ITEM 10.
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DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
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Our directors are elected to serve until the next annual meeting of shareholders and until his successor shall have been duly elected and qualified. Certain information with respect to our directors is presented below.
Richard A. Kaplan
, age 73, has served as chief executive officer and as a director since October 2010. From 2000 to 2010, Mr. Kaplan was the chief executive officer of Pictometry International Corp., a visual information systems company that experienced exponential growth under his leadership. Previously, Mr. Kaplan led and developed a number of other successful businesses in industries including retail floor covering, advertising and marketing, computer software, real estate development and human resource development.
Mr. Kaplan currently is on the board of Viggi Corporation. He has been very active in the community in academic institutions and charitable organizations, including present roles on the Board of Trustees at Rochester Institute of Technology, Nazareth College and the University of Rochester Medical Center as well as directorships at Venture Creations (an RIT business incubator), Camp Good Days and Special Times, Rochester’s Child, Rochester Broadway Theatre League, George Eastman House, and the Center for Governmental Research.
Mr. Kaplan’s business success and contributions within the community have been recognized by multiple awards, including the prestigious Herbert W. Vanden Brul Entrepreneurial Award presented by RIT’s E. Philip Saunders College of Business in April 2007. Mr. Kaplan was designated the “Businessperson of the Year” in 2007. In 2012, he was inducted into the Rochester Business Hall of Fame. Mr. Kaplan has an extensive background in economics, accounting, management and executive leadership. He is regularly sought out by startups, universities and other organizations for which he has provided private consulting and guest lecturing on marketing, economics and organizational development. He attended Rochester Institute of Technology and the University of Buffalo where he majored in accounting and minored in economics.
Keith E. Gleasman
, age 71, is a co-founder of the Company and has served as president and as a director since the Company’s inception on September 1996. From 2010 to 2016, he served as the vice president of marketing. From 2005 to 2010 he also held the title of chief technology officer. From 1985-1988, Mr. Gleasman was the vice president of sales for the Power Systems Division of Gleason Works.
Mr. Gleasman is a co-inventor on a notable number of the Company’s patents. His strengths include his marketing and sales executive experience, in addition to his design and development knowledge. His particular expertise has been in the area of defining and demonstrating products to persons within all levels of the automotive industry, race crew members, educators and students. He has spent virtually his entire career involved with inventing and manufacturing new and creative mechanical components for the automotive industry, working closely with his father, Vernon E. Gleasman. Mr. Gleasman earned his B.S. degree from Ashland University in Ashland, Ohio.
Gary A.
Siconolfi
, age 67, has served as a director since October 2002, and has been the Company’s board chair since 2005. Since 1995, Mr. Siconolfi has been the sole owner of his own commercial real estate business. Mr. Siconolfi acted as an advisor to the Company from 1999 through 2002, at which time he joined the board. From 1984 to 1995, he was the owner and president of Panorama Dodge, Inc., Penfield, New York and from 1989 to 1995 he was the owner and president of Panorama Collision, Inc., East Rochester, New York, where he started and managed a highly successful auto/truck dealership and collision business. Prior to opening the dealership and collision business, Mr. Siconolfi acquired extensive knowledge in the automotive industry, working in sales, sales management and general management at various automotive businesses. He has completed more than 100 programs sponsored by Chrysler Corporation, Ford Motor Company and General Motors in fields such as management, sales management, sales, customer relations, human resources and service training, and he has earned numerous awards given by these companies.
Thomas F. Bonadio,
age 69, has served as a director since November 2010. Mr. Bonadio serves as the CEO and Managing Partner of the Bonadio Group. After graduation from St. John Fisher College in 1971, Mr. Bonadio spent seven years with Arthur Andersen & Co. in Rochester, New York. In 1978, he started the Bonadio Group, which now is the largest CPA firm in New York state (outside of Manhattan) and the 40th largest in the United States. Current annual revenue of approximately $120 million, with more than 750 employees. Each year since 1988, the Bonadio Group has been named a Rochester Top 100 growth company by the
Rochester Business Journal.
Mr. Bonadio is chairman of the CurAegis Audit Committee. He also serves on multiple private and public boards. In addition to other community activities, he has been active in many community organizations and not-for-profit boards. He has also served as a member of the Monroe County Jobs Creation Task Force and the St. John Fisher Alumni Activities Committee. He is a past chairman of the Board of Trustees of St. John Fisher College. Mr. Bonadio serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Paychex Inc. and is a member of that company’s Audit Committee; and he heads the audit committees of Royal Oak Realty Trust (formerly Buckingham Properties Group) and previously served as the head of the Audit Committee of Conceptus, Inc. a NASDAQ listed public entity.
Mr. Bonadio’s success and contributions within the community have been recognized by multiple awards, including: the prestigious Herbert W. Vanden Brul Award presented by the Rochester Institute of Technology in 2016; Managing Partner Elite by
Accounting Today
in 2013, the Rochester Business Hall of Fame in 2010, Businessperson of the Year in 2009 by the Rochester Chamber of Commerce, and in 1990, the Accounting Alumnus of the Year Award from St. John Fisher College. Recently, Mr. Bonadio was honored as a Rochester Business Journal business ICON.
Mr. Bonadio is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants. Mr. Bonadio has a B.B.A. degree in accounting and an Honorary Doctorate from St. John Fisher College. He was certified as a CPA in 1973.
William W. Destler
, age 72, has served as a director since September 2009. Dr. Destler was president of Rochester Institute of Technology from July 1, 2007 to June 30, 2017. He was the ninth president in the university's 182-year history. Prior to RIT, he was senior vice president for academic affairs and provost of the University of Maryland at College Park, where he rose from the ranks of research associate and assistant professor of electrical engineering to senior vice president and provost. At Maryland, he also served as electrical engineering department chair, dean of the A. James Clark School of Engineering, interim vice president for university advancement, vice president for research, and dean of the graduate school.
Dr. Destler is an international authority on high-power microwave sources and advanced accelerator concepts. He is best known for his pioneering work in the collective acceleration of heavy ions, achieving the highest energies to date by this method, and for his development of large orbit microwave devices, including large orbit gyrotrons and rotating beam free electron lasers. He has consulted for government agencies and private firms, received more than $40 million in grants and contracts, published more than 200 journal articles and book chapters, and presented many papers. Dr. Destler has also directed 18 masters and doctoral student theses and earned awards for his teaching. Dr. Destler earned a bachelor’s degree from Stevens Institute of Technology and a Ph.D. from Cornell University. Both degrees were in the field of applied physics.
Lance
Drummond,
age 64
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Lance Drummond has served as a director since December 2018. Mr. Drummond is currently a board member for Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) where he has served on the Audit Committee and Nominations and Governance Committee since 2015. He is a board member for United Community Bank Inc. since 2018, where he serves on the Risk Committee, Nominating and Governance Committee and Compensation Committee. He is also a member of the Public Board of Governors or the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).
Mr. Drummond earned a Bachelor’s degree in Business Management from Boston University, a Master’s degree in Business Administration from the Simon Business School at the University of Rochester and a Master’s degree in Management Science from MIT. Mr. Drummond received the MIT Sloan Fellowship in 1994 and the Aspen Institute’s Henry Crown Fellowship in 1998.
Mr. Drummond’s professional experience includes: twenty-six years at Eastman Kodak Company in a variety of technology and general management positions including as Chief Operating Officer for the Kodak’s professional products division, Bank of America where he served as Service and Fulfillment Operations executive for Global Technology and Operations and Digital Channels executive for the Consumer Banking Division. At Fiserv, he was Executive Vice President of Human Resources and Shared Services. Prior to retiring from TD Canada Trust, he was Executive Vice President of Operations and Technology.
John W. Heinricy
, age 71, has served as a director since November 2010. Since 2008, he has served as president of Heinrocket Inc., an international automotive consulting firm specializing in vehicle testing and development, high-performance driver training, race car development, vehicle forensics and expert witness. He is also on the board of the National Corvette Museum Motorsports Park and was elected to the National Corvette Museum Hall of Fame in 2014. From 2001 to 2008, Mr. Heinricy was the director of High-Performance Vehicle Operations in General Motor’s Performance Division, responsible for the planning, development, testing, and execution of all the performance versions of GM vehicles, from the Cobalt SS to the Cadillac CTS-V. Mr. Heinricy began his career at General Motors in 1970 and worked in various leadership positions, including vehicle development manager for the Corvette platform, the head of vehicle integration engineering for the Corvette, and chief engineer for the Camaro and Firebird.
Mr. Heinricy is also a legendary race-car driver. Mr. Heinricy has raced Corvettes, Camaros, and Pontiac Firebirds professionally since 1984, driving in over 240 professional races, including thirty-five 24-hour races, has won 4 Professional Driver Championships, 13 SCCA National Championships, has set 3 FIA world speed records and was a 2001 President’s Cup recipient. In the summer of 2010, he won six out of six SCCA races, driving a C-5 Corvette equipped with CurAegis’s IsoTorque® differential.
He earned his BSME degree from South Dakota School of Mines and Technology University and his MBA degree from Michigan State Advanced Management Program.
Thomas J.
Labus,
age 73, has served as a director since December 2012. Since 2012, Mr. Labus has served as the president of SCIRE Corporation, an engineering consulting firm specializing in hydraulics. From 1991 through 2012, Mr. Labus held an appointment as a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE) from which he recently retired. At MSOE, Mr. Labus was instrumental in developing a fluid power option in the mechanical engineering technology program, and in developing long-term industrial partnerships with companies such as Caterpillar and John Deere in the field of advanced fluid power technologies. Additionally, he taught in the Master of Engineering program at MSOE in the areas of mechanical engineering and fluid power.
Mr. Labus is nationally known as one of the foremost experts in hydraulics, with additional background in fluid mechanics, high-pressure engineering, actuation/controls systems, pneumatics, materials evaluation, and mechanical design and analysis. With over forty-eight years of experience, he has a wealth of knowledge on both the technology and the market in the hydraulics industry.
He earned his BS degree from Purdue University in Aeronautical Engineering and his MS degree from the University of Illinois in Theoretical and Applied Mechanics.
Charles N. Mills
, age 80, has served as a director since November 2010. Mr. Mills is the co-CEO, along with his son, Aaron, of a commercial real estate development firm he founded in 1973, whose primary business has been the development and construction of several highly successful corporate office parks and retail properties. Previously, he was a partner in a law firm he founded in 1967 of Mills, Schwartz and White which later merged to become Bernstein, Mills, Schwartz, White and Bernstein. Mr. Mills substantially concentrated on real estate syndication, venture capital, and securities law.
Mr. Mills has been active in several charitable organizations. Mr. Mills holds a BS degree in business administration from Syracuse University and a doctor of laws from The Cornell Law School.
E. Philip Saunders
, age 81, has served as a director since November 2010. Since 1990, Mr. Saunders has been the president and chief executive officer of Saunders Management Co., a firm that he owns. He also is chairman of the board of Genesee Regional Bank and Valley Fuels and serves on the board of directors for American Rock Salt, Lewis Tree, Paul Smiths, Passero Associates, Royal Oak Realty Trust, Western New York Energy, University of Rochester, Rochester Institute of Technology and the Young Entrepreneurs Academy.
Mr. Saunders’ previous business history includes owner/founder of Truckstops of America, owner/founder of Travel Ports of America, Inc. which later merged with TravelCenters of America, owner of W.W. Griffith Oil Corp., owner/founder of Sugar Creek Corp., owner of Econocar International, owner of Richardson Foods, chief executive officer of American Rock Salt, and senior vice president of Ryder Systems.
Mr. Saunders’ past services have included membership on the boards of directors of several organizations, including Rochester General Hospital, Excellus Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Security-Norstar Ryder Systems, and the Boy Scouts of America-Steuben Area Council. He has received numerous awards for his contributions to the community, including the Herbert W. Vanden Brul Entrepreneurial Award from the Rochester Institute of Technology’s College of Business (now known as the E. Philip Saunders College of Business), a Doctorate of Commercial Science from Paul Smiths College, the Teddi Award from Camp Good Days and Special Times and the Livingston County Citizen of the Year. He was elected to the Rochester Business Hall of Fame in 2004. Mr. Saunders is a member of Livonia Central School Athletic Hall of Fame and the National Association of Travel Centers Hall of Fame and was the recipient of the 2018 Rochester Business Journal Icon Award.
Information About Executive Officers
In addition to Richard A. Kaplan and Keith E. Gleasman, the Company’s other executive officer is Kathleen A. Browne, Chief Financial Officer and Secretary.
Relationships and Agreements
There are no family relationships among any of the directors or executive officers of the Company. There are no agreements or arrangements for the nomination or the appointment of any persons to the board of directors.
Kathleen A. Browne
, age 64, has served as chief financial officer, corporate secretary, and principal accounting officer since April 2015. From 2007 to 2015, Ms. Browne managed her own professional services and consulting business. Ms. Browne provided consulting services to the Company from April 2015 through August 2015 and joined the Company in September 2015. From 2007 to 2015 she served as chief financial officer in several development stage businesses including U-Vend, Inc. and NaturalNano, Inc. Ms. Browne also served as the Controller and Chief Accountant for Paychex (2001-2004) and W. R. Grace (1996-2001). Ms. Browne spent thirteen years in public accounting with PricewaterhouseCoopers. Ms. Browne is a CPA with a degree in accounting from St. John Fisher College in Rochester, NY.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
CurAegis believes it is important to disclose to you a summary of our major corporate governance practices. Some of these practices have been in place since the Company’s inception. Others have been adopted in response to legislative and regulatory changes.
We will continue to assess our corporate governance practices and refine them as are appropriate due to changed circumstances. We will share any future changes with you on an ongoing basis.
A.
Role of the Board of Directors---Board Leadership Structure
All corporate authority resides in the board of directors as the representative of the shareholders. The board has delegated authority to management to implement the Company’s mission of maximizing long-term shareholder value while adhering to the laws of the jurisdictions where we operate and at all times observing the highest ethical standards. With respect to its relationship to management, the board’s role is not to manage but to provide independent oversight of management’s decisions.
Management’s responsibilities include the development and implementation of the Company’s strategic plans, utilization of company resources, authorization of spending limits and the authority to hire consultants and employees and terminate their services. The board retains responsibility to recommend candidates to the shareholders for election to the board of directors. The board retains responsibility for selection and evaluation of the chief executive officer, determination of senior management compensation, approval of the annual budget, and assurance of adequate financial and accounting systems, procedures and controls. The board also provides advice and counsel to senior management on a regular basis.
All major decisions are considered by the board as a whole; however, the board has chosen to exercise certain of its responsibilities through committees of the board. The board has established three standing committees - an Audit Committee, a Nominating Committee, and a Governance and Compensation Committee.
Consistent with the Company’s view of our board of directors’ and management’s distinct but mutually supportive roles described above, the Company has chosen to separate the positions of board chairman and chief executive officer. The role of the board chairman is to set board agendas, priorities and procedures to facilitate the board in its review and oversight function. The role of the chief executive officer is to establish and implement the Company’s strategic direction, subject to board oversight.
Risk Oversight
The board oversees the Company’s risk management process through regular discussions of the Company’s credit, liquidity, operational, compliance and similar risks with senior management both during and outside of regularly scheduled board meetings. In addition, the Audit Committee assists the board by administering such oversight function with respect to risks relating to the Company’s accounting and financial controls.
Annual Meeting Attendance
It is the Company's policy that all directors attend the annual shareholders meeting. All persons who were directors on the date of last year's annual shareholders' meeting attended such meeting either in person or by telephonic conference, except for Thomas F. Bonadio, Thomas Labus, E. Philip Saunders, and Gary Siconolfi.
B.
Operation of the Board of Directors
During 2018, the Board of Directors met 3 times and took official action 13 times during the period from January 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018. During this period, our directors as a group participated in, either in person or by telephonic conference as permitted by the Company's Bylaws, approximately 92% of the total number of meetings held and/or actions taken during the period for which they were directors and 92% of the total number of meetings and/or actions taken by the committees of the board on which they served during the period for which were members of such committee(s).
Code of Ethics / Committee Charters
The board has adopted, implemented and published on the Company’s website (www.CurAegis.com) the Company’s code of business conduct which applies to all members of the Board, all executive and financial officers and all employees and consultants of the Company, its divisions and its subsidiaries. The code mandates that all Company personnel observe the highest standards of business and personal conduct in the performance of their duties and responsibilities, especially in dealing with other Company personnel, our shareholders, the general public, the business community, customers, suppliers, and governmental authorities. It addresses conflicts of interest, corporate opportunities, confidentiality, fair dealing, protection and proper use of corporate assets, compliance with laws, rules, and regulations and requires the reporting of any illegal or unethical behavior.
We require our employees, our officers, and directors to talk to supervisors, managers or other appropriate personnel to report and discuss any known or suspected unethical, illegal or criminal activity involving the Company and/or its employees. We have established a process which allows employees, officers, and directors to anonymously report any known or suspected violation of policies and rules set forth in the code of business conduct.
Waivers or amendments of the code's provisions are generally not permitted, may be granted only by the board of directors, and if granted, will be disclosed promptly by the Company by posting the waiver or amendment on the Company’s website and by filing a current report (Form 8-K) with the Securities and Exchange Commission. There were no waivers and/or amendments of the code during 2018.
The board has also adopted, implemented and posted on the Company’s website the Company’s financial integrity and compliance program. The program mandates that the Company's results of operations and financial position must be recorded in accordance with the requirements of law and generally accepted accounting principles and that all books, records, and accounts must be maintained in reasonable detail so that they accurately and fairly reflect the business transactions and disposition of assets of the Company. The written policy requires all personnel responsible for the preparation of financial information to ensure that the Company's financial policies and internal control procedures are followed and holds each person involved in creating, processing and recording financial information accountable for the integrity of the financial reporting process. The program establishes a network for the receipt, retention, and treatment of complaints received by the Company regarding accounting, internal accounting controls or auditing matters and provides for the submission (including the confidential anonymous submission) by Company personnel of any concerns they might have regarding questionable accounting or auditing practices.
The board adopted an Audit Committee charter delineating the composition and the responsibilities of the Audit Committee which became effective on April 17, 2000. The charter was revised by the board effective January 15, 2003 and July 21, 2011. The charter is on the Company's website.
On November 9, 2004, the board adopted a Nominating Committee charter delineating the composition and responsibilities of the Nominating Committee. The Nominating Committee charter is on the Company’s website.
Committees of the Board
The Audit Committee
Members:
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Thomas F. Bonadio, chairman
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Number of Meetings in 2018: 4
The primary function of the Audit Committee as stated in its charter is to assist the board of directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities relating to: (i) the integrity of the Company’s financial statements; (ii) the Company’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements, including requirements for implementing effective internal controls over financial reporting and programs to detect fraud; (iii) the independent auditor’s qualifications and independence; and (iv) the performance of the Company’s independent auditor, who shall be ultimately accountable and report to the Committee.
The Committee shall prepare the report required by the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission to be included in the Company’s annual proxy statement.
In addition to the powers and responsibilities expressly delegated to the Committee pursuant to the Audit Committee charter, the Committee is empowered to exercise any other powers and carry out any other responsibilities delegated to it by the board of directors from time to time consistent with the Company’s bylaws. While acting within the scope of the powers and responsibilities specified in the charter and delegated to it by the board, the Committee has and may exercise all the powers and authority of the board.
All members of the Audit Committee are "independent" as independence is defined in Nasdaq Marketplace Rule 4200(a)(15) and as defined by Rule 10A-3(b)(1)(ii) promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Thomas F. Bonadio has been appointed the Audit Committee's "financial expert" as defined by the Audit Committee's charter in accordance with rules promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Nominating Committee
Members:
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Gary A. Siconolfi, chairman
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Number of Meetings in 2018: 1
As specified in its charter, the purpose of the Nominating Committee is to identify, consider and recommend qualified individuals to the Board for election as directors, including the slate of directors that the board proposes for election by shareholders at the annual meeting. The charter sets forth the following policy and procedures with respect to the consideration of any director candidates recommended by security holders.
Shareholders wishing to directly nominate candidates for election to the board of directors at an annual meeting must do so by giving notice in writing to the chairman of the Nominating Committee, CurAegis Technologies, Inc., 1999 Mount Read Blvd., Bldg. 3, Rochester, New York 14615. The notice with respect to any annual meeting must be delivered to the chairman not less than 120 days prior to the first anniversary of the preceding year's annual meeting. The notice shall set forth (a) the name and address of the shareholder who intends to make the nomination; (b) the name, age, business address and residence address of each nominee; (c) the principal occupation or employment of each nominee; (d) the class and number of shares of CurAegis securities which are beneficially owned by each nominee and by the nominating shareholder; (e) any other information concerning the nominee that must be disclosed in nominee and proxy solicitations pursuant to Regulation 14A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and (f) the executed consent of each nominee to serve as a director of CurAegis if elected.
Nominations submitted in accordance with the foregoing procedure will be considered and voted upon by the Nominating Committee. Any shareholder nominee recommended by the Committee and proposed by the board for election at the next annual meeting of shareholders shall be included in the Company's proxy statement for such annual meeting.
The Nominating Committee charter also sets forth the qualifications and a specific description of skills that members of the board of the Company should possess, regardless of by whom nominated.
In recommending candidates, the Committee shall consider the candidates' mix of skills, experience with businesses and other organizations of comparable size, reputation, background and time availability (in light of anticipated needs), the interplay of the candidate's experience with the experience of other board members, the extent to which the candidate would be a desirable addition to the board and any committees of the board and any other factors the Committee deems appropriate. At a minimum, the Committee shall address the following skill sets in evaluating director candidates: accounting or finance, business or management experience, industry knowledge, customer base experience or perspective, international marketing, and business experience, strategic planning and leadership experience.
Directors should possess the highest personal and professional ethics, integrity and values, and be committed to representing the long-term interest of the shareholders. They must also have an inquisitive and objective perspective, practical wisdom and mature judgment. The board should represent diverse experience at policy-making levels in business, government, education and technology, and in areas that are relevant to the Company's worldwide activities.
Directors must be willing to devote sufficient time to carrying out their duties and responsibilities effectively and should be committed to serving on the board for an extended period of time. Directors should consider offering their resignation in the event that significant change in their personal circumstances, including their health, family responsibilities, or a change in their principal job responsibilities, would preclude them from devoting sufficient time to carrying out their responsibilities effectively.
The board does not believe that arbitrary term limits on director service are appropriate, nor does it believe that directors should expect to be re-nominated automatically. The contribution of each member as a member of a committee or the board shall be evaluated each year by the Committee before his re-nomination is recommended to the board.
All members of the Nominating Committee are “independent” as defined in Rule 10A-3(b)(1)(ii) promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission and as defined by Nasdaq Marketplace Rule 4200(a)(15).
The Governance and Compensation Committee
Members:
William W. Destler, chairman
John W. Heinricy
Charles N. Mills
Number of Meetings in 2018: none
The purpose of the Governance and Compensation Committee is to monitor the effectiveness of management’s policies and decisions including the execution of the Company's strategies in order to ensure that the Company represents the shareholders' interests, including optimizing long term as well as short term financial returns. The Committee develops and recommends to the board corporate governance principles and guidelines and reviews the charter and composition of each committee of the board and makes recommendations to the board for the adoption of or revisions to committee charters, the creation of additional committees or the elimination of committees.
The Committee also:
(1) establishes and reviews the overall executive compensation philosophy and strategy of the Company and oversees the Company’s various compensation programs and plans;
(2) reviews on its own and taking into account shareholder advice on executive compensation policies, makes recommendations to the board of directors on employment and business consultants compensation policies, forms and levels of annual compensation, including specifically, the performance and level of annual compensation of the executive officers and top management personnel of the Company;
(3) specifically reviews the annual compensation of the chief executive officer in the light of established goals and objectives and based upon such evaluation and taking into consideration shareholder advice on such compensation, makes specific recommendations to the board regarding such compensation;
(4) reviews and makes recommendations to the board on the operation, performance, and administration of the Company's employee benefit plans.
All members of the Committee are independent within the meaning of Rule 10A-3(b)(1)(ii) promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission and Nasdaq Marketplace Rule 4200(a)(15).
C.
Shareholder Communications
We encourage all shareholders to communicate with management and with our directors, including our independent directors. Any shareholder wishing to communicate directly with management should e-mail or address regular mail to:
Officer
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Mailing Address
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E-mail
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Richard A. Kaplan,
Chief Executive Officer
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CurAegis Technologies, Inc.
1999 Mt. Read Blvd., Bldg. 3
Rochester, New York 14615
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dickk@CurAegis.com
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Keith E. Gleasman,
President
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CurAegis Technologies, Inc.
1999 Mt. Read Blvd., Bldg. 3
Rochester, New York 14615
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kgleasman@CurAegis.com
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Kathleen A. Browne
Chief Financial Officer
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CurAegis Technologies, Inc.
1999 Mt. Read Blvd., Bldg. 3
Rochester, New York 14615
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kbrowne@CurAegis.com
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Any shareholder wishing to communicate directly with any of our independent directors should e-mail him as follows:
Thomas F. Bonadio
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tbonadio@bonadio.com
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William W. Destler
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wwdpro@rit.edu
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Lance Drummond
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Lance.drummond@outlook.com
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John W. Heinricy
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heinrocket@gmail.com
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Thomas J. Labus
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tjlabus@gmail.com
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Charles N. Mills
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charlesnmills@gmail.com
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E. Philip Saunders
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PhilS@saundersmgt.com
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Gary A. Siconolfi
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garysic1951@icloud.com
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Regular mail may be addressed to:
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CurAegis Independent Directors
c/o CurAegis, Inc.
1999 Mt. Read Blvd., Bldg. 3
Rochester, New York 14615
Attention: Kathleen A. Browne
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Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance
Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires our directors, our executive officers and persons who own more than 10% of our common stock to file initial reports of ownership (Form 3) and reports of changes in ownership of our common stock (Forms 4 and 5) with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These persons are required by SEC regulations to furnish us with copies of all section 16(a) reports they file.
Based upon Company records and other information, we believe that for the year ended December 31, 2018, and for the period January 1, 2019, through April 29, 2019, all directors and executive officers complied with all applicable Section 16(a) filing requirements.