April 6, 2005

Securities and Exchange Commission

Dear Securities and Exchange Commission,

I am writing to urge the Securities and Exchange Commission to act on its proposed rule making on executive compensation disclosure. Too often executives are richly rewarded even when their companies' performance is below par. Without better disclosure, shareholders, employees and the general public cannot evaluate whether executive pay packages are unjustly enriching executives at shareholder cost or providing fair compensation.

The newly proposed rules will make this crucial information more accessible to shareholders and the public. The new requirements to disclose total compensation figures, pensions and detailed compensation breakdowns will make it clear exactly how much top executives are earning and why.

I believe that CEO pay should be set by independent directors. Under the proposed rule, a director could secretly do $120,000 in business with a company, an amount that is more than four times the average worker's annual pay of $27,460. Shareholders should be told if directors have potential conflicts of interest, no matter what the amount.

I also urge the SEC to require that companies disclose pay-for-performance data. In order for investors to understand how pay and performance match up, companies need to explain more clearly what level of performance is necessary for a particular level of pay. I urge the SEC to require companies to disclose both the performance criteria and the performance targets they use when setting executive pay.

Pat Russo should be number 1 on your list. She gets enormous amounts of money and stock while in order to make the company look good she made it so that retired management emplotees now pay for the majority of their health insurance, which was supposed to be part of their retirement package. I personally pay $870 a month from my retirement money which leaves $950 a month to live on since Lucent stock took a dive in 2001 and all management lost their 401K plans, thanks to mismanagement from the CEO and Vice presidents of the company. Something needs to be done about her, wait and see how much she spends on her 1st class tickets back and forth to Paris.

Sincerely,

Jim Riggs
7846 Newcastle Ave.
Burbank, Illinois 60459