO from 2001 to 2006, and executive vice president from 2000 to 2001, of PacifiCorp, and has held executive officer positions at the Bonneville Power Administration and Avista Energy. Prior to that, she was a partner in the law firm Gordon Thomas Honeywell.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: Schnitzer Steel; Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: Cascade Bancorp; Pacific Continental Corporation

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: Ms. Johansen brings a wealth of electric utility industry knowledge and experience to our board of directors. Based on her prior service as president and CEO of PacifiCorp, as CEO and Administrator of the Bonneville Power Administration, and as vice president of Avista Energy, Ms. Johansen provides valuable industry insight and guidance regarding our regulated utility business as well as financial reporting and risk management as it relates to utility companies. She also brings to our board of directors her experience from service on the boards of two other unaffiliated public companies and several diverse unaffiliated private companies, including Hood River Distillers Inc., Roseburg Forest Products, and Kaiser Permanente.

     

 

Dennis L. Johnson

Age: 63

Director Since: 2013

Committees:

Corp. Gov. & Nominating

 

Professional Experience: Mr. Johnson has been the president and CEO and a director of United Heritage Mutual Holding Company since 2001, and of United Heritage Financial Group and United Heritage Life Insurance Company, which are insurance, annuity, and financial products companies, since 1999. Mr. Johnson has also held a number of other executive officer positions, including general counsel, with United Heritage and its affiliates since 1983.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: First Interstate Bancorp; Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: Cascade Bancorp

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: Mr. Johnson brings financial, risk management, and legal experience to our board of directors. Mr. Johnson acquired his extensive experience through his positions at the insurance companies at which he is the president and CEO, and from his former position as the companies’ general counsel. He also brings to the board of directors his knowledge of economics and finance and experience with employee benefits and auditing matters. Mr. Johnson’s long-standing ties to Idaho also provide an important connection to Idaho Power’s service area and allow him to offer insight into local, state, and regional issues where Idaho Power conducts business.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   17

 

 

 

Christine King

Age: 68

Director Since: 2006

Committees:

Compensation;

Executive

 

Professional Experience: Ms. King served as a director of QLogic Corp. from 2013 to 2016 and as executive chairman and chairman of the board from 2015 to 2016. Ms. King was the president and CEO and a director of Standard Microsystems Corporation, a silicon-based integrated circuits company, from 2008 to 2012; and CEO and director of AMI Semiconductor from 2001 to 2008.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: Cirrus Logic, Inc.; Skyworks Solutions, Inc.; Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: Standard Microsystems Corporation; QLogic Corp

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: Ms. King brings a key element of business diversity to our board of directors with her advanced level of experience and success in the high-tech industry. Her experience from serving as the CEO and as a director of various technology companies, her knowledge of compensation design, and the knowledge and experience she gains from service on the boards of other public companies, provides important perspectives for our board of directors’ deliberations and for helping to shape our compensation design and philosophy.

     

 

Richard J. Navarro

Age: 65

Director Since: 2015

Committees:

Audit

 

Professional Experience: Mr. Navarro was the chief administrative officer of Albertson’s LLC and AB Management Services Corp., a food and drug retailer, from 2014 to 2015, and the CFO of Albertson’s LLC from 2006 to 2014. Mr. Navarro was also a director of Home Federal Bancorp, Inc. from 2005 to 2014.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: Home Federal Bancorp, Inc.

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: Mr. Navarro joined our board of directors in 2015 with a strong business and financial background and significant business experience within our service area. His experience from serving as the former CFO of Albertson’s, as well as his prior service on the board of a financial institution, gives him important background and insight into financial matters, allowing him to contribute significantly to finance, accounting, and capital markets matters.

 

18   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

 

Robert A. Tinstman

Age: 71

Director Since: 1999

Committees:

Corp. Gov. & Nominating;

Executive

 

Professional Experience: Mr. Tinstman served as the executive chairman of James Construction Group, a construction company, from 2002 to 2007 and as the president and CEO and a director of Morrison Knudsen Corporation, a civil engineering and construction company, from 1995 to 1999. He also previously served as a director of CNA Surety Corporation from 2004 to 2011 and as a director of Home Federal Bancorp from 1999 to 2014.

 

Current Public Company Directorships: Westmoreland Coal Company; Primoris Services Corp.; Idaho Power Company

 

Former Public Company Directorships in Past Five Years: Home Federal Bancorp, Inc.

 

Qualifications and Expertise as a Director: Mr. Tinstman brings extensive operational and executive experience in the construction industry to our board of directors. The electric utility business is capital intensive, involving heavy construction work for generation, transmission, and distribution projects. Mr. Tinstman’s construction industry knowledge and expertise provide a valuable contribution to the board of directors’ oversight function at a time when Idaho Power has embarked on large construction projects. Mr. Tinstman’s experience from serving on the boards of directors of other public companies also provides the company with an experienced chairman.

 

Board of Directors’ Recommendation

 

The board of directors unanimously recommends a vote “FOR” the election of each nominee.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   19

 

 

Committees of the Board of Directors

 

Overview and Composition

 

Our standing committees of the board of directors are the audit committee, the compensation committee, the corporate governance and nominating committee, and the executive committee. The committee memberships as of the date of this proxy statement are set forth below. We also describe our board committees and their principal responsibilities following the table.

 

    Committee Memberships
Director Independent1 Audit Compensation Corp. Gov.
and Nomin.
Executive
Darrel T. Anderson         ©
Thomas E. Carlile ü ü      
Richard J. Dahl ü ©     ü
Annette G. Elg ü ü      
Ronald W. Jibson ü   ü    
Judith A. Johansen ü   ü ü  
Dennis Johnson ü     ü  
J. LaMont Keen          
Christine King ü   ©   ü
Richard J. Navarro ü ü      
Robert A. Tinstman (BC) ü     © ü

 

(BC) – Board Chairperson

© – Committee Chairperson

1 Independent according to New York Stock Exchange listing standards and our Corporate Governance Guidelines

 

Audit Committee

 

The audit committee is a separately designated standing committee. The audit committee has numerous responsibilities, including:

 

  assists the board of directors in the oversight of the integrity of our financial statements; our compliance with legal and regulatory requirements; the qualifications, independence, and performance of our independent registered public accounting firm and our internal audit department; and our major financial risk exposures;
     
  discusses with our independent registered public accounting firm and our internal auditors the audit of, and opinion on, the company’s financial statements and our internal control over financial reporting, including the overall scope and plans for audits, and any other matters deemed appropriate;
     
  is directly responsible for the appointment, compensation, retention, and oversight of the work of our independent registered public accounting firm, helping to ensure that the selection of the independent registered public accounting firm and its lead audit partner is in the best interests of the company and our shareholders;
     
  prepares the audit committee report required to be included in the proxy statement for our annual meeting of shareholders; and
     
  other responsibilities of the audit committee as are specified in its charter, available at http://www.idacorpinc.com/governance/governance-documents.

 

As of the date of this proxy statement, the members of the audit committee include Mr. Carlile, Mr. Dahl, Ms. Elg, and Mr. Navarro. All members of the audit committee are independent under our Corporate Governance Guidelines and applicable New York Stock Exchange listing standards, including the SEC’s audit committee member independence standards. The board of directors has determined that Mr. Carlile, Mr. Dahl, Ms. Elg, and Mr. Navarro are “audit committee financial experts” as defined by the rules of the SEC. The board of directors has also determined that although Mr. Dahl currently serves on the audit committees of more than three public companies (IDACORP, Idaho Power, Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc., Hawaii Electric Company, and DineEquity, Inc., which are each considered separate public companies as defined under New York Stock Exchange Rule 303A.07(a)), such simultaneous service will not impair Mr. Dahl’s ability to effectively serve on our audit committee. During 2017, the audit committee met eight times.

 

Compensation Committee

 

The compensation committee has direct responsibility to:

 

  review and approve corporate goals and objectives relevant to our CEO’s compensation;
     
  evaluate our CEO’s performance in light of those goals and objectives;

 

20   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

  either as a committee or together with the other independent directors, as directed by the board of directors, determine and approve our CEO’s compensation based on this evaluation;
     
  make recommendations to the board of directors with respect to executive officer compensation, incentive compensation plans, and equity-based plans that are subject to board of director approval;
     
  review and discuss with management the compensation discussion and analysis, and based on such review and discussion determine whether to recommend to the board of directors that the compensation discussion and analysis be included in our proxy statement for the annual meeting of shareholders;
     
  oversee our compensation and employee benefit plans and practices; and
     
  assist the board of directors in the oversight of risks arising from our compensation policies and practices.

 

The compensation committee and the board of directors have sole responsibility to determine executive officer compensation, which responsibility may not be delegated. The compensation committee has sole authority to retain and terminate any consulting firm to assist the compensation committee in carrying out its responsibilities, including sole authority to approve the consulting firm’s fees and other retention terms. In 2017, the compensation committee retained Pay Governance, LLC (“Pay Governance”) for advice regarding executive officer compensation, primarily to provide the compensation committee with general compensation market information and trends, to review the structure of our compensation programs, and to provide insight and analysis to the compensation committee at committee meetings. Management and the compensation committee also reviewed data provided by Pay Governance in evaluating our compensation and benefit plans.

 

In retaining compensation consultants, the compensation committee’s charter provides that the committee is required to consider factors bearing on the independence from management of the compensation consultant and whether the work performed by the compensation consultant will raise any conflict of interest. Although management may request services, the compensation committee must pre-approve the engagement of the consulting firm for any services to be provided to management. These services may not interfere with the consulting firm’s advice to the compensation committee. The chairperson may pre-approve services between regularly scheduled meetings of the compensation committee. Pre-approval of services by the chairperson must be reported to the compensation committee at its next meeting.

 

In addition, the compensation committee has responsibility for reviewing and making recommendations with respect to director compensation to the board of directors. For information on director compensation, refer to the section entitled “Director Compensation” in this proxy statement.

 

Each member of the compensation committee is independent under our Corporate Governance Guidelines and applicable New York Stock Exchange listing standards. During 2017, the compensation committee met four times.

 

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

 

No person who served as a member of the compensation committee during 2017 has (a) served as one of our officers or employees or (b) any relationship requiring disclosure under Item 404 of the SEC’s Regulation S-K. None of our executive officers serve as a member of the board of directors or compensation committee of any other company that has an executive officer serving as a member of our board of directors or our compensation committee.

 

Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee

 

The corporate governance and nominating committee’s responsibilities include:

 

  identifying individuals qualified to become directors, consistent with criteria approved by the board of directors;
     
  selecting, or recommending that the board of directors select, the candidates for all directorships to be filled by the board of directors or by the shareholders;
     
  developing and recommending to the board of directors our Corporate Governance Guidelines;
     
  overseeing the evaluation of the board of directors and management; and
     
  taking a leadership role in shaping our corporate governance.

 

Each member of the corporate governance and nominating committee is independent under our Corporate Governance Guidelines and the applicable New York Stock Exchange listing standards. During 2017, the corporate governance and nominating committee met four times.

 

Executive Committee

 

The executive committee acts on behalf of the board of directors when the board of directors is not in session, except on those matters that require action of the full board of directors. The executive committee also assists the board of directors in overseeing risk management. The executive committee is composed of our CEO and the chairpersons of each of our other standing committees. During 2017, the executive committee met once.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   21

 

 

Director Compensation

 

We structure director compensation to attract and retain qualified non-employee directors and to further align the interests of our directors with the interests of our shareholders. The compensation committee periodically reviews surveys of non-employee director compensation trends and a competitive analysis of peer company practices prepared by the independent compensation consultant (Pay Governance). The compensation committee then makes recommendations to the board of directors on compensation for our non-employee directors, including their retainers and annual equity awards. No changes to director compensation were recommended for 2017.

 

The table that follows describes the compensation earned during 2017 by each individual who served as an independent non-employee director during 2017.

 

Name
(a)
Fees
Earned
or
Paid in
Cash
($)
(b)
Stock
Awards
($)
(c)1
Option
Awards
($)
(d)2
Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
($)
(e)
Change in Pension
Value and
Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation
Earnings
($)
(f)
All Other
Compensation
($)
(g)
Total
($)
(h)
Darrel T. Anderson3  
Thomas Carlile 77,000   99,931 176,931
Richard J. Dahl 92,500   99,931 192,431
Annette G. Elg 67,583   99,931 167,514
Ronald Jibson 71,000   99,931 170,931
Judith A. Johansen 77,000   99,931 176,931
Dennis L. Johnson 71,000   99,931 170,931
J. LaMont Keen 65,000   99,931 164,931
Christine King 84,000   99,931 183,931
Richard J. Navarro 77,000   99,931 176,931
Robert A. Tinstman 172,500   99,931 54,3934 326,824

 

1 This column reflects the grant date fair value of IDACORP common stock awarded to our non-employee directors measured in accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification Topic 718 – Stock Compensation (“FASB ASC Topic 718”). The grant date fair value is based on the closing price of IDACORP common stock on the business day before the grant date. The grant date fair value for the awards included in this column for all non-employee directors is based on the closing price of IDACORP common stock on February 28, 2017, which was $82.93.
2 No options were awarded to directors in 2017. As of December 31, 2017, no member of the board of directors owned any stock options.
3 Employee directors do not receive fees or awards for service as a member of our board of directors. Mr. Anderson’s 2017 compensation as an executive officer is discussed in Part 4 – “Executive Compensation” in this proxy statement.
4 Includes above-market interest accrued on deferred fees. Also includes the aggregate change in actuarial present value of Mr. Tinstman’s accumulated benefit under the Idaho Power Company Security Plan for Directors, which was terminated on April 1, 2002, in the amount of $14,659.

 

The table that follows lists the forms and amounts of compensation payable to our non-employee directors for 2017. All directors of IDACORP also serve as directors of Idaho Power. The fees and other compensation shown in the table and discussed below are for service on both boards as well as for service on any subsidiary board. Employee directors receive no compensation for service on the boards.

 

22   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Annual Director Compensation Amounts for 2017
Base Retainer $65,000
Base Committee Annual Retainers:1  
Audit committee 12,000
Compensation committee 6,000
Corp. gov. and nom. committee 6,000
Executive committee 3,000
Additional Chair Annual Retainers:  
Chair of the board 100,000
Chair of audit committee 12,500
Chair of compensation committee 10,000
Chair of corp. gov. and nom. committee 7,500
Annual Stock Awards 100,000

 

1 The Chairman of the Board does not receive base committee annual retainer fees.

 

Deferral Arrangements

 

Directors may defer all or a portion of their annual IDACORP and Idaho Power retainers and receive payment of all amounts deferred with interest in a lump sum or in a series of up to 10 equal annual payments after they separate from service with IDACORP and Idaho Power. Any cash fees that were deferred before 2009 for service as a member of the board of directors are credited with the preceding month’s average Moody’s Long-Term Corporate Bond Yield for utilities, or the Moody’s Rate, plus 3%, until January 1, 2019 when the interest rate will change to the Moody’s Rate. All cash fees that are deferred for service as a member of the board of directors beginning January 1, 2009 are credited with interest at the Moody’s Rate. Interest is calculated on a pro rated basis each month using a 360-day year and the average Moody’s Rate for the preceding month.

 

Directors may also defer their annual stock awards, which are then held as deferred stock units with dividend equivalents reinvested in additional deferred stock units. Upon separation from service with IDACORP and Idaho Power, directors will receive either a lump-sum distribution or a series of up to 10 equal annual installments. Upon a change in control the directors’ deferral accounts will be distributed to each participating director in a lump sum. The distributions will be in shares of our common stock, with each deferred stock unit equal to one share of our common stock and any fractional shares paid in cash.

 

Stock Ownership Guidelines for Directors

 

Our stock ownership guidelines for non-employee directors require that each non-employee director own IDACORP common stock equal in value to five times his or her current base annual retainer fee. A director is allowed five years from the later of April 1, 2015 and the date of the director’s initial election to meet these requirements. As of December 31, 2017, all of our directors were in compliance with the guidelines, other than one director who was appointed to the board of directors in 2017 and has until 2022 to meet the requirement. Once a director reaches the stock ownership target under the guidelines, based on the then-current stock price, the director will remain in compliance with the guidelines, despite future changes in stock price, as long as the director continues to own the minimum number of shares that brought the director into compliance with the stock ownership target. If the base annual retainer fee for directors increases, directors who have already met their stock ownership targets will need to meet the stock ownership guidelines only for the amount of increase in the base annual retainer fee.

 

Anti-Hedging and Anti-Pledging Policy for Directors

 

The same prohibitions on hedging ownership of our common stock and the pledging of our securities as collateral that apply to our executive officers, which are described in Part 4 – “Executive Compensation – Compensation Discussion and Analysis – Other Compensation Practices” of this proxy statement, apply equally to members of our board of directors.

 

Retirement Benefits

 

Effective April 1, 2002, we terminated the Idaho Power Company Security Plan for Directors. At that time, current directors were entitled to their vested benefits under the plan as of January 15, 2002. The plan was a nonqualified deferred compensation plan that provided for retirement benefit payments. The maximum payment is $17,500 per year for a period of 15 years. Directors elected after November 1994 receive a single life annuity with a joint and survivor option. Benefits are paid to inside directors on the 10th day of the month after severance from service on the board of directors. Benefits are paid to non-employee directors on the 10th date of the month after the later of severance from service on the board or reaching age 65. During 2017, Mr. Tinstman, who was elected after November 1994, was the only director with vested benefits in the plan.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   23

 

 

PART 4 – EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

 

Compensation Discussion and Analysis

 

This Compensation Discussion and Analysis contains statements regarding future performance targets and goals. These targets and goals are disclosed in the limited context of our compensation programs and should not be understood to be statements of management’s expectations or estimates of results or other guidance. We caution readers not to apply these statements to other contexts.

 

Overview

 

This part of the proxy statement focuses on the compensation we provide to our executive officers, and primarily our named executive officers, or “NEOs.” For 2017, our NEOs were as follows (with their current titles):

 

  ü Darrel T. Anderson President and CEO of IDACORP and Idaho Power
       
  ü Steven R. Keen Senior vice president, CFO, and treasurer of IDACORP and Idaho Power
       
  ü Lisa A. Grow Senior vice president and COO of Idaho Power
       
  ü Brian R. Buckham Senior vice president and general counsel of IDACORP and Idaho Power
       
  ü Lonnie G. Krawl Senior vice president of administrative services and chief human resources officer of Idaho Power

 

Our 2017 Performance Highlights

 

For the year 2017, we achieved solid financial performance, made progress on our long-term projects, and continued to implement our strategic plans. Some of our specific accomplishments for the year included:

 

  Our earnings per diluted share were $4.21, representing our tenth consecutive year of earnings growth.
     
  We provided a 15 percent cumulative annual total shareholder return over the past three years, including share price appreciation and dividends paid, ranking in the 85th percentile among our peer companies in the Edison Electric Institute (EEI) Index of U.S. Shareholder-Owned Electric Utilities (EEI Utilities Index).
     
  Our board of directors voted to increase the quarterly dividend, from $0.55 per share to $0.59 per share. We have increased our quarterly dividend a total of approximately 97 percent since the fourth quarter of 2011, reflecting our continued commitment to our previously adopted dividend policy.
     
  Our customer count grew 2.0 percent, and sales volumes to industrial customers increased 3.2 percent in 2017 compared to 2016.
     
  Our all-time system peak demand of 3,422 megawatts (MW) was set on July 7, 2017, and on January 6, 2017, Idaho Power tied its highest all-time winter peak demand of 2,527 MW.
     
  Idaho Power ranked second in JD Power’s Electric Business Customer Satisfaction Study in its West Midsize segment.
     
  We established a process approved by the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (IPUC) and Public Utility Commission of Oregon for recovery of costs related to Idaho Power’s plan to end participation in coal-fired operations at the North Valmy coal-fired power plant units 1 and 2 in 2019 and 2025, respectively.
     
  We executed on business optimization initiatives, focusing on improving operations and controlling expenditures, which have resulted in no significant increase to total other operations and maintenance (O&M) expenses over the past six years.
     
  We reached milestones on key transmission projects as the U.S. Bureau of Land Management issued a record of decision on the siting of the Boardman-to-Hemingway project and a final environmental assessment on the remaining transmission line segments of the Gateway West 500-kV transmission project.
     
  We continued to achieve our CO2 emissions intensity reduction goals and extended the goal into future years. Preliminary analysis of the CO2 emissions intensity for calendar year 2017 indicates that our average CO2 emissions intensity over the eight-year period from 2010 through 2017 is more than 20 percent below our 2005 emissions intensity level.
     
  We reached agreement on a settlement stipulation in Idaho establishing the reasonableness of Hells Canyon Complex relicensing costs incurred through December 2015.

 

24   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Continued Emphasis on At-Risk Compensation for Our NEOs

 

We believe strong performance by our executive officers is essential to long-term growth in shareholder value and to delivering superior service to our customers. We seek to accomplish strong performance by making the majority of our NEO’s pay “at risk,” meaning we tie the majority of our NEOs’ compensation to our financial and operational performance. In order for this “at risk” compensation to be earned, our company must achieve successful results over one- and three-year performance periods. As an executive’s level of responsibility increases, so does the percentage of total compensation at risk, which we believe aligns the interests of our executives who have the highest level of decision-making authority with the interests of our shareholders. In “Our 2017 NEO Compensation Design and Metrics” below, we have included a chart to help illustrate the degree to which our NEOs’ compensation is performance-based and thus “at risk.”

 

Our Pay Practices

 

We have a number of compensation policies and practices intended to align the interests of management with those of our shareholders. The table that follows lists certain practices we use, and certain practices we have chosen to avoid.

 

Practices We Use
     
  ü We tie our executives’ compensation to corporate performance, and over one-half of each of our NEOs’ target compensation is “at-risk”
     
  ü Our compensation committee reviews and adjusts performance metrics annually
     
  ü The compensation committee consists solely of independent directors and retains an independent compensation consultant
     
  ü We require our officers to own specified minimum amounts of our stock
     
  ü We impose stock retention obligations
     
  ü We have a clawback policy that provides for the recovery of incentive compensation under certain circumstances
     
  ü We impose a cap on the amount of incentive compensation that may be paid
     
  ü We assess compensation and target incentive that is “at risk” on an annual basis
     
  ü We set our target goal for TSR performance at the 55th percentile of our peer group for long-term incentive

 

Practices We Avoid
     
  We do not provide employment agreements to our executives
     
  We do not permit the hedging or pledging of our securities by executives
     
  We restrict the purchase and sale of securities under an insider trading policy
     
  We discourage excessive or inappropriate risk-taking through our compensation design
     
  We provide only limited perquisites
     
  We do not provide dividends on performance-based compensation awards until they are vested


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Our 2017 NEO Compensation Design and Metrics

 

The general design of our 2017 executive compensation program remained largely unchanged from 2016. Our 2017 executive compensation program continued to provide for fixed compensation (base salary) to promote retention of our executives and at-risk compensation (short- and long-term incentive compensation) to help ensure our management team’s focus on our operational and financial performance. Our short-term incentive compensation is paid in cash, if earned, based on single-year performance. Our long-term incentive compensation is paid in IDACORP common stock, if earned, based on performance over a three-year period. The allocation of the “total target direct compensation” (base salary plus short- and long-term incentive compensation at the target payout level) mix for each of our NEOs for 2017 is illustrated in the table that follows.

 

 

 

We set rigorous performance goals for our short- and long-term incentive compensation programs, and our compensation committee reviews them annually to help assure that payouts are only earned upon strong performance. The nature of the 2017 performance goals and their respective weightings for our short- and long-term incentive compensation were unchanged from 2016 and are illustrated in the charts that follow (“CEPS” refers to cumulative earnings per share and “TSR” refers to relative total shareholder return).

 

Short-Term Incentive (One-Year) Long-Term Incentive (Three-Year)
   
   
* Adjusted consolidated net income is calculated as consolidated net income minus additional accumulated deferred investment tax credits recorded for the year, if we used any, as more fully described below under Non-Base Rate Idaho Regulatory Settlement Stipulations.

 

26   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

By using metrics tied to both operational and financial performance with goals set that are challenging in the context of past and anticipated future performance, as shown in the charts above, our executives’ annual compensation can vary considerably depending on our actual performance in any period. This is what we refer to as the “at risk” component of our executives’ compensation.

 

Each year our compensation committee establishes a threshold, target, and maximum performance level for each of our short- and long-term incentive plan goals. The compensation committee seeks to establish performance levels each year that assure the goals are realistic enough to be achievable yet difficult enough to incentivize outstanding performance. For our two short-term incentive operational goals of customer satisfaction and service reliability, we have either maintained or increased the target performance levels each year since the operational goals were first adopted in 2006. For our short-term incentive financial goal of adjusted consolidated net income (net income attributable to IDACORP), we have increased the target performance level significantly, from a target of $82 million in 2007 to $192 million in 2017. See “Short-Term Incentive Compensation” below in this Compensation Discussion and Analysis for a discussion of the methodology for our determination of adjusted consolidated net income for short-term incentive purposes, which we changed in 2016.

 

For our long-term incentive goal of CEPS, we have also increased the target performance level significantly, from $6.20 for the 2007-2009 performance period to $12.00 for the 2017-2019 performance period. Our other long-term incentive goal, TSR, is a relative goal, which, for grants made in 2017, continued to require 55th percentile performance versus our total shareholder return comparison group in order to be earned at target.

 

In connection with its annual review of executive compensation, our compensation committee reviews the correlation between our executives’ historical compensation and our historical performance. We believe that one of the primary metrics of importance to our shareholders is TSR, which is reflective of both share price growth and dividends. The graph below shows the correlation between our CEO’s actual compensation as described in the graph and TSR.

 

 

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   27

 

 

We believe that earnings per share is also a metric of importance to our shareholders, and it is a factor used in determining long-term incentive compensation. The graph below also shows the correlation between diluted earnings per share and our CEO’s actual compensation as described in the graph.

 

 

 

We believe that it is appropriate to use our CEO’s actual compensation, which excludes change in pension value, in the two “pay-for-performance” graphs above, which compare our CEO’s pay and our financial performance over the past seven years. The change in pension value calculation is highly sensitive to discount rates on the date of calculation, and does not reflect amounts actually paid to our CEO in a given compensation year. For example, we recorded a $2,761,720 increase in CEO pension value for 2017, increasing his 2017 total compensation, as reported in the Summary Compensation Table, from $3,933,876 to $6,695,596. This increase in pension value does not result in any current payment to our CEO, and our CEO’s pension value could change significantly in future years, before any pension payments are actually made, based on changes to the discount rate and the other factors discussed in footnote 2 to the Summary Compensation Table.

 

The first pay-for-performance graph above shows our strong TSR growth over the 2011-2017 period. We provided a 15 percent cumulative annual total shareholder return over the past three years, including share price appreciation and dividends paid, ranking in the 85th percentile among our peer companies in the EEI Utilities Index. This is further demonstration of our strong pay-for-performance results over the past three years.

 

Summary of Our NEOs’ Total Target Direct Compensation Compared to Our Peers’ NEOs

 

To assist the compensation committee in establishing our NEOs’ compensation, we conduct extensive market benchmarking. The total target direct compensation (base salary plus target short- and long-term incentive compensation) of our NEOs for 2017, compared to the median total target direct compensation of each of the three designated data sets we used for benchmarking our NEO’s 2017 compensation, is summarized in the table that follows.

 

    Median Total Target Direct Compensation1
Executive 2017 Total Target Direct
Compensation
Peer Group2 IOU Survey Data2 General Industry
Survey Data2
Darrel T. Anderson $3,360,000 $3,300,807 $3,296,670 $4,442,012
Steven R. Keen $1,134,000 $1,200,480 $1,130,647 $1,535,808
Lisa A. Grow $1,080,000 $1,141,440 $1,309,847 $1,731,848
Brian R. Buckham $720,000 $879,450 $837,874 $1,111,125
Lonnie G. Krawl $720,000 $689,825 $759,895 $889,861

 

1 2016 compensation data increased 3 percent to reflect projected market compensation at January 1, 2017.
2 Descriptions of the Peer Group, IOU Survey Data, and General Industry Survey Data sets are included below.

 

We have historically targeted a range of total target direct compensation for our executive officers of 85 percent to 115 percent of the market median (based on designated data sets) for each executive officer position. However, the compensation committee uses its judgment in assessing market data and may establish compensation levels above or below the targeted range depending on factors such as the officer’s experience, level of responsibility, and performance.

 

28   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Our Compensation Philosophy and Policy

 

Compensation decisions for our executive officers, including our NEOs, are made in the context of our overall compensation philosophy. Our executive compensation philosophy is to provide balanced and competitive compensation to our executive officers to ensure that we can attract and retain high-quality executive officers, and to motivate our executive officers to achieve performance goals that will benefit our shareholders and customers and contribute to the long-term success and stability of our business without excessive risk-taking. Our board of directors has adopted a written executive compensation policy, and the compensation committee reviews the policy annually. The policy includes the following compensation-related objectives:

 

  Manage officer compensation as an investment with the expectation that officers will contribute to our overall success.
     
  Recognize officers for their demonstrated ability to perform their responsibilities and create long-term shareholder value.
     
  Be competitive with respect to those companies in the markets in which we compete to attract and retain the qualified executives necessary for long-term success.
     
  Be fair from an internal pay equity perspective.
     
  Ensure effective utilization and development of talent by working in concert with other management processes, such as performance appraisal, management succession planning, and management development.
     
  Balance total compensation with our ability to pay.

 

How We Make Compensation Decisions

 

Consistent with prior years, our 2017 executive compensation decisions were made in the following four steps:

 

  (1) Conduct a general review of the components of executive compensation and industry practices and consider potential changes.
     
  (2) Analyze peer groups and market data to assess competitiveness of compensation and consider potential changes.
     
  (3) Review total compensation structure, internal pay equity analysis, and the allocation of various forms of compensation.
     
  (4) Review organizational results and individual executive officer performance, responsibility, and experience to determine compensation levels and opportunities for each executive officer.

 

Role of the Compensation Consultant and Management in Establishing Executive Compensation

 

The compensation committee, our compensation consultant, and management all participate in the process of setting executive compensation. The compensation committee has primary responsibility for determining the compensation provided to our executive officers. In making its determinations, the compensation committee receives information and advice from its independent compensation consultant and from management. Once the compensation committee deliberates privately as a committee and develops a recommendation, it presents the recommendation to the full board of directors for approval.

 

The compensation committee retained Pay Governance for advice regarding executive officer compensation for 2017. The primary roles of the compensation consultant during 2017 included providing the compensation committee with information on the general compensation market and trends, reviewing the structure of our compensation programs, and providing insight and analysis on compensation levels and compensation design to the compensation committee. During 2017, Pay Governance did not provide services to us beyond its advice regarding executive officer and director compensation, as directed by the compensation committee. In connection with its retention of Pay Governance as an advisor, the compensation committee assessed the independence of the compensation consultant and determined that the compensation consultant was independent. On an annual basis in connection with the execution of an engagement agreement, the compensation committee has evaluated whether the services to be performed by the compensation consultant would raise any conflicts of interest and determined that no such conflicts of interest existed.

 

Our executive officers are also involved in the process of reviewing executive compensation. Our CEO and other executives review and comment on the market compensation data, including the make-up of the various peer groups, develop proposed compensation levels for officers that report to them, and review and recommend to the compensation committee performance goals and goal weightings for our incentive plans. Our CEO performs and delivers to the compensation committee an evaluation of the performance of other executive officers and a self-evaluation. In addition, our CEO, CFO, and other members of management regularly attend compensation committee meetings at the invitation of the compensation committee chair.

 

Market Compensation Data and Analysis

 

We believe that market compensation information is important because it provides an indication of the levels of compensation that need to be paid to enable us to remain competitive with other companies in attracting and retaining executive officers. In determining the composition of our peer groups, we consider the following factors:

 

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  ü Breadth – include companies that are philosophically relevant
     
  ü Nature and complexity of the business – take into account each company’s portfolio and markets, and seek companies that derive at least 70 percent of revenues from regulated operations
     
  ü Scope – reflect an appropriate range of revenues and market capitalization
     
  ü Ease of administration – ensure availability of valid and reliable data (e.g., SEC filings)
     
  ü Size – include a sufficient number of companies to provide robust data and mitigate volatility

 

We use the market compensation analysis to determine a market compensation range for each of our executive officers for base salary, short-term incentive compensation, and long-term incentive compensation, and for combinations of these three elements, based on compensation provided to officers in similar positions at our designated groups of companies. The compensation committee reviewed survey data for three separate sets of companies, described below, for each executive officer (where data was available). It then reviewed whether each element of compensation, and the total target direct compensation, for each of our executive officers was within the targeted range (85 percent to 115 percent of the median of each data set).

 

The two sources of market compensation data used to prepare the market compensation analysis for our 2017 executive officer compensation were:

 

1.   Private Survey Data Sources: Willis Towers Watson’s 2016 annual private survey of corporate executive compensation, with the following three subsets of companies:

 

Peer Group Comprised of comparable utilities, as determined by the compensation committee; these are the same companies we use for the public survey data source, listed below
IOU Survey Data Comprised of all participating investor-owned utilities, regressed to $1.7 billion in annual revenues
General Industry Survey Data Comprised of all participating general industry companies, regressed to $1.7 billion in annual revenues

 

Our annual revenues were $1.35 billion in 2017. We used the $1.7 billion annual revenue figure for our compensation comparisons, to adjust for the fact that Idaho Power’s relatively low customer rates understate our annual revenues compared to electric utilities of similar scope that charge higher rates. The $1.7 billion annual revenue figure is intended to reflect what Idaho Power’s annual revenues would be if Idaho Power charged average customer electricity rates. In May 2016, our analysis showed that average U.S. retail electricity rates over the 2012-2014 period were 41% higher than Idaho Power’s average retail electricity rates over the same period. We added the same 41% differential to our average annual revenues over the 2012-2014 period and this increased Idaho Power’s annual revenues from approximately $1.2 billion to approximately $1.7 billion. Idaho Power’s annual revenues would have been adjusted even higher, to $1.9 billion, if we had added the 41% rate differential to our actual 2017 revenues of $1.35 billion. To determine average U.S. electricity rates, we used the “EEI Typical Bills and Average Rates Report – Select American Cities.” When identifying compensation peer groups, if Idaho Power’s lower customer rates and resulting lower annual revenues are not factored in, comparison groups would have lower annual revenues than our comparison groups, typically with lower CEO compensation levels.

 

2.   Public Data Source: 2016 public proxy statement compensation data from a designated peer group of companies, listed below (the same companies included in the Peer Group).

 

The names of the companies included in the IOU Survey Data set and the General Industry Survey Data set are listed in Appendix A to this proxy statement. Our management and the compensation committee worked together in developing and approving the Peer Group, based in part on data provided by the compensation consultant. The companies in the Peer Group and used for our survey and public proxy data for purposes of establishing 2017 compensation included the following:*

 

Allete Inc.   Great Plains Energy Inc.   PNM Resources, Inc.
Alliant Energy Corporation   Hawaiian Electric Company   Portland General Electric Co.
Avista Corp.   Northwestern Corporation   Questar Corporation
Black Hills Corporation   OGE Energy Corp.   Spire Inc.
Cleco Corporation   ONE Gas Inc.   Teco Energy Inc.
El Paso Electric Co.   Pinnacle West Capital Corp.   Westar Energy, Inc.

 

* The changes to the Peer Group, compared to the prior year, were the removal of Southwest Gas Corporation, UIL Holdings Corporation, and Vectren Corporation, and the addition of Hawaiian Electric Company and Pinnacle West Capital Corp. Southwest Gas Corporation and Vectren Corporation were removed from the Peer Group because their percentage of revenues from regulated utility operations fell below our 70% Peer Group threshold. UIL Holdings Corporation was removed from the Peer Group due to its merger with another company. Hawaiian Electric Company was added to the Peer Group because it fit our Peer Group parameters and discontinued its plans for a merger with another company. Pinnacle West Capital Corp was added to the Peer Group because it fit our Peer Group parameters and helped us maintain a similar Peer Group size.

 

30   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Because the public proxy compensation data are not as broad or detailed as the private survey data, the compensation committee used the public proxy compensation data as a secondary data source to provide general confirmation of the compensation levels for our NEOs. For purposes of compiling the market compensation information, each NEO’s role is matched to a comparable position at the peer companies, as applicable.

 

An individual executive officer’s compensation may be positioned above or below the market level for his or her position, depending on his or her level of experience, responsibility, and performance, and based on the degree of comparability between our executive officer’s role and the roles of persons with similar positions at the peer companies. The compensation committee uses its judgment and our CEO’s feedback on executive officer performance in assessing these factors in determining how an executive officer’s compensation should align relative to the market level.

 

Review of Total Compensation Structure and Internal Pay Ratios

 

Each year, the compensation committee reviews the total compensation structure for each NEO, including the elements and mix of compensation, levels of historic compensation, potential termination and retirement benefits, internal equity, and IDACORP stock ownership, to determine whether it should adjust an executive officer’s total target direct compensation. The internal pay equity analysis presented by our management showed the ratios below for internal pay equity based on proposed (as of the date of the review) 2017 total target direct compensation amounts.

 

Officer Comparison Set

Internal Pay Ratio –

2017 Total Target Direct Compensation

CEO to senior vice presidents 3.93x
CEO to pay grade S-3 senior managers 12.85x
CEO to all senior managers 14.89x

 

Based on these reviews, the compensation committee determined that no changes to the general structure of our compensation programs or to the forms of compensation payable to our executive officers for 2017 were necessary, though it did make some adjustments as described below. In making this determination, the compensation committee relied on its subjective judgment.

 

Allocation of Compensation – Policy to Emphasize At-Risk Compensation

 

Our executive compensation policy provides that various elements of our compensation for all executive officers should generally target the ranges in the table that follows. For 2017, the percentage of total target direct compensation for each of the NEO’s that was comprised of short- and long-term incentive compensation at target exceeded 50 percent.

 

Element of Executive Officers’ Compensation Percent of Total Target
Direct Compensation
Cash Compensation (Base Salary and Short-Term Incentive Compensation at Target) 50-80%
Short-term Incentive Compensation at Target 15-25%
Long-term Incentive Compensation at Target 20-50%
Short- and Long-Term Incentive Compensation Combined at Target 35-75%

 

We believe that this structure provides the appropriate balance between at-risk compensation tied to executive and corporate performance and base salary to promote executive retention. We also apply a policy that the more senior the executive officer’s position, the greater the emphasis on long-term results and, therefore, on equity-based compensation. Accordingly, our CEO’s compensation is typically weighted more heavily toward long-term incentive compensation in the form of equity compared to our other executive officers’ compensation.

 

Consideration of the Results of the Shareholder Advisory Votes on Executive Compensation

 

At each annual meeting from 2011 through 2017, over 92 percent of votes cast were cast in favor of our executive compensation program. At the 2017 annual meeting, over 97 percent of votes cast were cast in favor of our executive compensation programs. These consistent voting results were an important indicator to management, the compensation committee, and the board of directors of investor support of our executive compensation philosophy, policies, and practices. Based in part on this indicator, we did not significantly alter our 2017 compensation program design and it continued to reflect our pay-for-performance philosophy. Our investors have not expressed concerns to us about our executive compensation policies and practices. We have noted in our discussions with investors that our short-term incentive grants provide an incentive for IDACORP to preserve additional accumulated deferred investment tax credits (see “Non-Base Rate Idaho Regulatory Settlement Stipulations” below), and investors and analysts have generally expressed support for this as part of the incentive.

 

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Impact of Tax and Accounting Treatment on Compensation Decisions

 

The compensation committee may consider the impact of tax and/or accounting treatment in determining compensation. Until the enactment on December 22, 2017 of the tax reform act generally referred to as the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,” Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code placed a limit of $1,000,000 on the amount of compensation paid to certain officers that we could deduct as a business expense in any tax year unless, among other things, the compensation qualified as performance-based compensation, as that term was used in Section 162(m). The compensation committee was permitted to structure certain compensation programs in a manner intended to allow compensation to be fully deductible under Section 162(m), but retained the flexibility and discretion to award compensation, whether or not deductible. This flexibility was necessary to foster achievement of performance goals established by the compensation committee, as well as other considerations important to our success, such as encouraging employee retention and rewarding achievement of key corporate goals. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated the performance-based compensation exemption under Section 162(m), except that the exemption will continue to apply to remuneration provided pursuant to a written binding contract in effect on November 2, 2017 that is not modified in any material respect after that date. Given the timing of the enactment, the compensation committee did consider the potential impact of the lost deduction when determining compensation for 2017.

 

Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code imposes additional income taxes for certain types of deferred compensation if the deferral does not comply with Section 409A. We administer our compensation plans and arrangements affected by Section 409A with the objective of not triggering any additional income taxes under Section 409A.

 

Individual Executive Officer Performance Evaluation

 

An important aspect of the compensation committee’s process is its review of each executive officer’s level of experience and time in the role, responsibility, and individual performance to determine where the executive officer’s base salary and target incentive compensation should be relative to the compensation of peers. For 2017 compensation determinations, the evaluation of our CEO covered the following categories:

 

Strategic Capability Performance
Vision – builds and articulates a shared vision Financial – financial performance meets or exceeds plan and is competitive relative to industry peers
       
Strategy – develops a sound, long-term strategy Relationships – builds and maintains relationships with key stakeholders
       
Implementation – ensures successful implementation; makes timely adjustments when external conditions change Leadership – dynamic, decisive, strong confidence in self and others; demonstrates personal sacrifice, determination, and courage
       
    Operational – establishes performance standards and clearly defines expectations
       
    Succession – develops and enables a talented team
       
    Compliance – establishes strong auditing and internal controls and fosters a culture of ethical behavior

 

For purposes of establishing 2017 compensation, the evaluation of our NEOs, including our CEO, covered the following competencies:

 

authenticity executive presence building organizational talent
business savvy compelling communication inspiring excellence
courage emotional intelligence essentials personal growth orientation
establishing strategic direction customer focus    

 

While the general factors used for evaluation of those officers were the same, the evaluation under each category involved a review of more specific sub-factors relevant to each officer’s position, based on the specific functions and responsibilities of each officer.

 

Each executive officer must also accomplish specific performance goals for each year, including safety leadership, which the compensation committee reviews and evaluates in connection with its compensation decisions. In connection with the review of our CEO’s performance, the compensation committee received input from the full board of directors.

 

32   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

2017 Named Executive Officer Compensation

 

Elements of Compensation for 2017

 

Our executive compensation for 2017 included the following elements:

 

  Base salary
     
  Annual cash incentive awards
     
  Long-term (three year) equity incentive awards
     
  Other benefits, such as health and welfare, retirement and 401(k) plans, and limited perquisites

 

We discuss each of these elements below. We believe that providing these compensation components meets our fundamental compensation objectives of attracting and retaining qualified executives and motivating those executives to achieve key performance goals for the benefit of our customers and shareholders. The success of those objectives is demonstrated by our historic ability to retain members of management over the long term, which has helped us to establish a cohesive executive team with a united goal of long-term value creation for our shareholders.

 

Base Salary

 

Base salary consists of fixed cash payments. We pay base salaries in order to provide our executive officers with sufficient regularly paid income and to secure officers with the knowledge, skills, and abilities necessary to successfully execute their job duties and responsibilities. Base salary is established based on factors such as competitiveness of the salary compared to similar positions at the company’s peers, the officer’s specific responsibilities and experience, and individual and company performance.

 

As discussed above, for purposes of determining each NEO’s base salary for 2017, the compensation committee reviewed the base salary market data from the market compensation analysis. This included a comparison of each NEO’s current base salary with the median from each of the three data sets for that position (where data was available). As a component of determining appropriate 2017 base salaries (as well as other elements of compensation), the compensation committee also reviewed the 2016 performance evaluations for each NEO and the company’s overall performance during 2016. Based on its review and analysis of this information, in February 2017 the compensation committee recommended, and the board of directors approved, the NEO base salaries for 2017 shown in the table that follows:

 

Executive 2017 Base Salary % Increase from 2016 Base Salary1
Darrel T. Anderson $800,000 6.7%
Steven R. Keen $420,000 10.5%
Lisa A. Grow $400,000 11.1%
Brian R. Buckham $300,000 30.4%
Lonnie G. Krawl $300,000 9.1%

 

1 Represents the increase relative to the amount of annual base salary in effect as of year-end 2016.

 

The base salary increases for 2017 for the NEOs resulted in large part from strong performance in 2016 and their progression in relatively new, expanded roles, together with our efforts to achieve compensation rates closer to the median of our peers.

 

  Mr. Anderson continued to drive strong financial results, including continued earnings growth and increased shareholder returns, and led the company’s advancement of a number of strategic initiatives aimed at growing revenues, improving the core business, and enhancing the company’s brand.
     
  Mr. Keen helped maintain strong financial performance by overseeing ongoing internal efforts to manage our cost structure and encouraging optimization efforts targeted at controlling operations and maintenance expenses.
     
  Ms. Grow assumed the role of senior vice president of operations of Idaho Power in 2016, and in 2017, became chief operating officer of Idaho Power. She has led several successful initiatives, including leading the ongoing transformation of the safety culture across operations, handling renewable energy acquisition and integration issues, and implementing our participation in the western energy imbalance market.
     
  Mr. Buckham assumed the role of vice president and general counsel in 2016, and in 2017, was promoted to senior vice president. The former general counsel’s full retirement in 2016 led to a significant increase in responsibilities for Mr. Buckham as he transitioned into the role of leading our legal and compliance, risk, and security departments. As noted previously, Mr. Buckham’s total target direct compensation was significantly less than the median shown for peer groups, despite his broad responsibilities, and was increased in 2017 to help achieve progress toward better alignment with our peers.
     
  Mr. Krawl, as senior vice president of administrative services and chief human resources officer of Idaho Power commencing in May 2016, helped lead the ongoing transformation of the safety culture across the company, and he executed on various initiatives in the human resources, information technology, and corporate services departments, including improving data and system accuracy and infrastructure and leveraging technology to standardize processes.

 

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While the NEOs received increases in salary in 2016, their respective 2017 base salaries were less than or near the average base salaries for their positions, as applicable, of the Peer Group, IOU Survey Data set, and General Industry Survey Data set, and thus the compensation committee approved the above listed increases in their base salaries for 2017.

 

Short-Term Incentive Compensation

 

Short-term incentive compensation under our Executive Incentive Plan is based on annual performance goals and is intended to encourage and reward annual financial and operational performance results. We provide participants in the Executive Incentive Plan the opportunity to earn cash-based short-term incentives in order to be competitive from a total compensation standpoint and to ensure focus on annual financial, operational, and customer service goals.

 

For 2017, the compensation committee retained the same short-term incentive goal structure as was used in 2016, described below. While the compensation committee continued to consider whether additional or alternative metrics would be appropriate, the compensation committee determined that operational goals of customer satisfaction and service reliability and the financial goal of IDACORP adjusted consolidated net income currently provide effective measures of the overall performance of our company for incentive purposes. The compensation committee also retained the same weightings for the incentive goals as in 2016-15 percent for customer satisfaction, 15 percent for service reliability, and 70 percent for adjusted consolidated net income. Following is a more detailed description of the 2017 short-term incentive performance goals:

 

  Customer Satisfaction – The customer satisfaction goal focuses on our relationship with and service to our customers. We measure customer satisfaction through quarterly surveys conducted by an independent survey firm. The survey data covered five specific performance qualities: overall satisfaction, quality, value, advocacy, and loyalty.
     
  Service Reliability – The service reliability goal is intended to focus executive officers on Idaho Power’s system reliability and its impact on the company’s relationship with its customers. We measure this goal by the number of interruptions greater than five minutes in duration experienced by Idaho Power’s metered general customers over the course of the year.
     
  Adjusted Consolidated Net Income – Our compensation committee believes that the IDACORP adjusted consolidated net income goal provides the most important overall measure of our financial performance, and thus the compensation committee gave it the greatest weighting. This goal aligns management and shareholder interests by motivating our executive officers to increase earnings for the benefit of shareholders.

 

Early in 2017, the compensation committee set the specific performance targets for each goal, based on three levels of performance: threshold, target, and maximum. For 2017, the compensation committee:

 

  Established more challenging customer satisfaction goals at the maximum and target levels compared to 2016, and maintained the same performance goal as in 2016 at the threshold level based on its review of the potential impact of customer-facing initiatives in process and historical customer satisfaction metrics;
     
  Maintained the same performance levels for the service reliability goals as in 2016, based on its review of historical performance and factors likely to impact reliability; and
     
  Established more challenging adjusted consolidated net income performance goals at all levels compared to 2016, based on historic net income levels, its review of forecasted financial information, and the 2016 change in methodology for calculating adjusted consolidated net income for short-term incentive purposes, as discussed later in this Compensation Discussion and Analysis. Our 2017 target net income goal of $192 million was lower than our 2016 actual net income of $198.3 million, but the 2017 target goal was higher than our internal net income estimate for 2017. We were able to exceed our 2016 and 2017 target net income goals due to strong financial performance both years, and we have stretched our short-term incentive net income goal even further beyond the 2017 target for 2018.

 

The table below shows the specific 2017 threshold, target, and maximum performance targets for each short-term incentive performance goal and the qualifying payout multiplier for each target. We use linear interpolation for achievement between the levels specified. The short-term cash incentive award opportunities are calculated by multiplying base salary by the product of the approved incentive percentage and the qualifying multiplier for each goal. The table also shows the actual 2017 performance results for all three performance goals. The Executive Incentive Plan under which the short-term awards are made to executives does not permit the payment of awards if there is no payment of awards under the Employee Incentive Plan (which uses the same metrics and performance levels) or if IDACORP does not have net income sufficient to pay dividends on its common stock. Neither of these restrictions applied for 2017.

 

34   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

  IDACORP Short-Term Incentive Metrics
Performance Goal Performance Levels

Qualifying

Multiplier

2017 Actual

Results

Customer Satisfaction – Customer Relations Index Score Threshold: 81.5% 7.5%  
  Target: 83.0% 15.0% 83.1%
  Maximum: 85.0% 30.0%  
Service Reliability – Number of Outage Incidents Threshold: ≤1.70 7.5%  
  Target: 1.45 15.0% 1.54
  Maximum: ≤1.20 30.0%  
2017 Adjusted Net Income Attributable to IDACORP (in millions)1 Threshold: $172 35.0%  
  Target: $192 70.0% $212.4
  Maximum: $212 140.0%  

 

1 See “Non-Base Rate Idaho Regulatory Settlement Stipulations” below in this Compensation Discussion and Analysis for a discussion of the methodology to determine adjusted consolidated net income attributable to IDACORP for short-term incentive purposes.

 

Our short-term incentive compensation is payable as a specified percentage of the NEO’s base salary for target level performance, with one-half this percentage payable for threshold performance and twice the percentage payable for maximum performance. For 2017, we increased the percentage of base salary payable for short-term incentive over 2016 levels for three of our NEOs: Mr. Keen (from 50 percent to 60 percent at target), Ms. Grow (from 50 percent to 60 percent at target), and Mr. Buckham (from 45 percent to 50 percent at target). In making its decision, the compensation committee considered the fact that Mr. Keen, Ms. Grow, and Mr. Buckham also received base salary increases for 2017, and that these base salary increases would automatically increase the potential short-term incentive awards for these three NEOs for 2017. However, the compensation committee determined that in addition to the base salary increases, it should also increase the percentage of base salary payable under the 2017 short-term incentive for these individuals, based on its review of market compensation and individual performance for the three NEOs, and the recent promotions for Ms. Grow and Mr. Buckham.

 

The table that follows shows the 2017 short-term incentive award opportunities for the NEOs recommended by the compensation committee and approved by the board of directors, as well as the 2017 short-term incentive awards earned by our NEOs based on actual performance results for 2017.

 

    IDACORP Short-Term Incentive Award Opportunity  
      Levels    
Executive   Threshold1 Target1 Maximum1 2017 Award Earned
Darrel T. Anderson % of Base Salary: 50% 100% 200%  
  Dollar Amount: $400,000 $800,000 $1,600,000 $1,341,169
Steven R. Keen % of Base Salary: 30% 60% 120%  
  Dollar Amount: $126,000 $252,000 $504,000 $421,935
Lisa A. Grow % of Base Salary: 30% 60% 120%  
  Dollar Amount: $120,000 $240,000 $480,000 $401,769
Brian R. Buckham % of Base Salary: 25% 50% 100%  
  Dollar Amount: $75,000 $150,000 $300,000 $249,813
Lonnie G. Krawl % of Base Salary: 25% 50% 100%  
  Dollar Amount: $75,000 $150,000 $300,000 $251,267

 

1 The percentage shown represents the percent of base salary to be awarded, assuming achievement of the relevant performance level.

 

Non-Base Rate Idaho Regulatory Settlement Stipulations – Commencing in 2016 and continuing for 2017, the compensation committee made an adjustment to the methodology for determining consolidated net income for short-term incentive purposes, to adjust for the impact of tax credit component of the Idaho Settlement. In October 2014, the Idaho Public Utilities Commission issued an order approving an extension, with modifications, of the terms of a December 2011 Idaho settlement stipulation for the period from 2015 through 2019. Under the terms of the settlement stipulation, if Idaho Power’s annual return on year-end equity in the Idaho jurisdiction (Idaho ROE) in any year is less than 9.5 percent, then Idaho Power may amortize up to $25 million of additional accumulated deferred investment tax credits (ADITC) to help achieve a 9.5 percent Idaho ROE for that year, and may amortize up to a total of $45 million of additional ADITC over the 2015 through 2019 period. The more specific terms and conditions of the Idaho Settlement are described in Note 3 – “Regulatory Matters” to the consolidated financial statements included in our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   35

 

 

The Idaho Settlement has the potential to increase Idaho Power’s, and thus IDACORP’s, net income if Idaho Power’s Idaho ROE is below 9.5 percent, by permitting Idaho Power to amortize additional tax credits. While the Idaho Settlement was not contemplated at the time the Executive Incentive Plan was originally approved, the compensation committee has authority under the plan to use its discretion to establish performance goals. The compensation committee determined that it would remove the effect of the settlement stipulation so that the short-term incentive metric of IDACORP consolidated net income is focused on financial performance without regard to Idaho Power’s use of additional ADITC. Accordingly, for 2017 the short-term incentive metrics for IDACORP consolidated earnings per share were to be determined based on net income attributable to IDACORP, adjusted to subtract the amount of additional ADITC recorded for the year at Idaho Power under the Idaho Settlement, if any. This adjusted amount is referred to as “adjusted consolidated net income” in this proxy statement. The compensation committee used adjusted consolidated net income for purposes of determining the 2017 net income metric threshold, target, and maximum for short-term incentive and intended to use it for purposes of determining the level of achievement of the net income target for short-term incentive. For 2017, Idaho Power’s Idaho ROE was between 9.5 percent and 10.0 percent, so no adjustment to IDACORP’s consolidated net income occurred for compensation purposes (i.e., there was no use of additional ADITC for 2017).

 

Long-Term Incentive Compensation

 

Long-term incentive compensation is intended to encourage and reward long-term performance and is based on performance goals achievable over a period of three years. We grant executive officers the opportunity to earn stock-based long-term compensation in order to be competitive from a total compensation standpoint, to ensure focus on long-term financial goals, to recognize future performance, to promote retention, and to maximize shareholder value by aligning our executive officers’ interests with shareholder interests. Our 2017 long-term incentive awards were allocated as follows:

 

  time-vesting restricted stock units, vesting in January 2020, representing one-third of the awards; and
     
  performance-based units with a three-year performance period of 2017-2019, representing two-thirds of the awards at target.

 

Consistent with our historical practice, the compensation committee recommended, and the board of directors approved, the 2017 long-term incentive grants at their February 2017 meetings, which occurred after we released our 2016 full-year earnings. In 2017, we switched to time-vesting restricted stock units from time-vesting restricted shares and to performance-based units from performance-based shares, which awards remained materially the same except that voting rights are not associated with units. Following is a more detailed description of the time-vesting restricted stock units and performance-based units that comprise the long-term incentive grants.

 

Time-Vesting Restricted Stock Units:

 

The time-vesting restricted stock unit awards made to our NEOs in 2017 will vest in January 2020, as long as the NEO remains employed by us throughout the restriction period. Earned awards are settled in shares. The NEOs receive dividends on the units during the restriction period, since the officer is assured of vesting in the units as long as he or she remains employed by the company. We believe that the restricted stock units and dividend payments provide a strong incentive for the officer to continue working for us for the entire three-year restriction period. Because the restricted stock units are intended to serve as a retention tool, the compensation committee decided to use cliff vesting, rather than ratable vesting. However, if the NEO’s employment terminates before the vesting date, subject to board approval, the officer may receive a prorated payout, depending on the reason for or circumstances surrounding the termination.

 

Performance-Based Units:

 

Performance-based units are based entirely on our financial performance over a three-year performance period and may be earned up to 200% of target, but will not be earned if our minimum performance goals are not met at the end of the performance period. Earned awards are settled in shares. Dividends on the performance-based units are not paid to our NEOs during the performance period. Instead, they are paid at the end of the performance period only on performance-based units that are actually earned, if any.

 

The performance-based units granted in February 2017 may be earned by the NEOs based on performance against two financial measures over the 2017-2019 performance period. The two equally weighted performance measures are CEPS and TSR. We believe these performance metrics represent key measures of performance for the benefit of our shareholders and align our executive officers’ management efforts with our shareholders’ performance objectives. The CEPS levels are indicative of management performance, as this goal relates to revenue enhancement and cost containment. Relative TSR is determined by our common stock price change and dividends paid over a three-year performance period compared to that achieved by a comparison group of companies over the same three-year period. As in prior years, for 2017 grants, we used the EEI Utilities Index as the TSR comparison group. We compare our TSR with these companies’ TSRs on a percentile basis. For example, if our TSR falls exactly in the middle of the TSR of the comparison companies, we would rank at the 50th percentile of the comparison group.

 

The TSR performance levels below were not changed in 2017 from the levels established in 2016. We believe our TSR percentile goals are aggressive, including setting our target TSR goal at the 55th percentile rather than the 50th percentile. Our CEPS performance levels were all slightly increased from the 2016-2018 grant to the 2017-2019 grant. Our target CEPS goal of $12.00 for the 2017-2019 grant was slightly lower

 

36   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

than our actual CEPS result of $12.02 for the 2015-2017 grant, but we believe our CEPS performance was outstanding over the 2015-2017 period and that reaching the $12.00 CEPS target goal for 2017-2019 will also require strong financial performance. We have not undertaken any share repurchases that could impact our CEPS performance.

 

The CEPS performance levels for the 2017-2019 performance period are as follows:   The TSR performance levels for the 2017-2019 performance period are as follows:
         
-Threshold: $11.25   -Threshold: 30th percentile
-Target: $12.00   -Target: 55th percentile
-Maximum: $12.75   -Maximum: 90th percentile

 

The table that follows shows the long-term incentive award opportunities recommended by the compensation committee and approved by our board of directors for 2017 for each NEO. We use linear interpolation for achievement within the levels specified.

 

 

IDACORP Long-Term Incentive

Compensation Component

 
   
  Time-Vesting Performance-Based Units Approximate Total Long-Term
  Restricted Stock Units (CEPS and TSR) Incentive Award
Executive (Percent of 2017 Base Salary) (Percent of 2017 Base Salary) (Based on 2017 Base Salary)
Darrel T. Anderson 73.3% Threshold: 66.0% Threshold: $ 1,114,667  
    Target: 146.7% Target: $ 1,760,000  
    Maximum: 293.3% Maximum: $ 2,933,333  
Steven R. Keen 36.7% Threshold: 33.0% Threshold: $ 292,600  
    Target: 73.3% Target: $ 462,000  
    Maximum: 146.7% Maximum: $ 770,000  
Lisa A. Grow 36.7% Threshold: 33.0% Threshold: $ 278,667  
    Target: 73.3% Target: $ 440,000  
    Maximum: 146.7% Maximum: $ 733,333  
Brian R. Buckham 30.0% Threshold: 27.0% Threshold: $ 171,000  
    Target: 60.0% Target: $ 270,000  
    Maximum: 120.0% Maximum: $ 450,000  
Lonnie G. Krawl 30.0% Threshold: 27.0% Threshold: $ 171,000  
    Target: 60.0% Target: $ 270,000  
    Maximum: 120.0% Maximum: $ 450,000  

 

As with base salary and short-term incentive opportunities, the compensation committee established the 2017 long-term incentive opportunities based on its review of the market compensation analysis and individual executive officer experience and tenure and both individual and company performance. Following its review, the compensation committee increased the 2017 target long-term incentive award opportunities as a percentage of base salary for both Mr. Anderson (from 200 percent to 220 percent) and Mr. Buckham (from 30 percent to 90 percent), compared to the target level for 2016. In making its decision, the compensation committee considered the fact that Mr. Anderson and Mr. Buckham also received base salary increases for 2017, and that these base salary increases would automatically increase the potential long-term incentive awards for these two NEOs for 2017. However, the compensation committee determined that in addition to the base salary increases, it should also increase the percentage of base salary payable under the 2017 long-term incentive for these individuals, due to their accomplishments as reflected in their annual performance evaluations, and to bring compensation levels closer to market compensation levels. Mr. Buckham’s award was also increased due to his new role and change in responsibilities.

 

Payment of Performance-Based Shares for 2015-2017 Performance Period

 

The performance-based shares granted in February 2018 for the 2015-2017 performance period were earned at 152 percent of target, based on our CEPS of $12.02, and at 185.71 percent of target based on our relative TSR at the 85th percentile. The table that follows lists (1) the target performance-based share awards granted, (2) the shares actually earned, and (3) the dividend equivalent payments earned.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   37

 

 

Executive Awards Granted in February 2015
(#)
Shares Earned in February 2018
(#)
Dividend Equivalents
($)
Darrel T. Anderson 11,328 19,128 130,644
Steven R. Keen 3,618 6,109 41,724
Lisa A. Grow 2,350 3,968 27,101
Brian R. Buckham 350 591 4,037
Lonnie G. Krawl 1,574 2,658 18,154

 

Other Benefits

 

We make available general employee benefits for medical, dental, and vision insurance, and disability coverage to employees, including our NEOs. Our NEOs are also eligible to participate in an executive physical program, which provides executive management employees access to a comprehensive physical exam. Other benefits include the availability of an executive deferred compensation plan and limited perquisites. We believe these other benefits, though limited, contribute to a competitive executive compensation program.

 

Post-Termination Compensation Programs

 

Idaho Power Company Retirement Plan

 

The Idaho Power Company Retirement Plan is a defined-benefit pension plan available to our employees. We discuss the material terms of the plan later in this proxy statement in the narrative following the Pension Benefits for 2017 table. Because benefits under the plan increase with an employee’s continued service and earnings, the compensation committee believes that providing a pension serves as an important retention tool by encouraging our employees to make long-term commitments to the company.

 

Idaho Power Company Security Plans for Senior Management Employees

 

We have two nonqualified defined benefit plans that provide supplemental retirement benefits for certain key employees beyond our retirement plan benefits-the Security Plan for Senior Management Employees I, or Security Plan I, and the Security Plan for Senior Management Employees II, or Security Plan II. We have two separate plans to take advantage of grandfathering rules under Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code. The compensation committee views these supplemental retirement benefits as a key component in attracting and retaining qualified executives. Benefits under the security plans continue to accrue for up to 25 years of continuous service at an executive officer level. Because benefits under the security plans increase with period of service and earnings, the compensation committee believes that providing a supplemental pension under these plans serves as an additional retention tool that encourages our executives to make long-term commitments to the company. The security plans provide income security for our executives and are balanced with the at-risk compensation represented by our incentive plans. We discuss the other material terms of the security plans later in this proxy statement in the narrative following the Pension Benefits for 2017 table.

 

Executive Deferred Compensation Plan

 

Our executive officers are eligible to participate in the Executive Deferred Compensation Plan, which is a nonqualified supplemental deferred compensation plan that allows participants to defer compensation in excess of certain statutory limits in the tax-qualified 401(k) plan. Participants may defer up to 50 percent of their base salary and up to 50 percent of any short-term incentive compensation. The compensation committee views the plan as a supplemental benefit to attract and retain qualified executive officers. For 2017, no NEO made any contributions to the plan. We discuss the material terms of the plan later in this proxy statement in the narrative following the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation for 2017 table.

 

Change in Control Agreements

 

We have change in control agreements with all of our executive officers. The compensation committee believes that change in control agreements are an important benefit to promote officer retention during periods of uncertainty around acquisitions and to motivate officers to weigh acquisition proposals in a balanced manner for the benefit of shareholders, rather than resisting such proposals for the purpose of job preservation.

 

In November 2009, the compensation committee adopted a policy regarding stand-alone change in control agreements, and approved a form of change in control agreement consistent with that policy in March 2010. As provided in the policy, change in control agreements executed after March 17, 2010, do not include any 13th-month trigger (a provision permitting an officer to terminate employment for any reason during the first month following the one-year anniversary of the change in control and receive a reduced payout) or tax gross-up provisions. The compensation committee made these changes based on the growing trend away from single-trigger and modified single-trigger provisions and tax gross-up provisions in executive change in control agreements. Existing change in control agreements were not affected by the new policy. Mr. Anderson, Mr. Keen, and Ms. Grow are parties to change in control agreements executed prior to March 17, 2010.

 

38   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

The agreements we have with our NEOs are “double-trigger” agreements in the sense that two events must occur in order for cash severance payments to be made: a change in control and a termination of employment in connection with the change in control. However, if a change in control occurs and the officer is not terminated, the agreements (other than the agreement with Mr. Buckham, which was executed in 2016, and Mr. Krawl, which was executed in 2013) permit a NEO to terminate employment for any reason during the first month following the one-year anniversary of the change in control. In this event, the NEO would receive a lesser severance payout. This provision was historically included because the first year after a change in control is a critical transition period, and the 13th-month trigger serves as an important tool to encourage our executive officers to remain with the company or our successor for at least that transition period.

 

We discuss the other material terms of our change in control agreements later in this proxy statement in the section entitled Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control.

 

Other Compensation Practices

 

Clawback Policy

 

In January 2014, our board of directors adopted a compensation clawback policy. Under the clawback policy, if our board of directors determines that a current or former executive officer has engaged in fraud, willful misconduct, gross negligence, or a violation of one of our policies that caused or otherwise contributed to the need for a material restatement of our financial results, the compensation committee will review all performance-based compensation earned by that executive officer during fiscal periods materially affected by the restatement. If, in the compensation committee’s view, the performance-based compensation would have been materially lower if it had been based on the restated results, the compensation committee will, to the extent permitted by applicable law, seek recoupment from that executive officer of any portion of such performance-based compensation as it deems appropriate under the circumstances. The compensation committee has sole discretion in determining whether an executive officer’s conduct has or has not met any particular standard of conduct under law or a company policy. The clawback policy applies to all short-term cash incentive awards and performance-based equity incentive awards made after the adoption of the policy.

 

Prohibitions on Hedging Transactions and Pledges of Our Securities

 

Our compensation policy and corporate governance guidelines prohibit executive officers (as well as directors) from hedging their ownership of company common stock. Under our policy, an executive officer may not enter into transactions that allow the officer to benefit from devaluation of our stock or be the technical legal owner of our stock without the full benefits and risks of such ownership. In addition, our corporate governance guidelines provide that our directors, officers, and certain key employees are prohibited from pledging (through a margin feature or otherwise) our securities as collateral in order to secure personal loans or other obligations.

 

Stock Ownership and Stock Retention Guidelines

 

We have had minimum stock ownership guidelines for our officers since 2007. Company stock ownership enhances our officers’ commitment to our future and further aligns our officers’ interests with those of our shareholders. Since 2015, the guidelines require ownership of IDACORP common stock valued at a multiple of each officer’s annual base salary, as follows:

 

  president and chief executive officer – 5x annual base salary;
     
  senior vice presidents – 3x annual base salary; and
     
  vice presidents – 1x annual base salary.

 

Our executives are allowed five years from the later of April 1, 2015 and the effective date of appointment to his or her position to meet these requirements.

 

Our graduated stock ownership requirements reflect the fact that compensation is weighted more heavily toward equity compensation for our most senior positions. In circumstances where the stock ownership guidelines would result in a severe financial hardship, the officer may request an extension of time from the corporate governance and nominating committee to meet the guidelines.

 

We also have minimum stock retention guidelines for our officers to further align our officers’ interests with shareholder interests. The guidelines state that until the officer has achieved the minimum stock ownership requirements described above, the officer must retain at least 50 percent of the net shares he or she receives from the vesting of restricted and performance-based share or unit awards, as applicable. For restricted and performance-based shares or unit awards, “net shares” means the number of shares acquired upon vesting, less the number of shares withheld or sold to pay withholding taxes.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   39

 

 

Compensation Risk and Discretion to Adjust Awards

 

We believe that our mix of compensation elements and the design features of our plans described in this Compensation Discussion and Analysis help to ensure that our executive officers focus on the long-term best interests of our company and its shareholders, with appropriate incentives to avoid taking excessive risks in pursuit of unsustainable short-term results. The compensation committee and our board of directors retain the discretion to adjust awards under the short- and long-term incentive plans, when deemed appropriate, including in any circumstance where the compensation committee or our board of directors believes there has been misconduct by one or more executive officers. Further, the compensation clawback policy described above provides that we may seek to recoup incentive compensation in specified circumstances, to discourage unlawful or grossly negligent conduct.

 

Compensation Committee Report

 

The compensation committee has reviewed and discussed with management the Compensation Discussion and Analysis contained in this proxy statement. Based on its review and these discussions, the compensation committee has recommended to our Board of Directors that the Compensation Discussion and Analysis be included in this proxy statement and incorporated by reference into our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017.

 

THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE

Christine King, Chair
Judith A. Johansen
Ronald W. Jibson

 

40   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Our Compensation Policies and Practices as They Relate to Risk Management

 

We annually review our compensation policies and practices for all employees to determine whether any risks arising from these policies and practices may be reasonably likely to have a material adverse effect on our company. This discussion involves a review and consideration of several of the factors set forth in Item 402(s) of Regulation S-K under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and other items. At its November 2016 meeting, the compensation committee members discussed, together with management and its compensation consultant, the factors in Item 402(s) and considered the following additional factors relating to compensation practice risks:

 

  the vast majority of IDACORP’s income from continuing operations is contributed by Idaho Power, which is a regulated electric utility, and management believes its regulated operations do not lend themselves to or incentivize significant risk-taking by employees;
     
  our employees and executives are limited from taking operational risks by the extensive regulation of our operations by multiple agencies, including the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and state public utility commissions;
     
  we use a compensation structure based on both financial and operational goals, use time-vesting shares as a portion of the long-term incentive awards, and cap the maximum incentive payouts and provide a base salary to prevent undue emphasis on incentive compensation;
     
  we do not pay our executives a short-term incentive award if no short-term incentive payment is made to our employees;
     
  we benchmark compensation annually to be consistent with industry practice;
     
  we impose stock retention obligations, we have a compensation clawback policy, and the board of directors and compensation committee retain discretion to adjust awards as they deem necessary;
     
  incentive compensation is based on objective performance metrics that are consistent with our long-term goals, and those metrics are both financial and operational;
     
  we have internal controls and standards of business conduct that support our compensation goals and mitigate risk, and we use internal and external auditing processes on a regular basis to ensure compliance with these controls and standards; and
     
  the compensation committee, the members of which are independent, oversees our compensation policies and practices and is responsible for reviewing and approving executive compensation, and it considers potential risks when evaluating executive compensation policies and practices.

 

The compensation committee also believes that the company has an extensive risk management policy and that the company’s compensation practices are not a significant factor in the overall risk profile of the company’s business. As part of its review, the compensation committee considered whether a balance between prudent business risk and resulting reward is maintained. Following its review, the compensation committee determined that our compensation practices do not increase the company’s risk exposure.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   41

 

 

Compensation Tables

 

The following tables set forth information about the compensation paid to or accrued by our NEOs for services in all capacities to IDACORP and its subsidiaries. The amounts set forth as compensation in the tables are calculated and presented pursuant to applicable SEC and accounting rules and may not represent amounts actually realized by the NEOs for the periods presented.

 

2017 Summary Compensation Table

 

Name and
Principal
Position
(a)
Year
(b)
Salary
($)
(c)
Bonus
($)
(d)
Stock
Awards
($)
(e)1
Option
Awards
($)
(f)
Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
($)
(g)
Change in
Pension
Value and
Nonqualified
Deferred
Compensation
Earnings
($)
(h)2
All Other
Compensation
($)
(i)3
Total
($)
(j)
Total
Without
Change
in
Pension
Value
($)4
Darrel T. Anderson
President and CEO
2017 798,077 1,783,270 1,341,169 2,761,720 11,360 6,695,596 3,933,876
2016 747,116 1,497,132 1,292,585 2,046,106 11,187 5,594,126 3,548,020
2015 671,154 1,033,567 760,606 1,141,116 11,206 3,617,649 2,476,533
Steven R. Keen
SVP, CFO, and Treasurer
2017 418,462 468,126 421,935 1,145,661 10,850 2,465,034 1,319,373
2016 378,654 417,232 327,555 733,724 10,652 1,867,817 1,134,093
2015 343,846 330,170 243,546 410,139 10,654 1,338,355 928,216
Lisa A. Grow
SVP and COO (Idaho Power)
2017 398,462 445,817 401,769 891,452 13,093 2,150,593 1,259,141
2016 358,462 395,238 310,087 471,242 11,954 1,546,983 1,075,741
2015 319,231 214,414 203,500 210,336 11,998 959,479 749,143
Brian R. Buckham
SVP and General Counsel
2017 297,308 273,644 249,813 56,956 10,800 888,521 831,565
                   
Lonnie G. Krawl
SVP of Administrative Services and Chief HR Officer
2017 299,039 273,644 251,267 712,885 10,800 1,547,635 834,750
2016 274,039 247,087 237,057 443,790 10,600 1,212,573 768,783
                 

 

1 Amounts in this column represent the aggregate grant date fair value of the awards (performance-based awards at target) granted in each of the years shown calculated in accordance with FASB ASC Topic 718. The full grant date fair value for the market-related TSR component of the performance-based units for the entire three-year performance cycle is included in the amounts shown for 2017 (the year of grant) and was determined using a Monte Carlo simulation model. The column was prepared assuming none of the awards will be forfeited. Additional information on the assumptions used to determine the fair value of the awards is contained in Note 7 to the consolidated financial statements included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017, on file with the SEC.

 

The table below shows the grant date fair values of the CEPS component of the performance-based unit awards granted in 2017, assuming that the highest levels of performance conditions are achieved for the awards. The grant date fair value for the market-related TSR component is not subject to probable or maximum outcome assumptions and, is therefore, based on target award value.

 

Name Grant Date Fair Value of CEPS Component
Darrel T. Anderson $1,170,229
Steven R. Keen $307,251
Lisa A. Grow $292,557
Brian R. Buckham $179,464
Lonnie G. Krawl $179,464

 

2 Values shown represent the change in actuarial present value of the accumulated benefit under the pension plan and the Senior Management Security Plans. Assumptions included a discount rate of 4.60% for 2015, 4.45% for 2016, and 3.95% for 2017; use of the RP-2014 Total Health Annuitant Mortality, Male & Female, with male rates loaded 6% and female rates loaded 12% plus MP-2017 Generational Projection Scale adjusted with an ultimate improvement rate of 0.75% and retirement at age 62. There were no above-market earnings on deferred compensation.
3 For 2017, represents our contribution to the Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan, which is our 401(k) plan, and a charitable match contribution for each of Mr. Anderson, Mr. Keen, and Ms. Grow.

 

42   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

4 Total Without Change in Pension Value represents total compensation, as determined under applicable SEC rules, minus the amount reported in the Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings column (column h). The amounts set forth in the Total Without Change In Pension Value column differ substantially from, and are not a substitute for, the amounts required to be reported in the Total column pursuant to SEC regulations. We are presenting this supplemental column to illustrate how the compensation committee views the annual compensation elements for the NEOs. While the compensation committee does review the table in its totality, we note that the change in pension value amount reported in the Change in Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Earnings column does not reflect current compensation and represents the present value of an estimated stream of payments to be made following retirement. The methodology used to report the change in pension value under applicable accounting rules is sensitive to external variables such as assumptions about life expectancy and changes in the discount rate determined at each year end, which are functions of economic factors and actuarial calculations that do not relate to our performance and are outside of the control of the compensation committee.

 

Grants of Plan-Based Awards in 2017

 

Name
(a)
Grant Date
(b)
Estimated Future Payouts Under
Non-Equity Incentive Plan
Awards
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Equity Incentive Plan
Awards
All Other
Awards:
Number
of Shares
of Stock
or Units
(#)
(i)
Grant
 Date Fair
Value of
Units and
Option
Awards
($)
(l)

 

Threshold
($)
(c)

Target
($)
(d)
Maximum
($)
(e)
Threshold
(#)
(f)
Target
(#)
(g)
Maximum
(#)
(h)
Darrel T. Anderson
Short-Term Incentive1 2/24/2017 400,000 800,000 1,600,000          
Restricted Stock Units – Time2 2/24/2017             7,088 586,674
Restricted Stock Units – Perf.3 2/24/2017       6,379 14,176 28,352   1,196,596
Steven R. Keen
Short-Term Incentive1 2/24/2017 126,000 252,000 504,000          
Restricted Stock Units – Time2 2/24/2017             1,860 153,952
Restricted Stock Units – Perf.3 2/24/2017       1,675 3,722 7,444   314,174
Lisa A. Grow
Short-Term Incentive1 2/24/2017 120,000 240,000 480,000          
Restricted Stock Units – Time2 2/24/2017             1,772 146,668
Restricted Stock Units – Perf.3 2/24/2017       1,595 3,544 7,088   299,149
Brian R. Buckham
Short-Term Incentive1 2/24/2017 75,000 150,000 300,000          
Restricted Stock Units – Time2 2/24/2017             1,089 90,137
Restricted Stock Units – Perf.3 2/24/2017       978 2,174 4,348   183,507
Lonnie G. Krawl
Short-Term Incentive1 2/24/2017 75,000 150,000 300,000          
Restricted Stock Units – Time2 2/24/2017             1,089 90,137
Restricted Stock Units – Perf.3 2/24/2017       978 2,174 4,348   183,507

 

1 Represents short-term incentive cash compensation for 2017 awarded pursuant to the IDACORP Executive Incentive Plan. Actual short-term incentive payouts during 2017 are shown in the “Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation” column of the 2017 Summary Compensation Table.
2 Represents time-vesting restricted units awarded pursuant to the IDACORP 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan.
3 Represents performance-based units for the 2017-2019 performance period awarded pursuant to the IDACORP 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan.

 

2017 Short-Term Incentive Awards

 

The short-term cash incentive award opportunities are calculated by multiplying actual base salary by the product of the approved incentive percentage and the qualifying multiplier for each goal. We discuss the short-term incentive award opportunities and results in more detail in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis.

 

2017 Long-Term Incentive Awards

 

In February 2017, the compensation committee approved long-term incentive awards with the following two components:

 

  Time-vesting units: Each NEO received an award of time-vesting restricted units equal to a percentage of his or her base salary in 2017. These units vest and are settled in shares in January 2020 if the NEO remains continuously employed with the company during the entire restricted period. Dividend equivalents are paid on the shares during the restricted period and are not subject to forfeiture.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   43

 

 

  Performance-based units: Each NEO received an award of performance-based units at the target level equal to a percentage of his or her base salary in 2017. The units will vest at the end of the three-year performance period to the extent we achieve our performance goals (CEPS and TSR, weighted equally) and the NEO remains employed by the company during the entire performance period, with certain exceptions. Dividend equivalents will accrue during the performance period and will be paid in cash based on the number of shares that are earned. Performance-based units are settled in shares and paid out in accordance with the payout percentages set forth in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis.

 

We discuss in further detail the long-term incentive award opportunities and results in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis.

 

Salary and Bonus in Proportion to Total Compensation

 

The following table shows the proportion of salary and bonus to total compensation for 2017:

 

Name Salary
($)
Bonus
($)
Total Compensation
($)
Salary and Bonus as a %
of Total Compensation
Darrel T. Anderson $798,077 $0 $6,695,596 11.9%
Steven R. Keen $418,462 $0 $2,465,034 17.0%
Lisa A. Grow $398,462 $0 $2,150,593 18.5%
Brian R. Buckham $297,308 $0 $888,521 33.5%
Lonnie G. Krawl $299,039 $0 $1,547,635 19.3%

 

44   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End 2017

 

  Option Awards Stock Awards
Name
(a)
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
Exercisable
(#)
(b)
Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options
Unexercisable
(#)
(c)
Option
Exercise
Price
($)
(e)
Option
Expiration
Date
(f)
Number
of Shares
or Units
of Stock
That Have
Not
Vested
(#)
(g)1
Market
Value of
Shares or
Units of
Stock
That Have
Not
Vested
($)
(h)2
Equity
Incentive Plan
Awards:
Number of
Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested
(#)
(i)3
Equity
Incentive Plan
Awards:
Market or
Payout Value
of Unearned
Shares, Units
or Other
Rights That
Have Not
Vested
($)
(j)2
Darrel T. Anderson
Restricted Stock/Units - Time-Vesting         19,718 1,801,436    
Restricted Stock/Units - Performance             35,306 3,225,556
Steven R. Keen
Restricted Stock/Units - Time-Vesting         5,612 512,712    
Restricted Stock/Units - Performance             10,656 973,532
Lisa A. Grow
Restricted Stock/Units - Time-Vesting         4,786 437,249    
Restricted Stock/Units - Performance             7,950 726,312
Brian R. Buckham
Restricted Stock/Units - Time-Vesting         1,523 139,141    
Restricted Stock/Units - Performance             1,910 174,498
Lonnie G. Krawl
Restricted Stock/Units - Time-Vesting         3,026 276,455    
Restricted Stock/Units - Performance             5,160 471,418

 

1 The number of shares underlying the awards of time-vesting restricted stock/units and the applicable vesting dates are as follows:

 

NEO Award Shares Underlying
Restricted
Stock/Units
Vesting Date
Darrel T. Anderson 2015 5,664 1/2/2018
  2016 6,966 1/2/2019
  2017 7,088 1/2/2020
Steven R. Keen 2015 1,810 1/2/2018
  2016 1,942 1/2/2019
  2017 1,860 1/2/2020
Lisa A. Grow 2015 1,175 1/2/2018
  2016 1,839 1/2/2019
  2017 1,772 1/2/2020
Brian R. Buckham 2015 176 1/2/2018
  2016 258 1/2/2019
  2017 1,089 1/2/2020
Lonnie G. Krawl 2015 786 1/2/2018
  2016 1,151 1/2/2019
  2017 1,089 1/2/2020

 

2 Shares/units that have not vested are valued at $91.36 per share, the closing price of IDACORP common stock on December 29, 2017.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   45

 

 

3 The number of shares underlying the performance-based grants and the applicable performance periods are as follows:

 

NEO Award Shares Underlying
Restricted
Stock/Units
End of
Performance Period
Darrel T. Anderson 2015 22,656 12/31/2017
  2016 6,270 12/31/2018
  2017 6,380 12/31/2019
Steven R. Keen 2015 7,236 12/31/2017
  2016 1,746 12/31/2018
  2017 1,674 12/31/2019
Lisa A. Grow 2015 4,700 12/31/2017
  2016 1,656 12/31/2018
  2017 1,594 12/31/2019
Brian R. Buckham 2015 700 12/31/2017
  2016 232 12/31/2018
  2017 978 12/31/2019
Lonnie G. Krawl 2015 3,148 12/31/2017
  2016 1,034 12/31/2018
  2017 978 12/31/2019

 

Shares for the 2015 performance-based award are shown at the maximum level based on results for the 2015-2017 performance period above target but below maximum. Shares for the 2016 performance-based award are shown at the threshold level based on results for the first two years of the 2016-2018 performance period below threshold. Shares for the 2017 performance-based awards are shown at the threshold level based on results for the first year of the 2017-2019 performance period below threshold. The compensation committee and the board of directors determine if and at what level the performance goals have been met, which generally occurs in February following the end of the performance period.

 

Option Exercises and Stock Vested During 2017

 

  Option Awards Stock Awards
Name
(a)
Number of Shares
Acquired on
Exercise
(#)
(b)
Value Realized on
Exercise
($)
(c)
Number of Shares Acquired
on Vesting
(#)
(d)
Value Realized on
Vesting
($)
(e)1
Darrel T. Anderson 18,592 1,528,541
Steven R. Keen 6,791 558,324
Lisa A. Grow 5,031 413,621
Brian R. Buckham 767 63,061
Lonnie G. Krawl 2,493 204,963

 

1 Based on the closing price of IDACORP common stock on the vesting date.

 

46   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Pension Benefits for 2017

 

Name
(a)
Plan Name
(b)
Number of Years of
Credited Service
(#)
(c)
Present Value of
Accumulated Benefit
($)
(d)3
Payments During Last
Fiscal Year
($)
(e)
Darrel T. Anderson Retirement Plan 21 1,114,654  
  Security Plan I1 9 258,805  
  Security Plan II2 13 11,133,355  
Steven R. Keen Retirement Plan 35 1,691,406  
  Security Plan I1 9  
  Security Plan II2 13 3,557,457  
Lisa A. Grow Retirement Plan 30 1,272,411  
  Security Plan I1 3  
  Security Plan II2 13 2,675,383  
Brian R. Buckham Retirement Plan 8 161,030  
  Security Plan I1 0  
  Security Plan II2 2  
Lonnie G. Krawl Retirement Plan 12 497,133  
  Security Plan I1 0  
  Security Plan II2 12 2,031,113  

 

1 Security Plan for Senior Management Employees I, which has grandfathered benefits under Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code.
2 Security Plan for Senior Management Employees II, which does not have grandfathered benefits under Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code.
3 Values shown represent the present value of the accumulated pension benefit under each plan as of December 31, 2017, calculated using the SEC-mandated assumptions and a discount rate of 3.95% for 2017, the RP-2014 Total Health Annuitant Mortality, Male & Female, with male rates loaded 6% and female rates loaded 12% plus MP-2017 Generational Projection Scale to an ultimate improvement rate of 0.75%, and retirement at age 62.

 

Idaho Power Company Retirement Plan

 

Description

 

The Idaho Power Company Retirement Plan is a qualified, defined benefit pension plan for employees of Idaho Power, Idaho Power’s subsidiaries, and some of its affiliate companies. The plan was established in 1943 to help employees meet the important long-term goal of building for financial security at retirement. Idaho Power makes all contributions to the plan. The dollar amount of the contribution is determined each year based on an actuarial valuation.

 

Eligibility Standards and Vesting

 

Employees who are 18 years of age or older are eligible to participate once they complete 12 months of employment. Participation begins the first day of the month after meeting this requirement, with credit for purposes of vesting and term of service for the initial 12 months of employment. Employees become vested and eligible for benefits under the plan after completing 60 months of employment.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   47

 

 

Retirement Age

 

Under the terms of the plan, normal retirement is at age 65; however, an employee may retire at age 62 without a reduction in pension benefits. Employees are eligible for early retirement when:

 

they have reached the age of 55 and have 10 years of credited service; or

 

they have 30 years of credited service.

 

Employees electing to retire before reaching age 62 receive a reduced benefit as follows:

 

Age When
Payments Begin
Reduced Benefit
as a
Percentage of
Earned Pension
Age When
Payments Begin
Reduced Benefit
as a
Percentage of
Earned Pension
61 96% 54 62%
60 92% 53 57%
59 87% 52 52%
58 82% 51 47%
57 77% 50 42%
56 72% 49 38%
55 67% 48 34%

 

Benefits Formula

 

For employees hired before January 1, 2011, plan benefits for employees age 62 or older at the time of retirement are calculated based on 1.5 percent of their final average earnings multiplied by their years of credited service. Final average earnings is based on the employee’s average total wages – base pay plus short-term incentive compensation plus overtime – during the highest 60 consecutive months in the final 120 months of service. For employees hired on or after January 1, 2011, plan benefits are calculated based on 1.2 percent of their final average earnings multiplied by their years of credited service. Plan benefits for employees who at the time of retirement are under the age of 62 are calculated based on this same formula and are then reduced using the appropriate early retirement factor.

 

Joint and Survivor Options

 

Employees who have a spouse at retirement have a survivor option at an amount equal to 50%, 75%, or 100% of the employee’s benefit, or they may choose a single life benefit. Under the survivor options, the benefit payments are reduced to allow payments for the longer of two lives. The reduction factor is determined by the age difference between the employee and spouse. Under a single life benefit, no benefits will be payable to the spouse after the employee’s death.

 

The spouse is protected if the employee dies after being vested in the plan but before retirement. The spouse will receive a lifetime benefit payment equal to 50% of the benefit payment the employee had earned at the date of death. This benefit payment is calculated without an early retirement reduction and is not reduced for the age difference between the employee and the spouse. Payment commences on the date the employee could have retired had he or she survived. If the employee has 10 or more years of service at the time of death, payments would begin at age 55. With less than 10 years of service, payments would begin at age 65.

 

Policy on Granting Extra Years of Credited Service

 

We have not granted any extra years of credited service under the plan and do not have a policy on granting extra years of credited service under the plan.

 

Idaho Power Company Security Plans for Senior Management Employees

 

Description

 

The Idaho Power Company Security Plans for Senior Management Employees are nonqualified defined benefit plans. To meet the requirements of Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code and to take advantage of grandfathering rules under that section, which exclude from Section 409A’s coverage certain deferrals made before January 1, 2005, we divided our original plan into two plans, which we refer to as Security Plan I and Security Plan II. Security Plan I governs grandfathered benefits and Security Plan II governs non-grandfathered benefits, which are subject to Section 409A. Benefits under Security Plan I are limited to the present value of the benefits that would have been paid under the plan if the participant had terminated employment on December 31, 2004. Benefits under Security Plan II are based on services through the date of termination and are reduced by benefits under Security Plan I.

 

48   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Two of the key differences between the plans are:

 

if required to comply with Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code, payment of benefits under Security Plan II may be delayed for six months following termination of employment; and

 

Security Plan I contains a 10% “haircut” provision, which allows participants to elect to receive their benefits early in exchange for a 10% reduction in their benefits and cessation of further benefit accruals.

 

The purpose of the plans is to provide supplemental retirement benefits for certain key employees. We intend the plans to aid in retaining and attracting individuals of exceptional ability by providing them with these benefits. The terms of the plans have evolved over time based on our view of common practices with respect to such plans.

 

Eligibility Standards and Vesting

 

Security Plan II was amended in November 2009 to limit eligibility to participate in the plan after December 31, 2009 to Idaho Power officers and certain key employees. Key employees participating in Security Plan II as of December 31, 2009 may continue participating in the plan if they maintain a senior manager or officer pay grade during their continuous employment with Idaho Power. Before Security Plan II was amended, eligibility to participate in the plan was limited to those key employees who were designated by their employers and approved by the plan’s administrative committee. The plan’s administrative committee is made up of the CEO and a committee of individuals that is approved by the compensation committee. Participation in the plan by Section 16 officers is approved in advance by the compensation committee. Employees who were participants as of December 31, 2009 are 100% vested. New plan participants after December 31, 2009, become 100% vested in their benefits only after five years of participation, with no partial vesting before that time.

 

Retirement Age

 

Under the terms of the plans, normal retirement age, which is the earliest age at which a participant may retire without a reduction in benefits, is 62. Participants are eligible for early retirement when they have:

 

  reached the age of 55; or

 

  completed 30 years of credited service under the Idaho Power Company Retirement Plan.

 

Benefits Commencement

 

If a participant terminates employment on or after attaining normal retirement age or after satisfying the early retirement conditions, benefits commence on the first day of the month following the termination date unless the participant is a “specified employee,” as that term is used in Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code, in which case commencement of benefits under Security Plan II is delayed for six months or until the participant’s death, if earlier. Benefits provided to participants whose employment terminates, other than due to death, before attaining early retirement eligibility commence on the first day of the month following attainment of age 55, provided that if the participant is a specified employee, benefits under Security Plan II may not be paid within six months following termination of employment except in the event of death.

 

Benefits Formula

 

Normal retirement benefits under the combined plans equal the participant’s “target retirement percentage” multiplied by the participant’s final average monthly compensation less the amount of the participant’s retirement benefits under the Idaho Power Company Retirement Plan. Normal retirement benefits under Security Plan II are also reduced by the amount of the participant’s retirement benefits under Security Plan I. For participants in Security Plan II as of December 31, 2009, the target retirement percentage is 6% for each of the first 10 years of participation plus an additional 1% for each year in excess of 10 years, with a maximum target retirement percentage of 75%. For new plan participants after December 31, 2009, the target retirement percentage is equal to 5% for each of the first 10 years of participation plus an additional 1% for each year in excess of 10 years, with a maximum target retirement percentage of 65%. Effective January 1, 2018, the reduced target retirement percentages in the prior sentence apply to all participants in Security Plan II who are Idaho Power officers or certain specified key employees, regardless of when they commenced participation in the plan. However, if a participant has achieved a maximum target retirement percentage greater than 65% prior to January 1, 2018, that participant’s target retirement percentage will not be reduced to 65%, though the target retirement percentage will be fixed at that date. Final average monthly compensation is based on the participant’s base salary plus short-term incentive compensation, which may not exceed one times base salary for the year in which the short- term incentive compensation was paid, during the 60 consecutive months in the final 10 years of service in which the participant’s compensation was the highest, divided by 60. Final average monthly compensation does not include compensation paid to a participant pursuant to a written severance agreement.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   49

 

 

Early retirement benefits under the combined plans equal the participant’s “target retirement percentage” multiplied by the participant’s “early retirement factor” and by the participant’s final average monthly compensation, less the amount of the participant’s retirement benefit under the Idaho Power Company Retirement Plan. Early retirement benefits under Security Plan II are also reduced by the amount of the participant’s retirement benefits under Security Plan I. The early retirement factors under Security Plan I based on applicable ages are as follows:

 

Age When
Payments Begin
Early Retirement
Factor
61 96%
60 92%
59 87%
58 82%
57 77%
56 72%
55 67%

 

Under Security Plan II, retirement benefits are reduced in the same manner as under Security Plan I if the termination qualifies as early retirement or if the termination occurs within a limited period following a change in control.

 

Plan benefits for participants who are not eligible for early retirement benefits and, under Security Plan II, who do not terminate within the limited period following a change in control, are further reduced, as the participant would be entitled to the amount otherwise payable multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is their actual years of participation and the denominator of which is the number of years of participation they would have had at normal retirement.

 

Limit on Benefits Under Security Plan I

 

To comply with grandfathering rules under Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code, a participant’s benefit under Security Plan I is determined based on the participant’s average monthly compensation, age, and years of participation as of December 31, 2004, and is limited to the present value of the amount to which the participant would have been entitled under the plan had termination occurred on December 31, 2004. For this purpose, it is assumed the benefits would have been paid at the earliest possible date allowed under the plan. Benefits under Security Plan I may not be increased by events occurring after December 31, 2004, such as a change in control or increases in age, compensation, or years of participation.

 

Form of Payment

 

Under the plans, once benefits commence, payments are generally made in the form of a single life annuity for the lifetime of the participant. A participant may also elect to receive actuarial equivalent payments in the form of a joint and survivor annuity benefit. The two forms of joint and survivor annuity offered are a joint and survivor annuity with payments continued to the surviving spouse at an amount equal to the participant’s benefit and a joint and survivor annuity with payments continued to the surviving spouse at an amount equal to 75 percent of the participant’s benefit, in each case subject to an actuarial adjustment to the benefit amount. Under a single life annuity, no benefits will be payable to the spouse after the participant’s death.

 

Under Security Plan I, if a participant dies before retirement, the beneficiary (which must be the participant’s spouse if the participant is married on the date of death; otherwise, the beneficiary may be a non-spouse) is entitled to receive an amount equal to 66 2/3 percent of the benefit that would be payable under the normal retirement benefit provisions of the plan, assuming death occurred at the later of age 62 or the date of death. Under Security Plan II, if the participant dies before retirement, the beneficiary (which may be a spouse or non-spouse) is entitled to receive an amount equal to the greater of (a) 66 2/3 percent of the benefit that would be payable under the normal retirement benefit provisions of the plan, assuming retirement occurred at the later of age 62 or the date of death, or (b) if death occurs after eligibility for early retirement, a joint and survivor annuity benefit calculated under the early retirement benefit provisions of the plan.

 

Under the plans, if the participant dies after retirement but before commencement of benefits, the beneficiary is entitled to receive a payout equal to 66 2/3 percent of the retirement benefit payable to the participant. Security Plan I provides that if the participant is married on the date of death, the benefit will be paid to the spouse of the participant as an annuity for the life of the spouse. If the participant is not married on the date of death, Security Plan I provides that the benefit will be paid in the form of a lump sum. Under Security Plan II, the participant may elect the payment to be in the form of an annuity or lump sum to a spouse or other beneficiary.

 

Under the plans, if the beneficiary is a surviving spouse and the surviving spouse is 10 or more years younger than the participant, the monthly survivor benefit will be reduced using the actuarial equivalent factors to reflect the number of years over 10 that the spouse is younger than the participant. If the beneficiary is a person other than a surviving spouse, the survivor benefit payment amount will be calculated assuming the beneficiary is the same age as the participant.

 

50   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Policy on Granting Extra Years of Credited Service

 

The plans are unfunded and nonqualified with the intention of providing deferred compensation benefits for a select group of “management or highly compensated employees” within the meaning of Sections 201, 301, and 401 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, or ERISA, and are therefore exempt from the provisions of Parts 2, 3, and 4 of Title I, Subtitle B, of ERISA. As such, the company is permitted to provide extra years of credited service, which the plans refer to as years of participation, at its discretion, but has not done so.

 

Named Executive Officers Eligible for Early Retirement

 

The table below shows the eligibility of our NEOs for early retirement, as of December 31, 2017, under the Idaho Power Company Retirement Plan, Security Plan I, and Security Plan II.

 

  Eligibility for Early Retirement at December 31, 2017
Name Retirement Plan Security Plan I Security Plan II
Darrel T. Anderson X X X
Steven R. Keen X No present value1 X
Lisa A. Grow X No present value1 X
Brian R. Buckham   N/A  
Lonnie G. Krawl   N/A  

 

1 See the Pension Benefits for 2017 table.

 

Nonqualified Deferred Compensation for 2017

 

Name
(a)
Executive Contributions
in Last Fiscal Year
($)
(b)
Registrant
Contributions in Last
Fiscal Year
($)
(c)
Aggregate
Earnings in Last
Fiscal Year
($)
(d)
Aggregate
Withdrawals/
Distributions
($)
(e)
Aggregate
Balance at Last
Fiscal Year End
($)
(f)
Darrel T. Anderson 1,335 14,282
Steven R. Keen
Brian R. Buckham
Lisa A. Grow
Lonnie G. Krawl

 

The Idaho Power Company Executive Deferred Compensation Plan is a nonqualified deferred compensation plan for a select group of “management or highly compensated employees” within the meaning of Sections 201, 301, and 401 of ERISA, and therefore is exempt from the provisions of Parts 2, 3, and 4 of Title I of ERISA. To comply with the requirements of Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code, and to take advantage of grandfathering rules under that section, the plan distinguishes between amounts that are subject to Section 409A and amounts that are not.

 

Eligibility Standards

 

The compensation committee designates from time to time which key employees of Idaho Power and its affiliates are eligible to participate in the plan. In selecting eligible employees, the compensation committee considers the position and responsibilities of such individuals, the value of their services, and other factors the compensation committee deems pertinent. The compensation committee may rescind its designation of an eligible employee and discontinue an employee’s future participation in the plan at any time.

 

Deferred Compensation

 

Prior to 2009, the plan permitted a participant to defer up to 100% of base salary and up to 100% of any short-term incentive compensation. Effective January 1, 2009, the plan permits a participant to defer up to 50% of base salary and up to 50% of any short-term incentive compensation.

 

Accounts

 

Participants’ interests in the plan are reflected in bookkeeping accounts representing unfunded and unsecured obligations of the company. The amount deferred by a participant is credited to the participant’s bookkeeping account, and the participant selects how the amounts in the account are deemed invested. The company contributes the deferred amounts to a trust and the trust assets are used to satisfy plan obligations. The assets of the trust are subject to the claims of general creditors if the company were to become insolvent or file for bankruptcy.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   51

 

 

Investment Options

 

The investment options available to participants are the same as those investments permitted under the Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan, which is our 401(k) plan. Participants are able to change fund investments on a daily basis.

 

Distribution

 

The portion of a participant’s account that is not subject to Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code is distributed on the earliest of the following events: (a) the participant’s death; (b) the participant’s termination of employment; (c) the participant’s disability; or (d) termination of the plan. Participants may request earlier distribution in the case of an unforeseeable emergency. Participants may also elect to receive this portion of their accounts at any time, subject to a 10% reduction. The portion of a participant’s account that is subject to Section 409A is distributed on the earliest of the following events: (a) the participant’s death; (b) the participant’s termination of employment; or (c) the participant’s disability. If required to comply with Section 409A, distribution of this portion of a participant’s account may be delayed for six months following the participant’s termination of employment. In limited circumstances, this portion of a participant’s account may be distributed upon plan terminations.

 

Distributions may be made either in one lump sum or in five annual installments, as selected by the participant. With respect to the portion of the participant’s account that is not subject to Section 409A, this selection must be made at least one year prior to the occurrence of the event triggering payment. With respect to the portion of the participant’s account that is subject to Section 409A, this selection generally must be made before the year in which the services that give rise to the base salary or short-term incentive compensation being deferred are provided.

 

Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control

 

The tables below show the payments and benefits our NEOs would receive in connection with a variety of hypothetical employment termination scenarios and upon a change in control. For purposes of the calculations for those tables, we assumed the change in control or terminations occurred on December 29, 2017, and used the closing price of our common stock on that date, which was $91.36. Actual amounts payable can only be determined at the time of a change in control or termination. All of the payments and benefits described below would be provided by IDACORP or Idaho Power.

 

The tables below:

 

  Exclude base salary and short-term incentive awards, to the extent earned due to employment through December 31, 2017.
     
  Exclude compensation or benefits provided under plans or arrangements that do not discriminate in favor of the NEOs and that are generally available to all salaried employees. These include benefits under our qualified defined benefit pension plan, post-retirement health care benefits, life insurance, and disability benefits. The present value of the accumulated pension benefit for each NEO is set forth in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table.
     
  Exclude the amounts reported in the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation for 2017 table. See the Nonqualified Deferred Compensation for 2017 table and the accompanying narrative for a description of accumulated benefits under our nonqualified deferred compensation plans.
     
  Include only the incremental increase in the present value of the Security Plan I and Security Plan II benefit, as applicable, that would be payable upon the occurrence of the events listed (other than upon death or disability) over the amount shown as the present value of the accumulated benefit for Security Plan I and Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table.

 

Time-Vesting and Performance-Based Shares and Units

 

The IDACORP 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan and/or the related award agreements provide that, except for retirement with the approval of the compensation committee, death, disability, or change in control, all unvested shares or units, whether time-vesting or performance-based, are forfeited upon termination. In the event of retirement with the approval of the compensation committee, death, or disability, the NEO receives a prorated number of shares or units based on the number of full months employed during the restricted/performance period. For time-vesting restricted stock or units, the prorated shares or units vest at termination. In the case of performance-based shares or units, the performance goals must be met at some level before the shares or units vest and vesting only occurs after completion of the performance period. For purposes of these tables, we have assumed target performance levels would be achieved. Although vesting would not occur until after completion of the performance period, the amounts shown in the tables were not reduced to reflect the present value of the performance-based shares or units that could vest. In the event of a change in control, the restrictions on the time-vesting restricted stock or units are deemed to have expired and the payout opportunity on the performance-based shares or units is deemed to have been achieved at the target level. Dividend equivalents attributable to earned performance-based shares or units would also be paid. Dividend equivalents accrued through December 29, 2017 are included in the amounts shown in the tables.

 

52   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

As the compensation committee has discretion to determine whether a voluntary termination constitutes “retirement” for purposes of the vesting of time-based and performance-based restricted stock and unit awards (for NEOs over the age of 55), we have assumed for purposes of the tables that voluntary termination would constitute a retirement with approval of the compensation committee for vesting purposes if the NEO was over the age of 55 as of December 29, 2017.

 

Summary of Change in Control Agreements

 

We have entered into change in control agreements with all our NEOs. The agreements become effective for a three-year period upon a change in control. If a change in control occurs, the agreements provide for severance benefits in the event of termination of the NEO’s employment by IDACORP or any subsidiary or successor company, other than for cause (and not due to death or disability), or by the NEO for constructive discharge.

 

In such event, the NEO would receive:

 

  a lump-sum payment equal to 2.5 times his or her annual compensation, which is his or her base salary at the time of termination and his or her target short-term incentive compensation in the year of termination, or, if not yet determined at the time of termination, the prior year’s target short-term incentive compensation;
     
  vesting of stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, restricted stock units, performance-based shares, and performance units, with performance-based awards vesting at target levels;
     
  outplacement services for 12 months, not to exceed $12,000; and
     
  continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 24 months or, if earlier, until eligible for comparable coverage with another employer, with the NEO paying the full cost of such coverage and receiving a monthly reimbursement payment.

 

We define a “change in control” as:

 

  the acquisition of 20% or more of our outstanding voting securities;
     
  the commencement of a tender or exchange offer for 20% or more of our outstanding voting securities;
     
  shareholder approval, or consummation if shareholder approval is not required, of a merger or similar transaction or the sale of all or substantially all of the assets of IDACORP or Idaho Power unless our shareholders will hold more than 50% of the voting securities of the surviving entity, no person will own 20% or more of the voting securities of the surviving entity, and at least a majority of the board of directors will be composed of our directors;
     
  shareholder approval, or consummation if shareholder approval is not required, of a complete liquidation or dissolution of IDACORP or Idaho Power; or
     
  a change in a majority of the board of directors within a 24-month period without the approval of two-thirds of the members of the board.

 

Except with respect to Mr. Buckham’s and Mr. Krawl’s agreements, the agreements also permit an NEO to terminate employment for any reason during the first month following the one-year anniversary of the change in control. We refer to this as the 13th-month trigger in the tables. In such event, the NEO would receive the same severance benefits except that the lump-sum payment equal to 2.5 times annual compensation is reduced by one-third and the welfare benefits continue for 18 months, not 24 months.

 

Under the agreements, “cause” means the NEO’s fraud or dishonesty that has resulted or is likely to result in material economic damage to us or one of our subsidiaries, as determined in good faith by at least two-thirds of our non-employee directors at a meeting of the board of directors at which the NEO is provided an opportunity to be heard.

 

A NEO is considered constructively discharged under the provisions of his or her change in control agreement if, within 90 days after the occurrence of such event, but in no event later than 36 months following a change in control, the NEO gives written notice to IDACORP or any successor company specifying one of the following events relied upon for such termination and the company has not remedied the matter within 30 days of receipt of such notice:

 

  IDACORP or any successor company fails to comply with any provision of the agreement;
     
  the NEO is required to be based at an office or location more than 50 miles from the location where the NEO was based on the day prior to the change in control;
     
  a reduction that is more than de minimis in
     
  base salary or maximum short-term incentive award opportunity;
     
  long-term incentive award opportunity;
     
  the combined annual benefit accrual rate in our defined benefit plans, unless such reduction is effective for all executive officers; or
     
  long-term disability and life insurance coverage;

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   53

 

 

  our failure to require a successor company to assume and agree to perform under the agreement; or
     
  a reduction that is more than de minimis in the long-term disability and life insurance coverage provided to the NEO and in effect immediately prior to the change in control.

 

The agreements include a parachute tax provision. Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code disallows a corporate tax deduction for any “excess parachute payments” and Section 4999 imposes a 20% excise tax payable by the NEO on any “excess parachute payments.” Generally stated, these sections apply if the change in control related payments and benefits equal or exceed 300% of the NEO’s prior five-year average Form W-2 income. In the event the 300% threshold is met or exceeded, the NEO’s “excess parachute payments” generally equal the amount by which the change in control related payments and benefits exceed 100% of the NEO’s prior five-year average Form W-2 income. Mr. Anderson’s agreement provides for either (1) a gross-up payment if the 20% excise tax cannot be avoided by reducing the parachute payments and benefits by 15% or less, or (2) a reduction in parachute payments and benefits if the 20% excise tax can be avoided by reducing the parachute payments and benefits by 15% or less. Mr. Keen’s, Ms. Grow’s, Mr. Buckham’s and Mr. Krawl’s agreements provide for them to receive the greater net benefit of (i) full severance benefits with such NEO paying any Section 280G excise tax, with no gross-up for the excise taxes, or (ii) severance benefits capped at the Section 280G excise tax limit, in which case for Mr. Keen or Ms. Grow the company may, in its discretion in the event that the Internal Revenue Service nonetheless requires the payment of an excise tax, provide a gross-up payment related to such excise tax imposed.

 

The compensation committee adopted a new change in control agreement policy in November 2009, and the compensation committee approved a new form of change in control agreement in March 2010, which is the form entered into by Mr. Buckham and Mr. Krawl. The new change in control agreement does not include the 13th-month trigger provision, or any other single-trigger or modified single-trigger provisions, or any tax gross-up provisions. The compensation committee did not apply the new policy to existing change in control agreements, since those agreements were previously executed and agreed to with our NEOs.

 

54   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Darrel T. Anderson

 

  Change in Control
Executive Benefits and
Payments Upon
Termination or
Change in Control
(a)
Voluntary
Termination
(Retirement if
Over 55)
($)
(b)
Not for Cause,
Non-Retirement
Termination
($)
(c)
For Cause
Termination
($)
(d)
Death or
Disability
($)
(e)
Without
Termination
($)
(f)
Not for Cause or
Constructive
Discharge
Termination
($)
(g)
13th-Month
Trigger
($)
(h)
Compensation:
Base Salary           2,000,0001 413,4792
Short-Term Incentive Plan           2,000,0001 1,333,3332
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Time-Vesting 1,157,6233,4 5 5 1,157,6233 1,801,4366 1,801,4366 1,801,4366
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Performance Vesting 2,436,5494,7 5 5 2,436,5497 3,765,5006 3,765,5006 3,765,5006
Benefits and Perquisites:
Security Plan I 8 8 8 244,8109   10 10
Security Plan II 365,2498 365,2498 365,2498 11,395,0559   365,24911 365,24911
Welfare Benefits           37,91812 28,22813
Outplacement Services           12,00014  
280G Tax Gross-up           3,442,69015 16
Total: 3,959,421 365,249 365,249 15,234,037 5,566,936 13,424,793 7,707,225

 

1 Mr. Anderson’s change in control agreement provides for a lump sum cash severance payment of 2.5 times his base salary and short-term incentive plan target amount.
2 The 13th-month trigger provision in Mr. Anderson’s change in control agreement provides for the payment of two-thirds of his severance payment. His base salary was reduced by $919,854 to avoid excise tax. Independent tax counsel would determine which benefits are reduced in order to avoid excise tax.
3 Mr. Anderson would receive full vesting of his 2015 time-vesting restricted stock award and prorated vesting of his 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) time-vesting restricted stock/units. The dollar amount is determined by multiplying the number of shares by $91.36.
4 As of the assumed voluntary termination date of December 29, 2017, Mr. Anderson was over the age of 55. To illustrate potential termination-related benefits, we have assumed Mr. Anderson’s voluntary termination would constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of his time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
5 We have assumed a not for cause termination and a for cause termination would not constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of Mr. Anderson’s time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
6 Mr. Anderson would receive full vesting of his time-vesting restricted stock/unit awards and payout of the performance-based shares/units at target. The dollar amounts are determined by multiplying the number of shares by $91.36 and include the cash payment of dividend equivalents, as applicable.
7 Mr. Anderson would receive full vesting of his 2015 award assuming the performance goals are met at the target level and prorated vesting of his 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) awards assuming the performance goals are met at the target level. The amount shown assumes a share price of $91.36 and includes the cash payment of dividend equivalents.
8 The values shown represent the incremental increase in the Security Plan I and Security Plan II benefit based on Mr. Anderson’s actual age and termination as of December 29, 2017, relative to the amount shown for Security Plan I and Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table. We used a discount rate of 3.95% and the RP-2014 Total Healthy Annuitant Mortality, Male & Female, with male rates loaded 6% and female rates loaded 12% plus MP-2017 Generational Projection Scale adjusted with an ultimate improvement rate of 0.75%. Payments would begin in July 2018 under Security Plan II.
9 In the event of death, the values shown represent the present value of the Security Plan I and Security Plan II death benefits.
10 Mr. Anderson’s benefits under Security Plan I and Security Plan II would not be enhanced due to a termination within a change in control period. However, Mr. Anderson would be entitled to benefits under these plans upon a termination as of December 29, 2017. Mr. Anderson would not receive a payout greater than the amounts shown for Security Plan I in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table, and thus the table reflects no enhanced value upon the applicable events.
11 Under Security Plan II, if employment is terminated within a change in control period prior to the executive officer’s normal retirement, the benefit is calculated using age 55 or the officer’s age at termination if greater than 55. The values shown (which reflect only the incremental amount payable over the amount shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table) were determined as described in footnote 8.
12 Mr. Anderson’s change in control agreement provides for the continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 24 months. The value shown represents the cost to the company of continuing these benefits.
13 The 13th-month trigger provision in Mr. Anderson’s change in control agreement provides for the continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 18 months. The value shown represents the cost to the company of continuing these benefits.
14 Mr. Anderson’s change in control agreement provides for outplacement services commencing within 12 months of a change in control up to a maximum of $12,000 for a 12-month period.
15 The not for cause or constructive discharge termination would result in a parachute payment that would cause excise tax, and thus a 280G tax gross-up would be provided. See footnote 2 above.
16 The 13th-month trigger did not result in a parachute payment that would cause excise tax, and thus no 280G tax gross-up would be provided.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   55

 

 

Steven R. Keen

 

  Change in Control
Executive Benefits and
Payments Upon
Termination or
Change in Control
(a)
Voluntary
Termination
(Retirement if
Over 55)
($)
(b)
Not for Cause,
Non-Retirement
Termination
($)
(c)
For Cause
Termination
($)
(d)
Death or
Disability
($)
(e)
Without
Termination
($)
(f)
Not for Cause or
Constructive
Discharge
Termination
($)
(g)
13th-Month
Trigger
($)
(h)
Compensation:
Base Salary           503,2791 700,0002
Short-Term Incentive Plan           630,0001 420,0002
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Time-Vesting 340,3163,4 5 5 340,3163 512,7126 512,7126 512,7126
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Performance Vesting 716,8954,7 5 5 716,8957 1,072,9266 1,072,9266 1,072,9266
Benefits and Perquisites:
Security Plan I              
Security Plan II 120,9888 120,9888 120,9888 3,598,7479   120,98810 120,98810
Welfare Benefits           41,37411 30,78212
Outplacement Services           12,00013  
280G Tax Gross-up           14 14
Total: 1,178,199 120,988 120,988 4,655,958 1,585,638 2,893,279 2,857,408

 

1 Mr. Keen’s change in control agreement provides for a lump-sum cash severance payment of 2.5 times his base salary and short-term incentive plan target amount. Base salary was reduced by $546,721 to avoid excise tax. Independent tax counsel would determine which benefits are reduced in order to avoid excise tax.
2 The 13th-month trigger provision in Mr. Keen’s change in control agreement provides for the payment of two-thirds of his severance payment.
3 Mr. Keen would receive full vesting of his 2015 time-vesting restricted stock award and prorated vesting of his 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) time-vesting restricted stock/units. The dollar amount is determined by multiplying the number of shares by $91.36.
4 As of the assumed voluntary termination date of December 29, 2017, Mr. Keen was over the age of 55. To illustrate potential termination-related benefits, we have assumed Mr. Keen’s voluntary termination would constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of his time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
5 We have assumed a not for cause termination and a for cause termination would not constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of Mr. Keen’s time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
6 Mr. Keen would receive full vesting of his time-vesting restricted stock/unit awards and payout of the performance-based shares/units at target. The dollar amounts are determined by multiplying the number of shares by $91.36 and include the cash payment of dividend equivalents, as applicable.
7 Mr. Keen would receive full vesting of his 2015 award assuming the performance goals are met at the target level and prorated vesting of his 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) awards assuming the performance goals are met at the target level. The amount shown assumes a share price of $91.36 and includes the cash payment of dividend equivalents.
8 The values shown represent the incremental increase in the Security Plan II benefit based on Mr. Keen’s actual age and termination as of December 29, 2017, relative to the amount shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table. We used a discount rate of 3.95% and the RP-2014 Total Healthy Annuitant Mortality, Male & Female, with male rates loaded 6% and female rates loaded 12% plus MP-2017 Generational Projection Scale adjusted with an ultimate improvement rate of 0.75%. Payments would begin in July 2018 under Security Plan II.
9 In the event of death, the value shown represents the present value of the Security Plan II death benefits.
10 Under Security Plan II, if employment is terminated within a change in control period prior to the executive officer’s normal retirement, the benefit is calculated using age 55 or the officer’s age at termination if greater than 55. The values shown represent the incremental increase in the Security Plan II benefit relative to the amount shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table and were determined as described in footnote 8.
11 Mr. Keen’s change in control agreement provides for the continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 24 months. The value shown represents the cost to the company of continuing these benefits.
12 The 13th-month trigger provision in Mr. Keen’s change in control agreement provides for the continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 18 months. The value shown represents the cost to the company of continuing these benefits.
13 Mr. Keen’s change in control agreement provides for outplacement services commencing within 12 months of a change in control up to a maximum of $12,000 for a 12-month period.
14 The company may make a 280G tax gross-up payment to Mr. Keen if (a) he receives a claim from the Internal Revenue Service that, if successful, would require him to pay an excise tax in connection with any “excess parachute payments,” as that term is described in Internal Revenue Code Section 280G, and (b) he would not receive in the aggregate greater payments and benefits on an after tax basis if the excess parachute payments were not reduced. Under the terms of Mr. Keen’s change in control agreement, the company may provide, but is not required to provide, such a tax gross-up upon a not for cause or constructive discharge termination, in an amount that would reimburse Mr. Keen for the excise tax, taxes imposed upon the 280G tax gross-up payment, and any interest or penalties with respect to such taxes. Such amount is not determinable unless and until Mr. Keen were to receive a claim from the Internal Revenue Service. See footnote 1 above.

 

56   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Lisa A. Grow

 

  Change in Control
Executive Benefits and
Payments Upon
Termination or
Change in Control
(a)
Voluntary
Termination
(Retirement if
Over 55)
($)
(b)
Not for Cause,
Non-Retirement
Termination
($)
(c)
For Cause
Termination
($)
(d)
Death or
Disability
($)
(e)
Without
Termination
($)
(f)
Not for Cause or
Constructive
Discharge
Termination
($)
(g)
13th-Month
Trigger
($)
(h)
Compensation:
Base Salary           757,8081 666,6672
Short-Term Incentive Plan           600,0001 400,0002
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Time-Vesting 3 4 4 273,3495 437,2495 437,2496 437,2496
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Performance Vesting 3 4 4 574,5097 912,9897 912,9896 912,9896
Benefits and Perquisites:
Security Plan I              
Security Plan II 8 8 8 3,017,7459   10 10
Welfare Benefits           37,02811 27,55412
Outplacement Services           12,00013  
280G Tax Gross-up           14 14
Total: 3,865,603 1,350,238 2,757,074 2,444,459

 

1 Ms. Grow’s change in control agreement provides for a lump-sum cash severance payment of 2.5 times her base salary and short-term incentive plan target amount. Base salary was reduced by $242,192 to avoid excise tax. Independent tax counsel would determine which benefits are reduced in order to avoid excise tax.
2 The 13th-month trigger provision in Ms. Grow’s change in control agreement provides for the payment of two-thirds of her severance payment.
3 As of the assumed voluntary termination date of December 29, 2017, Ms. Grow was not over the age of 55. Thus, we have assumed Ms. Grow’s voluntary termination would not constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of her time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
4 We have assumed a not for cause termination and a for cause termination would not constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of Ms. Grow’s time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
5 Ms. Grow would receive full vesting of her 2015 time-vesting restricted stock award and prorated vesting of her 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) time-vesting restricted stock. The dollar amount is determined by multiplying the prorated number of shares by $91.36.
6 Ms. Grow would receive full vesting of her time-vesting restricted stock/unit awards and payout of the performance-based shares/units at target. The dollar amounts are determined by multiplying the number of shares by $91.36 and include the cash payment of dividend equivalents, as applicable.
7 Ms. Grow would receive full vesting of her 2015 award assuming the performance goals are met at the target level and prorated vesting of her 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) awards assuming the performance goals are met at the target level. The amount shown assumes a share price of $91.36 and includes the cash payment of dividend equivalents.
8 Ms. Grow would not receive a payout greater than the amounts shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table, and thus the table reflects no enhanced value upon the applicable events. We used a discount rate of 3.95% and the RP-2014 Total Healthy Annuitant Mortality, Male & Female, with male rates loaded 6% and female rates loaded 12% plus MP-2017 Generational Projection Scale adjusted with an ultimate improvement rate of 0.75%, and assumed Ms. Grow was 55 as of December 29, 2017.
9 In the event of death, the value shown represents the present value of the Security Plan II death benefits.
10 Under Security Plan II, if employment is terminated within a change in control period prior to the executive officer’s normal retirement, the benefit is calculated using age 55 or the officer’s age at termination if greater than 55. The values shown represent the incremental increase in the Security Plan II benefit relative to the amount shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table and were determined as described in footnote 8. Payments would not commence until Ms. Grow reaches age 55.
11 Ms. Grow’s change in control agreement provides for the continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 24 months. The value shown represents the cost to the company of continuing these benefits.
12 The 13th-month trigger provision in Ms. Grow’s change in control agreement provides for the continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 18 months. The value shown represents the cost to the company of continuing these benefits.
13 Ms. Grow’s change in control agreement provides for outplacement services commencing within 12 months of a change in control up to a maximum of $12,000 for a 12-month period.
14 The company may make a 280G tax gross-up payment to Ms. Grow if (a) she receives a claim from the Internal Revenue Service that, if successful, would require her to pay an excise tax in connection with any “excess parachute payments,” as that term is described in Internal Revenue Code Section 280G, and (b) she would not receive in the aggregate greater payments and benefits on an after tax basis if the excess parachute payments were not reduced. Under the terms of Ms. Grow’s change in control agreement, the company may provide, but is not required to provide, such a tax gross-up upon a not for cause or constructive discharge termination, in an amount that would reimburse Ms. Grow for the excise tax, taxes imposed upon the 280G tax gross-up payment, and any interest or penalties with respect to such taxes. Such amount is not determinable unless and until Ms. Grow were to receive a claim from the Internal Revenue Service. See footnote 1 above.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   57

 

 

Brian R. Buckham

 

  Change in Control
 Executive Benefits and
Payments Upon
Termination or
Change in Control
(a)
Voluntary
Termination
(Retirement if
Over 55)
($)
(b)
Not for Cause,
Non-Retirement
Termination
($)
(c)
For Cause
Termination
($)
(d)
Death or
Disability
($)
(e)
Without
Termination
($)
(f)
Not for Cause or
Constructive Discharge
Termination
($)
(g)
Compensation:
Base Salary           750,0001
Short-Term Incentive Plan           375,0001
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Time-Vesting 2 3 3 64,9574 139,1415 139,1415
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Performance Vesting 2 3 3 134,9346 287,0175 287,0175
Benefits and Perquisites:
Security Plan II 7 7 7 2,154,4878   9
Welfare Benefits           36,77310
Outplacement Services           12,00011
Total: 2,354,378 426,158 1,599,931

 

1 Mr. Buckham’s change in control agreement provides for a lump sum cash severance payment of 2.5 times his base salary and short-term incentive plan target amount.
2 As of the assumed voluntary termination date of December 29, 2017, Mr. Buckham was not over the age of 55. Thus, we have assumed Mr. Buckham’s voluntary termination would not constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of his time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
3 We have assumed a not for cause termination and a for cause termination would not constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of Mr. Buckham’s time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
4 Mr. Buckham would receive full vesting of his 2015 time-vesting restricted stock award and prorated vesting of his 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) time-vesting restricted stock/units. The dollar amount is determined by multiplying the prorated number of shares by $91.36.
5 Mr. Buckham would receive full vesting of his time-vesting restricted stock/unit awards and payout of the performance-based shares/units at target. The dollar amounts are determined by multiplying the number of shares by $91.36 and include the cash payment of dividend equivalents, as applicable.
6 Mr. Buckham would receive full vesting of his 2015 award assuming the performance goals are met at the target level and prorated vesting of his 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) awards assuming the performance goals are met at the target level. The amount shown assumes a share price of $91.36 and includes the cash payment of dividend equivalents.
7 Mr. Buckham would not receive a payout greater than the amounts shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table, and thus the table reflects no enhanced value upon the applicable events. We used a discount rate of 3.95% and the RP-2014 Total Healthy Annuitant Mortality, Male & Female, with male rates loaded 6% and female rates loaded 12% plus MP-2017 Generational Projection Scale adjusted with an ultimate improvement rate of 0.75%, and assumed Mr. Buckham was 55 as of December 29, 2017.
8 In the event of death, the value shown represents the present value of the Security Plan II death benefits.
9 Under Security Plan II, if employment is terminated within a change in control period prior to the executive officer’s normal retirement, the benefit is calculated using age 55 or the officer’s age at termination if greater than 55. The values shown represent the incremental increase in the Security Plan II benefit relative to the amount shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table and were determined as described in footnote 7. Payments would not commence until Mr. Buckham reaches age 55.
10 Mr. Buckham’s change in control agreement provides for the continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 24 months. The value shown represents the cost to the company of continuing these benefits.
11 Mr. Buckham’s change in control agreement provides for outplacement services commencing within 12 months of a change in control up to a maximum of $12,000 for a 12-month period.

 

58   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

Lonnie G. Krawl

 

  Change in Control
 Executive Benefits and
Payments Upon
Termination or
Change in Control
(a)
Voluntary
Termination
(Retirement if
Over 55)
($)
(b)
Not for Cause,
Non-Retirement
Termination
($)
(c)
For Cause
Termination
($)
(d)
Death or
Disability
($)
(e)
Without
Termination
($)
(f)
Not for Cause or
Constructive Discharge
Termination
($)
(g)
Compensation:
Base Salary           750,0001
Short-Term Incentive Plan           375,0001
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Time-Vesting 2 3 3 175,0464 276,4555 276,4555
Long-Term Incentive Plan – Performance Vesting 2 3 3 368,0646 576,9815 576,9815
Benefits and Perquisites:
Security Plan II 7 7 7 2,294,0008   9
Welfare Benefits           37,40810
Outplacement Services           12,00011
Total: 2,837,110 853,436 2,027,844

 

1 Mr. Krawl’s change in control agreement provides for a lump sum cash severance payment of 2.5 times his base salary and short-term incentive plan target amount.
2 As of the assumed voluntary termination date of December 29, 2017, Mr. Krawl was not over the age of 55. Thus, we have assumed Mr. Krawl’s voluntary termination would not constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of his time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
3 We have assumed a not for cause termination and a for cause termination would not constitute retirement with approval of the compensation committee for purposes of Mr. Krawl’s time-vesting restricted stock/units and performance-based share/unit awards.
4 Mr. Krawl would receive full vesting of his 2015 time-vesting restricted stock award and prorated vesting of his 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) time-vesting restricted stock/units. The dollar amount is determined by multiplying the prorated number of shares by $91.36.
5 Mr. Krawl would receive full vesting of his time-vesting restricted stock/unit awards and payout of the performance-based shares/units at target. The dollar amounts are determined by multiplying the number of shares by $91.36 and include the cash payment of dividend equivalents, as applicable.
6 Mr. Krawl would receive full vesting of his 2015 award assuming the performance goals are met at the target level and prorated vesting of his 2016 (66.7%) and 2017 (33.3%) awards assuming the performance goals are met at the target level. The amount shown assumes a share price of $91.36 and includes the cash payment of dividend equivalents.
7 Mr. Krawl would not receive a payout greater than the amounts shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table, and thus the table reflects no enhanced value upon the applicable events. We used a discount rate of 3.95% and the RP-2014 Total Healthy Annuitant Mortality, Male & Female, with male rates loaded 6% and female rates loaded 12% plus MP-2017 Generational Projection Scale adjusted with an ultimate improvement rate of 0.75%, and assumed Mr. Krawl was 55 as of December 29, 2017.
8 In the event of death, the value shown represents the present value of the Security Plan II death benefits.
9 Under Security Plan II, if employment is terminated within a change in control period prior to the executive officer’s normal retirement, the benefit is calculated using age 55 or the officer’s age at termination if greater than 55. The values shown represent the incremental increase in the Security Plan II benefit relative to the amount shown for Security Plan II in the Pension Benefits for 2017 table and were determined as described in footnote 7. Payments would not commence until Mr. Krawl reaches age 55.
10 Mr. Krawl’s change in control agreement provides for the continuation of welfare benefits for a period of 24 months. The value shown represents the cost to the company of continuing these benefits.
11 Mr. Krawl’s change in control agreement provides for outplacement services commencing within 12 months of a change in control up to a maximum of $12,000 for a 12-month period.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   59

 

 

PROPOSAL NO. 2: Advisory Resolution to Approve Executive Compensation

 

As required by Section 14A of the Exchange Act, the board of directors is submitting a separate resolution to approve on an advisory basis the compensation of our named executive officers. This is an opportunity for our shareholders, through what is commonly referred to as a “say-on-pay” vote, to endorse or not endorse our executive compensation program. At each of our annual meetings of shareholders from 2011 to 2017, we provided our shareholders with the same opportunity to cast an advisory vote on the compensation of our named executive officers as disclosed in the proxy statement for each meeting. At each of those meetings, over 93 percent of the votes cast by our shareholders have been in favor. We have considered the results of those votes as evidence of support for our compensation program and decisions, and those voting results were a component of our basis for maintaining a similar approach to executive compensation for 2017.

 

As described in more detail in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis, the philosophy that underlies our executive compensation policy is to provide balanced and competitive compensation to our officers to (1) ensure that our company is able to attract and retain high-quality officers, and (2) motivate our officers to achieve performance goals that will benefit our shareholders and customers. This philosophy is implemented in tandem with our three-part business strategy of responsible planning, responsible development and protection of resources, and responsible energy use to ensure adequate energy supplies. At the core of this philosophy is our pay-for-performance model, which links competitive levels of compensation to achievements of our overall strategy and business goals and predetermined objectives.

 

We urge our shareholders to read the Compensation Discussion and Analysis in this proxy statement, which describes in more detail how our executive compensation policies and procedures operate and are designed to achieve our compensation objectives, as well as the 2017 Summary Compensation Table and other related compensation tables and narrative included in Part 4 – “Executive Compensation” in this proxy statement, which provide detailed information on the compensation of our named executive officers. We believe that the policies and procedures articulated in that discussion are effective in helping to achieve our goals and that the compensation of our named executive officers reported in this proxy statement has contributed to our company’s success.

 

Accordingly, we are requesting that our shareholders approve the following advisory resolution at the Annual Meeting:

 

RESOLVED, that the shareholders of IDACORP, Inc. (the “Company”) approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of the Company’s named executive officers, as disclosed in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis and the accompanying tables and related narrative in the proxy statement for the Company’s 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

 

The vote on this resolution is not intended to address any specific element of compensation, but rather relates to the overall compensation of our named executive officers, as described in this proxy statement in accordance with the compensation disclosure rules of the SEC. The shareholder vote will not be binding on the company or our board of directors, and it will not be construed as overruling any decision by the company or the board of directors or creating or implying any change to, or additional, fiduciary duties for our company or our board of directors. Although nonbinding, the board of directors and the compensation committee will review and consider the voting results when making future decisions regarding our executive compensation program.

 

Our board of directors, at its May 18, 2017 meeting, determined that we will hold an annual advisory vote on executive compensation, and has adopted a policy consistent with this determination. Unless the board of directors modifies this policy, the next say-on-pay vote will be held at our 2019 annual meeting of shareholders.

 

Board of Directors’ Recommendation

 

The board of directors unanimously recommends a vote “FOR” the advisory resolution on executive compensation.

 

60   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

CEO Pay Ratio

 

Commencing in 2018, our compensation committee will annually review the relationship of the median of the annual total compensation of our employees (other than our CEO) and the annual total compensation of our CEO, and we will provide the required disclosure in accordance with Section 953(b) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, and Item 402(u) of Regulation S-K. For 2017, our last completed fiscal year, the ratio of our CEO’s annual total compensation, as reported above in the Summary Compensation Table, to the median of the annual total compensation of all employees (other than the CEO), as described below, was 42:1.

 

For 2017, the median of the annual base wage of all employees of our company (other than the CEO) was $91,300, and the median of the annual total compensation, which includes overtime, premium and supplemental pay, non-equity incentive plan compensation, change in present value of pension benefits, and 401k match, of all employees of our company (other than the CEO) was $161,297. For 2017, the base wage of our CEO was $798,077, and the annual total compensation of our CEO, as reported above in the Summary Compensation Table, was $6,695,596.

 

We identified the median employee as of the last payroll period in 2017, on December 22, 2017, using two factors:

 

  1. Base salary and wages paid to all full-time and part-time employees employed as of this date, as the consistently applied compensation measure and as reported in our payroll records reported to the Internal Revenue Service on Form W-2 for 2017; and
     
  2. Median years of service of employees with the same base wages, to reflect the median change in pension value for this group of employees.

 

As of December 22, 2017, our employee population consisted of approximately 2,000 individuals. Equity awards were excluded from our compensation measure in identifying the median employee because we do not widely distribute annual equity awards to our employees. Approximately 3% of our employees receive annual equity awards. In addition, we did not make any cost-of-living adjustments in identifying our median employee because all our employees are located in the United States.

 

After identifying the median employee, for the ratio calculation, we used the following Summary Compensation Table elements in accordance with the requirements of Item 402(c)(2)(x) of Regulation S-K for both our CEO and the median employee, which include, as applicable: base wages actually earned (including overtime wages), incentive earnings, bonus earnings, stock grants, the actuarial change in present value of pension benefits compared to the prior year, and all other compensation, such as taxable supplements, premiums, and 401k match amounts. The amounts attributable to a change in the value of each individual’s defined benefit pension account balance do not represent earned or paid compensation. Pension values are dependent on many variables including years of service, earnings, and actuarial assumptions, such as interest rates. As an additional point of reference, if the ratio calculation excluded the actuarial change in present value of pension benefits for both our CEO and the median employee, the pay ratio for 2017 would be 35:1.

 

We believe the pay ratio disclosed above is a reasonable estimate calculated in accordance with SEC rules, based on our records and the methodology described above. The SEC rules for identifying the median employee and calculating the pay ratio allow companies to use a variety of methodologies and apply various assumptions. The application of various methodologies may result in significant differences in the results reported by SEC reporting companies. As a result, the pay ratio reported by other companies may not be comparable to the pay ratio we report above.

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   61

 

 

PART 5 – AUDIT COMMITTEE MATTERS

 

 

PROPOSAL NO. 3: Ratification of Appointment of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

At the Annual Meeting, we will ask you to ratify the audit committee’s appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2018. This firm has conducted our consolidated annual audits since 1998 and is one of the world’s largest firms of independent certified public accountants. We expect a representative of Deloitte & Touche LLP to be present at the Annual Meeting. He or she will have an opportunity to make a statement and to respond to appropriate questions.

 

The audit committee will consider your vote as a factor in selecting our independent registered public accounting firm for 2019. The audit committee reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to change the appointment of the independent registered public accounting firm at any time if it determines that such a change would be in the best interests of the company and our shareholders.

 

Board of Directors’ Recommendation

 

The board of directors unanimously recommends a vote “FOR” ratification of the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2018.

 

Independent Accountant Billings

 

The aggregate fees our principal independent registered public accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche LLP, billed or are expected to bill us for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016 are as follows:

 

Fees Billed  2017   2016 
Audit Fees  $1,515,000   $1,468,708 
Audit-Related Fees1   39,275    25,000 
Tax Fees2   61,125    24,117 
All Other Fees3   2,000    2,000 
Total Fees  $1,617,400   $1,519,825 

 

1 For 2017 and 2016, includes agreed upon procedures at a subsidiary.
2 Includes fees for planning, consulting, compliance, and preparation of tax forms for IDACORP and its subsidiaries, including Idaho Power Company employee benefit plans.
3 Accounting research tool subscription.

 

Policy on Audit Committee Pre-Approval of Audit and Non-Audit Services

 

In accordance with the audit committee’s charter, the audit committee is responsible for the appointment, compensation, retention, and oversight of the work of the independent registered public accounting firm engaged by the company. The audit committee reviews the independent auditors’ engagement plan, including the audit plan, scope, and procedures. We and our audit committee are committed to ensuring the independence of the independent registered public accounting firm, both in fact and in appearance. In this regard, the audit committee has established a pre-approval standard for both audit and non-audit services.

 

In addition to the audits of our consolidated financial statements, the independent registered public accounting firm may be engaged to provide certain audit-related, tax, and other services. The audit committee must pre-approve all services performed by the independent registered public accounting firm to ensure that the provision of those services does not impair the independent registered public accounting firm’s independence. The services that the audit committee will consider include audit services such as attest services, changes in the scope of the audit of the financial statements, and the issuance of comfort letters and consents in connection with financings; audit-related services such as internal control reviews and assistance with internal control reporting requirements; attest services related to financial reporting that are not required by statute or regulation, and accounting consultations and audits related to proposed transactions and new or proposed accounting rules, standards, and interpretations; and tax compliance and planning services.

 

Unless a type of service to be provided by the independent public accounting firm has received general pre-approval, it requires specific pre-approval by the audit committee. In addition, any proposed services exceeding pre-approved cost levels require specific pre-approval by the audit committee. Under the pre-approval policy, the audit committee has delegated to the chairman of the audit committee pre-approval authority for services. The chairman must report any pre-approval decisions to the audit committee at its next scheduled meeting. Any request to engage the independent registered public accounting firm to provide a service that has not received general pre-approval must be submitted as a written proposal to our chief financial officer with a copy to our general counsel. The request must include a detailed description of the service

 

62   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

to be provided, the proposed fee, and the business reasons for engaging the independent registered public accounting firm to provide the service. Upon approval by the chief financial officer, the general counsel, and the independent registered public accounting firm that the proposed engagement complies with the terms of the pre-approval policy and applicable laws, rules, and regulations, the request will be presented to the audit committee or the audit committee chairman, as the case may be, for pre-approval.

 

In determining whether to pre-approve the engagement of the independent public accounting firm, the audit committee or the audit committee chairman, as the case may be, must consider, among other things, the pre-approval policy; applicable laws, rules, and regulations; and whether the nature of the engagement and the related fees are consistent with the following principles:

 

 the independent registered public accounting firm cannot function in the role of management; and
   
 the independent registered public accounting firm cannot audit its own work.

 

The pre-approval policy and separate supplements to the pre-approval policy describe the specific audit, audit-related, tax, and other services that have the general pre-approval of the audit committee. The term of any pre-approval is 12 months from the date of pre-approval, unless the audit committee specifically provides for a different period. The audit committee will periodically revise the list of pre-approved services, based on subsequent determinations.

 

For 2016 and 2017, all audit and non-audit services and all fees paid in connection with those services were pre-approved by the audit committee.

 

Report of the Audit Committee

 

The audit committee has reviewed and discussed the audited consolidated financial statements of IDACORP, Inc. with management. The audit committee has discussed with the independent auditors the matters required to be discussed by Auditing Standards No. 1301, Communications with Audit Committees, as adopted by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, Rule 2-07 of Regulation S-X, Communications with Audit Committees, and such other matters as are required to be discussed with the audit committee under the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board.

 

The audit committee has received the written disclosures and the letter from the independent auditors required by applicable requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board regarding the independent auditor’s communications with the audit committee concerning independence and has discussed with the independent auditors the independent auditors’ independence.

 

Based on the audit committee’s review and discussions referred to above, the audit committee recommended to the Board of Directors that the audited consolidated financial statements of IDACORP, Inc. be included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017 for filing with the SEC.

 

THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

Richard J. Dahl, Chair

Annette G. Elg
Thomas E. Carlile
Richard J. Navarro

 

IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT   63

 

 

PART 6 – OTHER MATTERS

 

 

Other Business

 

Neither the board of directors nor management intends to bring before the meeting any business other than the matters referred to in the Notice of Annual Meeting and this proxy statement. In addition, we have not been informed that any other matter will be presented to the meeting by others. If any other business should properly come before the meeting, or any adjournment thereof, the persons named in the proxy will vote on such matters according to their best judgment.

 

Shared-Address Shareholders

 

In accordance with a notice sent to eligible shareholders who share a single address, we are sending only one annual report to shareholders and proxy statement or Notice of Internet Availability, as applicable, to that address, unless we received instructions to the contrary from any shareholder at that address. This practice, known as “householding,” is designed to reduce our printing and postage costs. However, if a shareholder of record residing at such address wishes to receive a separate annual report to shareholders or proxy statement or Notice of Internet Availability, as applicable, for the 2018 annual meeting or in the future, he or she may contact investor relations in writing at 1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702-5627, or by telephone at (800) 635-5406. Eligible shareholders of record receiving multiple copies of our annual report to shareholders and proxy statement or Notice of Internet Availability, as applicable, can request householding by contacting us in the same manner. If you own shares through a bank, broker, or other nominee, you can request householding by contacting that bank, broker, or other nominee.

 

We will deliver promptly, upon written or oral request, a separate copy of the Annual Report, proxy statement, or Notice of Internet Availability, as applicable, to a shareholder at a shared address to which a single copy of the documents was delivered. Requests should be addressed to investor relations at the address or telephone number set forth above.

 

2019 Annual Meeting of Shareholders

 

As of the date of this proxy statement, we expect our 2019 annual meeting of shareholders to be held on May 16, 2019.

 

Shareholders of the company may submit proposals on matters appropriate for shareholder action at meetings of the company’s shareholders in accordance with Rule 14a-8 of the SEC. To be submitted for inclusion in next year’s proxy statement, shareholder proposals must satisfy all applicable requirements of Rule 14a-8. For our 2019 annual meeting of shareholders, if you wish to submit a proposal for inclusion in the proxy materials pursuant to Rule 14a-8, you must submit your proposal to our corporate secretary on or before the close of business on December 3, 2018.

 

Our Amended and Restated Bylaws require that any shareholder proposal that is not submitted for inclusion in our proxy statement under Rule 14a-8, but is instead sought to be presented directly at the 2019 annual meeting of shareholders, must be received at our principal executive offices not earlier than 150 days and not later than 120 days prior to the first anniversary of the date on which we held the 2018 Annual Meeting. As a result, proposals, including director nominations, submitted pursuant to these provisions of our Amended and Restated Bylaws must be received no earlier than December 18, 2018 and no later than the close of business on January 17, 2019. The proposal must be accompanied by certain information, representations, and documentation specified in our Amended and Restated Bylaws, which you may obtain by writing to our corporate secretary. Shareholder proposals should be personally delivered or delivered by registered or certified mail, postage prepaid, to: Corporate Secretary, IDACORP, Inc., 1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702-5627.

 

If a shareholder fails to meet the applicable deadlines or fails to satisfy other applicable requirements of the SEC, we may exercise discretionary voting authority over proxies we receive to vote on any such proposal as we determine appropriate.

 

Annual Report and Financial Statements

 

Our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2017, was provided or made available to shareholders together with this proxy statement. We will also make available to our shareholders a copy of our Annual Report on Form 10-K, excluding exhibits, which was required to be filed with the SEC. You may obtain a copy without charge upon written or oral request to Director of Investor Relations, IDACORP, Inc., 1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702-5627, telephone number (208) 388-2200. You may also access our Annual Report on Form 10-K through our website at www.idacorpinc.com or at the website maintained by the SEC, www.sec.gov.

 

64   IDACORP, Inc. 2018 PROXY STATEMENT

 

 

APPENDIX A

 

Compensation Survey Data Companies

 

Companies Included in the IOU Survey Data Group

 

AES Corporation El Paso Electric PPL Corporation
AGL Resources Entergy Public Service Enterprise Group
Allete Exelon Questar
Alliant Energy FirstEnergy SCANA
Ameren ITC Holdings Corp Sempra Energy
American Electric Power MDU Resources Southern Company Services
Atmos Energy NextEra Energy Inc. South Jersey Industries
Avista Corp NorthWestern Energy Southwest Gas
Black Hills NW Natural Spire
CenterPoint Energy OGE Energy TECO Energy
Chesapeake Utilities ONE Gas, Inc. UGI
Cleco Otter Tail Unitil
Dominion Resources Pacific Gas & Electric Vectren
DTE Energy Pinnacle West Capital Westar Energy
Duke Energy PNM Resources Wisconsin Energy
Edison International Portland General Electric Xcel Energy

 

A-1

 

 

Companies Included in the General Industry Survey Data Group

 

A.O. Smith Cabot Dow Chemical
AbbVie Calgon Carbon DuPont
Accenture Capsugel E.W. Scripps
ACH Cardinal Health Eastman Chemical
Adecco Cargill Eastman Kodak
ADT Security Services Carlson eBay
Agilent Technologies Carnival Ecolab
Agrium Casey’s General Stores Edwards Lifesciences
Aimia Catalent Pharma Solutions Eisai
Air Products and Chemicals Catalyst Paper Corporation Elementis
Alcoa CDI Eli Lilly
Alexander & Baldwin CDK Global Encana Services Company
Alexion Pharmaceuticals CDW Endo
Altria Group Celanese EnPro Industries
Amadeus North America Celestica Epson America
American Express Global Business Travel CenturyLink Equifax
American Sugar Refining Cepheid Ericsson
Americas Styrenics CEVA Logistics ESCO
AmerisourceBergen CGI Technologies and Solutions Estée Lauder
AMETEK CH2M HILL Esterline Technologies
Amgen Charter Communications Experian Americas
AMSTED Industries Chemours Company Express Scripts
Amway Chemtura Federal-Mogul
Andersons Chicago Bridge & Iron (CB&I) Ferrovial
Ansell CHS FIS
Arby’s Restaurant Group Cimpress Flowers Foods
Archer Daniels Midland Cintas Flowserve
Arkema Clearwater Paper Corporation Fluor
ARM Coca-Cola FOCUS Brands
Armstrong World Industries Coca-Cola Enterprises Ford
Arrow Electronics Colgate-Palmolive Forsythe Technology
Asbury Automotive Group Columbia Sportswear Frontier Communications
Ashland Comcast Fujitsu
AstraZeneca CommScope G&K Services
AT&T Communications Systems GAF Materials
Automatic Data Processing Compass Gap
Avnet ConAgra Foods Garmin
Axiall Corporation Continental Automotive Systems Gates
BAE Systems Convergys General Atomics
Baker Hughes Cooper Standard Automotive General Cable
Ball Corning General Dynamics
Barrick Gold of North America Cott Corporation General Mills
Beam Suntory Covestro General Motors
Bechtel Nuclear, Security & Environmental Cox Enterprises Gilead Sciences
Beckman Coulter Crown Castle Glatfelter
Becton Dickinson CSC GlaxoSmithKline
Bemis CSX GLOBALFOUNDRIES
Berry Plastics Cubic Goodyear Tire & Rubber
Best Buy Cumberland Gulf Group Graco
Big Lots Curtiss-Wright Greene, Tweed and Co.
Biogen, Inc. Cushman & Wakefield H.B. Fuller
Blount International CVR Energy Hallmark Cards
BMC Software D&B Halozyme Therapeutics
Bob Evans Farms Danaher Hanesbrands
Bombardier Transportation Darden Restaurants Haribo
BorgWarner Dean Foods Harley-Davidson
Boston Scientific Dell Harman International Industries
Brembo Delta Air Lines Harsco
Bridgestone Americas Deluxe Hasbro
Bristol-Myers Squibb Dematic Group HAVI Group
Broadridge Financial Solutions Dentsply Sirona HD Supply
Brown-Forman DHL Supply Chain Hearthside Food Solutions
Brunswick Diageo North America Henry Schein
Bunge Diebold HERC
Burlington Northern Santa Fe DJO Global, Inc. Herman Miller
Bush Brothers & Company Domtar Hershey
CA Technologies Donaldson Hertz
Cablevision Systems Dot Foods Hexcel

 

A-2

 

 

Hexion Lutron Electronics PulteGroup
Hilton Worldwide LyondellBasell Puratos
Hitachi Data Systems Magellan Midstream Partners Purdue Pharma
HNI Makino Quaker Chemical
HNTB Marriott International Qualcomm
Hoffman-La Roche Mars Incorporated Quest Diagnostics
Hormel Foods Martin Marietta Materials Quintiles
Host Hotels & Resorts Mary Kay R.R. Donnelley
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Masco Rackspace
HP Inc. Materion Corporation Ralph Lauren
Hunt Consolidated Mattel Rayonier Advanced Materials
Husky Injection Molding Systems Matthews International Regency Centers
IBM McCain Foods USA Regeneron Pharmaceuticals
IDEX Corporation McKesson Revlon
IDEXX Laboratories McLane Company Reynolds Packaging
IHeartMedia Medtronic Ricoh Americas
IMS Health Merck & Co Rio Tinto
INEOS Olefins & Polymers USA Meredith Ritchie Brothers Auctioneers
Ingenico Meritor Rockwell Automation
Ingevity Merrill Rockwell Collins
Ingredion Metrie Rolls-Royce North America
Intel Mettler-Toledo Royal Caribbean Cruises
Intelsat Micron Technology Ryder System
International Flavors & Fragrances Microsoft S.C. Johnson & Son
International Game Technology MillerCoors Sabre Corporation
International Paper Molex Sage Software
Irvine Molson Coors Brewing SAIC
Itron Monsanto Saint-Gobain
J. Crew Mosaic Samsung
Jabil Circuit Motorsport Aftermarket Group Sanofi
Jack in the Box MTS Systems SAS Institute
Jacobs Engineering Multi-Color Sasol USA
JetBlue Airways Mylan Scholastic
Johns Manville Navigant Consulting Schreiber Foods
Johnson & Johnson Navistar International Schwan Food Company
K. Hovnanian Companies NBTY Scotts Miracle-Gro
KB Home NCR Scripps Networks Interactive
KBR Neoris Sealed Air
Kellogg New York Times Sensient Technologies
Kelly Services Newell Rubbermaid ServiceMaster Company
Kennametal Newmont Mining SGS-Societe Generale de Surveillance
Kerry Group Nike Sherwin-Williams
Keurig Green Mountain Nissan North America Siemens
Keysight Technologies Norfolk Southern Smith & Nephew
Keystone Foods Nortek Snap-on
Kimberly-Clark Northrop Grumman Snyder’s Lance
Kinross Gold Novartis Sodexo
Koch Industries Novelis Sonic Corp
Kodak Alaris Nu Skin Enterprises Sonoco Products
Kohler Nuance Communications Sony
L-3 Communications Occidental Petroleum Sony Electronics
Lafarge North America Orbital ATK Southwest Airlines
Land O’Lakes Oshkosh Spirit AeroSystems
Lear Osram Sylvania SPX Corporation
Ledcor Group of Companies Outerwall SPX FLOW
Leggett and Platt Owens Corning St. Jude Medical
Lehigh Hanson Oxford Instruments America Stanley Black & Decker
Leidos Panasonic of North America Stantec
Lend Lease PAREXEL Starbucks
Lenovo Parker Hannifin Steelcase
Leprino Foods Parmalat Stolt-Nielsen
Level 3 Communications Parsons Corporation Stryker
Lexmark PayPal Sucampo Pharmaceuticals
LG Electronics PepsiCo SunCoke Energy
Liberty Global Pfizer SunOpta
Lifetouch Philip Morris SuperValu Stores
Lincoln Electric Pitney Bowes SWM International (Schweizer-Mauduit)
Lockheed Martin Polaris Industries Sysco Corporation
Lonza PolyOne Takeda Pharmaceuticals
L’Oréal Potash Talisman Energy USA
Lubrizol Praxair Target

 

A-3

 

 

Taubman Centers TRW Automotive VWR International
TE Connectivity Tupperware Brands W.R. Grace
Tele Tech Tyson Foods Walmart
Tempur Sealy Underwriters Laboratories Walt Disney
Teradata Unilever United States Waste Management
Terex Unisys Watts Water Technologies
Textron United States Cellular Welltower
Thermo Fisher Scientific United States Steel Wendy’s Group
ThyssenKrupp United Technologies Corporation (UTC) West Pharmaceutical Services
Tiffany & Co. UPS Westinghouse Electric
Time Warner USG Corporation WestRock
Time Warner Cable Valero Energy Weyerhaeuser
Timken Vantiv Whirlpool
TimkenSteel Vectrus Wilsonart
T-Mobile USA Ventura Foods Wood Mackenzie
Tobii Dynavox Verizon Worthington Industries
Toro Vertex Pharmaceuticals Xilinx
Total System Service (TSYS) Viacom Xylem
TransUnion Viad YP
Travel Leaders Group Vista Outdoor Zebra Technologies
Travelport Visteon Zimmer Biomet
Tribune Media Vizient  
TripAdvisor Vulcan Materials  

 

A-4

 
   
   
   

 

Annual Meeting of Shareholders of IDACORP, Inc.

 

Time:  May 17, 2018 / 10:00 a.m. Local Time
Place:  Idaho Power Company Corporate Headquarters, 1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702

 

Please make your marks like this:x  Use dark black pencil or pen only.

 

The Board of Directors recommends a vote “FOR” each of the director nominees in Proposal 1, and “FOR” Proposals 2 and 3, all of which are proposals of IDACORP, Inc.

 

    FOR WITHHOLD  
         
1. Elect ten directors nominated by the board of directors for one-year terms      
         
  (01) Darrel T. Anderson o o  
  (02) Thomas Carlile o o  
  (03) Richard J. Dahl o o  
  (04) Annette G. Elg o o  
  (05) Ronald W. Jibson o o  
  (06) Judith A. Johansen o o  
  (07) Dennis L. Johnson o o  
  (08) Christine King o o  
  (09) Richard J. Navarro o o  
  (10) Robert A. Tinstman o o  
         
    FOR AGAINST ABSTAIN
2. Advisory resolution to approve executive compensation o o o
         
    FOR AGAINST ABSTAIN
3. Ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2018 o o o

 

NOTE: Such other business as may properly come before the meeting and any adjournment or postponements thereof.

 

    Authorized Signatures - This section must be completed for your instructions to be executed.  

 

       
  Please Sign Here   Please Date Above
       
       
  Please Sign Here   Please Date Above

 

 

 

Annual Meeting of Shareholders of IDACORP, Inc.

 

Time:   May 17, 2018/ 10:00 a.m. Local Time
Place:   Idaho Power Company Corporate Headquarters
1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702

 

All votes by Internet or Telephone must be received by 5:00 pm, Eastern Daylight Saving Time, May 16, 2018.

 

INTERNET Go To: www.proxypush.com/ida
1. Go to the URL shown above.
2. Have your Voting Instruction Form ready and follow the instructions posted on the website.

 

  TELEPHONE Call 1-866-702-2221
1. Use any touch-tone telephone.
2. Have your Voting Instruction Form ready and follow the simple recorded instructions.

 

MAIL  
1. Mark, sign and date your Voting Instruction Form.
2. Detach and return your Voting Instruction Form in the postage-paid envelope provided.

 

  CONTROL NUMBER    
     
       
      Scan code for mobile voting

 

  PROXY TABULATOR FOR
   
   
   
  P.O. BOX 8016
CARY, NC 27512-9903

 

 

       
       
       

 

Copyright © 2017 Mediant Communications Inc. All Rights Reserved

 

April 2, 2018

Dear Shareholders of IDACORP, Inc.:

 

It is our pleasure to invite you to attend the upcoming 2018 Annual Meeting of Shareholders of IDACORP, Inc., to be held on May 17, 2018, at 10:00 a.m. local time, at the Idaho Power Company corporate headquarters building, 1221 West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho. Your board of directors and management look forward to personally greeting those shareholders able to attend.

 

Information about the business of the meeting and nominees for election as members of the board of directors is set forth in the Notice of Meeting and the Proxy Statement. This year IDACORP, Inc. is asking you to elect ten directors nominated by the board of directors for one-year terms; to vote on an advisory resolution to approve executive compensation; and to ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2018.

 

YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. YOU CAN BE SURE YOUR SHARES ARE REPRESENTED AT THE MEETING BY PROMPTLY RETURNING YOUR COMPLETED PROXY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE OR BY FOLLOWING THE INSTRUCTIONS ON THE REVERSE SIDE TO VOTE THROUGH THE INTERNET OR BY TELEPHONE. You may revoke your proxy prior to or at the meeting and may vote in person if you wish.

 

Robert A. Tinstman
Chairman of the Board
Darrel T. Anderson
President and Chief Executive Officer
 

IDACORP, Inc.

 

PROXY FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS ON MAY 17, 2018

THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

 

Properly executed proxies will be voted as marked and, if not marked, proxies properly executed and received will be voted “FOR” proposal (1), to elect ten directors nominated by the board of directors for one-year terms; “FOR” proposal (2), to approve an annual advisory vote on executive compensation; and “FOR” proposal (3), to ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2018.

 

The undersigned hereby appoints Steven R. Keen and Patrick A. Harrington, and each of them, proxies with full power of substitution to vote for the undersigned at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of IDACORP, Inc. and at any adjournment(s) thereof, on the matters set forth in the Proxy Statement and such other matters as may properly come before the meeting; and hereby directs that this proxy be voted in accordance with the instructions herein and in the proxies’ discretion on any other matters that may properly come before the meeting and at any adjournment or postponements thereof.

 

Please date, sign and promptly mail in the self-addressed return envelope, which requires no postage if mailed in the United States. Please so indicate following your signature if you are signing in a representative capacity. If shares are held jointly, both owners should sign.

 

You may also vote through the internet or by telephone by following the instructions on the reverse side.