(ALLEGHENY TECHNOLOGIES LOGO)
 
1000 Six PPG Place
Pittsburgh, PA 15222-5479
 
March 19, 2007
 
To our Stockholders:
 
We are pleased to invite you to attend the 2007 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The meeting will be held at 11:00 a.m., Eastern Time, on Wednesday, May 2, 2007, in the Grand Ballroom, 17th Floor, Omni William Penn Hotel, 530 William Penn Place, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15219. The location is accessible to disabled persons.
 
This booklet includes the notice of meeting as well as the Company’s Proxy Statement. Enclosed with this booklet are the following:
 
•  Proxy or voting instruction card (including instructions for telephone and Internet voting), and
 
•  Proxy or voting instruction card return envelope (postage paid if mailed in the U.S.)
 
A copy of the Company’s Annual Report for the year 2006 is also enclosed.
 
Your Board of Directors recommends that you vote:
 
  (1)  FOR the election of the three nominees named in this Proxy Statement (Item A);
 
  (2)  FOR approval of the 2007 Incentive Plan (Item B);
 
  (3)  FOR the ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP to serve as the Company’s independent auditors for 2007 (Item C); and
 
  (4)  AGAINST a stockholder proposal regarding sustainability reporting (Item D).
 
This Proxy Statement also outlines many of the corporate governance practices at ATI, discusses our compensation practices and philosophy, and describes the Audit Committee’s recommendation to the Board regarding our 2006 financial statements. We encourage you to read these materials carefully.
 
We urge you to vote promptly, whether or not you expect to attend the meeting.
 
If you are a stockholder of record and plan to attend the meeting, please mark the appropriate box on the proxy card, or enter the appropriate information by telephone or Internet, so that we can send your admission ticket to you before the meeting.
 
We look forward to seeing as many of you as possible at the 2007 Annual Meeting.
 
Sincerely,
 
(-S- L. PATRICK HASSEY)
L. Patrick Hassey
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer


ALLEGHENY TECHNOLOGIES INCORPORATED
 
Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders
 
Meeting Date: Wednesday, May 2, 2007
 
Time: 11:00 a.m., Eastern Time
 
Place: Grand Ballroom
17th Floor
Omni William Penn Hotel
530 William Penn Place
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15219
 
Record Date: March 5, 2007
 
Agenda
 
1) Election of three directors;
 
2) Approval of the 2007 Incentive Plan;
 
3) Ratification of the appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as independent auditors for 2007;
 
4) Vote on stockholder proposal regarding sustainability reporting; and
 
5) Transaction of any other business properly brought before the meeting.
 
Stockholder List
 
A list of stockholders entitled to vote will be available during business hours for 10 days prior to the meeting at the Company’s executive offices, 1000 Six PPG Place, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222-5479, for examination by any stockholder for any legally valid purpose.
 
Admission to the Meeting
 
Holders of Allegheny Technologies stock or their authorized representatives by proxy may attend the meeting. If you are a stockholder of record and you plan to attend the meeting, you may obtain an admission ticket from us by mail by checking the box on the proxy card indicating your planned attendance and returning the completed proxy card promptly, or by entering the appropriate information by telephone or the Internet. If your shares are held through an intermediary such as a broker or a bank, you should present proof of your ownership at the meeting. Proof of ownership could include a proxy card from your bank or broker or a copy of your account statement. The approximate date of the mailing of this Proxy Statement and proxy card, as well as a copy of ATI’s 2006 Annual Report, is March 19, 2007. For further information about Allegheny Technologies, please visit our web site at www.alleghenytechnologies.com .
 
On behalf of the Board of Directors:
 
-S- JON D. WALTON
Jon D. Walton
Corporate Secretary
 
Dated: March 19, 2007


 

 
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YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT
Please vote as soon as possible. You can help the Company reduce expenses by voting your shares by telephone or Internet; your proxy card or voting instruction card contains the instructions. Or, complete, sign and date your proxy card or voting instruction card and return it as soon as possible in the enclosed postage-paid envelope.
 


PROXY STATEMENT FOR
2007 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
 
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
 
You can help the Company save money by electing to receive future proxy statements and annual reports over the Internet instead of by mail. See question 11 below.
 
1.  Who is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting?
 
If you held shares of Allegheny Technologies Incorporated (“ATI” or the “Company”) common stock, par value $0.10 per share (“Common Stock”) at the close of business on March 5, 2007, you may vote at the annual meeting. On that day, 102,118,798 shares of our Common Stock were outstanding. Each share is entitled to one vote. Stockholders do not have cumulative voting rights.
 
In order to vote, you must either designate a proxy to vote on your behalf or attend the meeting and vote your shares in person. The Board of Directors (“Board”) requests your proxy so that your shares will count toward a quorum and be voted at the meeting.
 
2.  How do I cast my vote?
 
There are four different ways you may cast your vote. You may vote by:
 
•   telephone, using the toll-free number listed on each proxy or voting instruction card;
 
•   the Internet, at the address provided on each proxy or voting instruction card;
 
•   marking, signing, dating and mailing each proxy or voting instruction card and returning it in the envelope provided (If you return your signed proxy card but do not mark the boxes showing how you wish to vote, your shares will be voted FOR the election of the three nominees for director named in this Proxy Statement, FOR approval of the 2007 Incentive Plan, FOR the ratification of the appointment of the independent auditors, and AGAINST the stockholder proposal regarding sustainability reporting); or
 
•   attending the meeting and voting your shares in person, if you are a “stockholder of record” (that is, your shares are registered directly in your name on the Company’s books and not held in “street name” through a broker, bank or other nominee).
 
If you are a stockholder of record and wish to vote by telephone or electronically through the Internet, follow the instructions provided on the proxy card. You will need to use the individual control number that is printed on your proxy card in order to authenticate your ownership.
 
The deadline for voting by telephone or the Internet is 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on May 1, 2007.
 
If your shares are held in “street name” (that is, they are held in the name of broker, bank or other nominee), or if your shares are held in one of the Company’s savings or retirement plans, you will receive instructions with your materials that you must follow in order to have your shares voted. For voting procedures for shares held in the Company’s savings or retirement plans, see question 6 below.
 
3.  How do I revoke or change my vote?
 
You may revoke your proxy or change your vote at any time before it is voted at the meeting by:
 
•   notifying the Corporate Secretary at the Company’s executive office;
 
•   transmitting a proxy dated later than your prior proxy either by mail, telephone or Internet; or
 
•   attending the annual meeting and voting in person or by proxy (except for shares held in “street name” through a broker, bank or other nominee, or in the Company’s savings or retirement plans).
 
The latest-dated, timely, properly completed proxy that you submit, whether by mail, telephone or the Internet, will count as your vote. If a vote has been recorded for your shares and you submit a proxy card that is not properly signed and dated, the previously recorded vote will stand.


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4.  What shares are included on the proxy or voting instruction card?
 
The shares on your proxy or voting instruction card represent those shares registered directly in your name, those held on account in the Company’s dividend reinvestment plan and shares held in the Company’s savings and retirement plans. If you do not cast your vote, your shares (except those held in the Company’s savings and retirement plans) will not be voted. See question 6 for an explanation of the voting procedures for shares in the Company’s savings and retirement plans.
 
5.  What does it mean if I get more than one proxy or voting instruction card?
 
If your shares are registered differently and are in more than one account, you will receive more than one card. Please complete and return all of the proxy or voting instruction cards you receive (or vote by telephone or the Internet all of the shares on each of the proxy or voting instruction cards you receive) in order to ensure that all of your shares are voted.
 
6.  How are shares that I hold in a Company savings or retirement plan voted?
 
If you hold ATI Common Stock in one of the Company’s savings or retirement plans, you may tell the plan trustee how to vote the shares of Common Stock allocated to your account. You may either sign and return the voting instruction card provided by the plan trustee or transmit your instructions by telephone or the Internet. If you do not transmit instructions, your plan shares will be voted as the plan administrator directs or as otherwise provided in the plan.
 
The deadline for voting by telephone or the Internet is 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on April 27, 2007.
 
7.  How are shares held by a broker, bank or other nominee voted?
 
If you hold your shares of ATI Common Stock in “street name” through a broker, bank or other nominee account, you are a “beneficial owner” of the shares. In order to vote your shares, you must give voting instructions to your broker, bank or other intermediary who is the “nominee holder” of your shares. The Company asks brokers, banks and other nominee holders to obtain voting instructions from the beneficial owners of shares that are registered in the nominee’s name. Proxies that are transmitted by nominee holders on behalf of beneficial owners will count toward a quorum and will be voted as instructed by the nominee holder.
 
8.  What is a quorum?
 
A majority of the outstanding shares, present or represented by a proxy, constitutes a quorum. There must be a quorum for the Annual Meeting to be held. You are part of the quorum if you have voted by proxy or voting instruction card. Abstentions, broker non-votes and votes withheld from director nominees count as “shares present” at the meeting for purposes of determining a quorum.
 
9.  What is the required vote for a proposal to pass?
 
The director nominees receiving the highest number of votes will be elected to fill the seats on the Board. Only votes “for” or “against” affect the outcome. Checking the box on the proxy card that withholds authority to vote for a nominee is the equivalent of abstaining. Abstentions are not counted for the purpose of election of directors.
 
With respect to each of the proposals other than the election of directors (Items B-D), stockholders may vote in favor of the proposal or against the proposal, or abstain from voting. The affirmative vote of the majority of shares present in person or by proxy and entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting is required for approval of those proposals. In addition, in the case of the 2007 Incentive Plan (Item B), the number of votes cast for approval of the Plan must constitute a majority of the votes entitled to be cast at the meeting. A stockholder who signs and submits a ballot or proxy is “present,” so an abstention will have the same effect as a vote against those proposals (Items B-D).
 
Under New York Stock Exchange rules, if your broker holds your shares in its name as a nominee, the broker is permitted to vote your shares on the election of directors (Item A) and on the ratification of the appointment of the independent auditors (Item C) even if it does not receive voting instructions from you. Items B and D of this Proxy Statement are “non-


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discretionary,” meaning that brokers who hold shares for the accounts of their clients and who have not received instructions from their clients do not have discretion to vote on those items. When a broker votes a client’s shares on some but not all of the proposals at the Annual Meeting, the missing votes are referred to as “broker non-votes.” Those shares will be included in determining the presence of a quorum at the Annual Meeting but are not considered “present” for purposes of voting on the non-discretionary items. Specifically in the case of the proposal to approve the 2007 Incentive Plan, a broker non-vote has the effect of a vote against the proposal because approval requires a majority of the votes entitled to be cast. Otherwise, broker non-votes will have no effect on the results.
 
10.  Is my vote confidential?
 
The Company maintains a policy of keeping stockholder votes confidential.
 
11.  Can I, in the future, receive my proxy statement and annual report over the Internet?
 
Stockholders can elect to view future Company proxy statements and annual reports over the Internet instead of receiving paper copies in the mail and thus can save the Company the cost of producing and mailing these documents. Costs normally associated with electronic access, such as usage and telephonic charges, will be borne by you.
 
If you are a “stockholder of record” and you choose to vote over the Internet, you can choose to receive future annual reports and proxy statements electronically by following the prompt. If you hold your Company stock in “street name” (such as through a broker, bank or other nominee account), check the information provided by your nominee for instructions on how to elect to view future proxy statements and annual reports over the Internet.
 
Stockholders who choose to view future proxy statements and annual reports over the Internet will receive instructions containing the Internet address for those materials, as well as voting instructions, approximately six weeks before future meetings.
 
If you enroll to view the Company’s future annual reports and proxy statements electronically and vote over the Internet, your enrollment will remain in effect for all future stockholders’ meetings unless you cancel it. To cancel, stockholders of record should access www.melloninvestor.com/isd and follow the instructions to cancel your enrollment. You should retain your control number appearing on your enclosed proxy or voting instruction card. If you hold your Company stock in “street name,” check the information provided by your nominee holder for instructions on how to cancel your enrollment.
 
If at any time you would like to receive a paper copy of the annual report or proxy statement, please write to the Corporate Secretary, Allegheny Technologies Incorporated, 1000 Six PPG Place, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222-5479.

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ATI CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AT A GLANCE
 
This list provides some highlights from the Allegheny Technologies’ corporate governance program. You can find details about these and other corporate governance policies and practices in the following pages of the Proxy Statement and in the “Our Corporate Governance” section of the “About Us” page of our web site at www.alleghenytechnologies.com.   
 
•   Over 75% of our directors are independent. Mr. Hassey is the only ATI officer on the Board and Mr. Bozzone, our former Chairman, is the only other non-independent director.
 
•   Non-management directors meet in regularly scheduled executive sessions without management; independent directors also meet in regularly scheduled executive sessions.
 
•   Stockholders can communicate with the non-management directors.
 
•   The Audit Committee, Nominating and Governance Committee, and Personnel and Compensation Committee are composed entirely of independent directors.
 
•   All standing committees have a written charter that is reviewed and reassessed annually and is posted on our web site.
 
•   The Chair of the Audit Committee has been designated as an “audit committee financial expert.”
 
•   Stockholders annually ratify the Audit Committee’s selection of independent auditors.
 
•   Our internal audit function reports directly to the Audit Committee.
 
•   Our Corporate Governance Guidelines have been adopted and are disclosed on our web site.
 
•   We have an annual self-evaluation process for the Board and each standing committee.
 
•   Our Board evaluates individual directors whose terms are nearing expiration but who may be proposed for re-election.
 
•   Our Corporate Guidelines for Business Conduct and Ethics for directors, officers, and employees are disclosed on our web site.
 
•   Our Nominating and Governance Committee will consider director candidates recommended by stockholders.
 
•   We have adopted stock ownership guidelines for executive officers.
 
•   We have stock ownership guidelines for non-management directors.
 
•   We provide confidential stockholder voting.


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OUR CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
 
Corporate Governance Guidelines
 
ATI’s Board of Directors has adopted Corporate Governance Guidelines, which are designed to assist the Board in the exercise of its duties and responsibilities to the Company. They reflect the Board’s commitment to monitor the effectiveness of decision making at the Board and management level, with a view to achieving ATI’s strategic objectives. They are subject to modification by the Board from time to time.
 
You can find the Company’s Corporate Governance Guidelines on our web site at www.alleghenytechnologies.com , by first clicking “About Us” and then “Our Corporate Governance.” Copies will also be mailed to stockholders on written request directed to the Corporate Secretary, Allegheny Technologies Incorporated, 1000 Six PPG Place, Pittsburgh, PA 15222-5479.
 
Number and Independence of Directors
 
The Board of Directors determines the number of directors. The Board currently consists of ten members: L. Patrick Hassey (Chairman), H. Kent Bowen, Robert P. Bozzone, Diane C. Creel, James C. Diggs, Michael J. Joyce, W. Craig McClelland, James E. Rohr, Louis J. Thomas and John D. Turner.
 
In accordance with the Corporate Governance Guidelines, at least 75% of the Company’s directors are, and at least a substantial majority of its directors will be, “independent” under the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) definition of independence and the Company’s categorical Board independence standards, which are set forth in the Corporate Governance Guidelines and attached to this Proxy Statement as Appendix A.   A director is “independent” only if the director is a non-management director and, in the Board’s judgment, does not have a material relationship with the Company or its management.
 
In addition to L. Patrick Hassey, the current Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company, the Board considers Robert P. Bozzone, a former Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Company and whose son-in-law is the President of ATI Allegheny Ludlum, to be a management director.
 
The Board, at its February 22, 2007 meeting, affirmatively determined that the remaining eight of the Company’s current directors, H. Kent Bowen, Diane C. Creel, James C. Diggs, Michael J. Joyce, W. Craig McClelland, James E. Rohr, Louis J. Thomas and John D. Turner, are independent in accordance with the foregoing standards. Seven of the Company’s directors have no relationships with the Company other than as directors and stockholders of the Company. One of the Company’s directors, James E. Rohr, is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. (“PNC”). The Company has a $325 million secured revolving credit facility with a syndicate of 14 financial institutions, including PNC Bank, National Association, a subsidiary of PNC, as lender and administrative and collateral agent. The Company pays fees to PNC Bank under the terms of this facility. The Company also invests in three money market funds managed by BlackRock, Inc. (“BlackRock”). PNC currently holds approximately 34% of the outstanding common stock of BlackRock. During 2006, the Company paid fees to PNC and its affiliates representing a de minimis portion of both the Company’s revenues and PNC’s revenues, and therefore, all amounts were substantially less than the materiality threshold under NYSE rules. Mr. Rohr’s compensation is not affected by the fees that the Company pays to PNC. The Board has determined that (A) the transactions between the Company and PNC (i) are commercial transactions carried out at arm’s length in the ordinary course of business, (ii) are not material to PNC or Mr. Rohr, (iii) do not and would not potentially influence Mr. Rohr’s objectivity as a member of the Company’s Board of Directors in a manner that would have a meaningful impact on his ability to satisfy requisite fiduciary standards on behalf of the Company and its stockholders, and (iv) do not preclude a determination that Mr. Rohr’s relationship with the Company in his capacity as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of PNC is immaterial under NYSE rules, and (B) Mr. Rohr is an independent director under NYSE existing standards and the


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Company’s categorical Board independence standards.
 
The Board has also determined that each member of the Audit Committee satisfies the enhanced standards of independence applicable to Audit Committee members under NYSE listing standards and the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”).
 
Director Terms
 
The directors are divided into three classes and the directors in each class generally serve for a three-year term unless the director is unable to serve due to death, retirement or disability. The term of one class of directors expires each year at the annual meeting of stockholders. The Board may fill a vacancy by electing a new director to the same class as the director being replaced. The Board may also create a new director position in any class and elect a director to hold the newly created position. It is expected that new directors appointed to the Board to fill vacancies will stand for election by the stockholders at the next annual meeting.
 
Committees of the Board of Directors
 
Standing Committees
 
The Board of Directors has the following standing committees: Audit Committee, Finance Committee, Nominating and Governance Committee, Personnel and Compensation Committee, and Technology Committee. In 2006, the Board of Directors determined that there was no need to have an Executive Committee and therefore disbanded the Executive Committee.
 
Only independent directors, as independence is determined by NYSE rules, are permitted to serve on the Audit Committee, the Nominating and Governance Committee, and the Personnel and Compensation Committee. Audit Committee members must meet an additional independence standard under SEC rules; specifically, Audit Committee members may not receive any compensation from the Company other than their directors’ compensation.
 
Each committee has a written charter that describes its responsibilities. Each of the Audit Committee, the Nominating and Governance Committee and the Personnel and Compensation Committee has the authority, as it deems appropriate, to independently engage outside legal, accounting or other advisors or consultants. In addition, each committee annually conducts a review and evaluation of its performance and reviews and reassesses its charter. You can find the current charters of each committee on our web site at www.alleghenytechnologies.com by first clicking “About Us,” then clicking “Our Corporate Governance” and then clicking “Committee Charters.” The current charters will also be mailed to stockholders upon written request.
 
Audit Committee
 
The current members of the Audit Committee are Michael J. Joyce (Chairman), Diane C. Creel, James C. Diggs, Louis J. Thomas and John D. Turner. The Board of Directors has determined that these committee members have no financial or personal ties to the Company (other than director compensation and equity ownership as described in this Proxy Statement) and that they meet the NYSE and SEC standards for independence. The Board of Directors has also determined that Michael J. Joyce meets the SEC criteria of an “audit committee financial expert” and meets the NYSE standard of having accounting or related financial management expertise. Mr. Joyce has over 35 years of accounting, auditing and consulting experience, having most recently served as New England Managing Partner of Deloitte & Touche USA LLP prior to his retirement in May 2004.
 
The Audit Committee assists the Board in its oversight of the integrity of the Company’s financial statements, compliance with legal and regulatory requirements, the qualifications and independence of the Company’s independent auditors, and the performance of the Company’s internal audit function and independent auditors. The Committee has the authority and responsibility for the appointment, retention, compensation and oversight of ATI’s independent auditors, including pre-approval of all audit and non-audit services to be performed by the independent auditors. The independent auditors and the internal auditors have full access to the Committee and meet with the Committee with, and on a routine basis without, management being present, to discuss all appropriate matters.
 
The Audit Committee is also responsible for reviewing, approving and ratifying related party

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transactions. For more information, see the “Certain Transactions” section of this Proxy Statement.
 
The Audit Committee Report appears on page 26 of this Proxy Statement.
 
Finance Committee
 
The Finance Committee makes recommendations and provides guidance to the Board regarding major financial policies of the Company. It also serves as named fiduciary of the employee benefit plans maintained by the Company.
 
Nominating and Governance Committee
 
The Nominating and Governance Committee is responsible for overseeing corporate governance matters. It oversees the annual evaluation of the Company’s Board and its committees. It also recommends to the Board individuals to be nominated as directors, which process includes evaluation of new candidates as well as an individual evaluation of current directors who are being considered for re-election. In addition, this Committee is responsible for administering ATI’s director compensation program. The Committee also performs other duties as are described in the Corporate Governance Guidelines.
 
Personnel and Compensation Committee
 
The Personnel and Compensation Committee, on behalf of the Board of Directors, establishes and annually reassesses the executive compensation program and the Company’s philosophy on executive compensation, which is more fully discussed in the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section of this Proxy Statement.
 
One of the duties of the Committee is to oversee Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) and executive officer compensation. The Personnel and Compensation Committee reviews and approves corporate goals and objectives relevant to CEO and executive officer compensation, evaluates the CEO’s performance in light of those goals and objectives, and determines and approves the CEO’s compensation level (either as a Committee or together with the other independent directors, as directed by the Board) based on this evaluation. The Committee also reviews and approves non-CEO executive officer compensation, and makes recommendations to the Board with respect to incentive compensation plans and equity-based plans that require Board approval. In addition, the Personnel and Compensation Committee administers ATI’s incentive compensation plans. The Committee may delegate authority to subcommittees, when appropriate. For other executives, the Committee reviews and approves recommendations from management within plan parameters. However, the Committee may not delegate any authority under those plans for matters affecting the compensation and benefits of the executive officers.
 
The Personnel and Compensation Committee, under the terms of its charter, has the sole authority to retain, approve fees and other terms for, and terminate any compensation consultant used to assist the committee in the evaluation of the Chief Executive Officer or other executive compensation. The Committee may also obtain advice and assistance from internal or external legal, accounting or other advisors. Each year, the Committee retains a compensation consultant; for years 2005 and 2006, the Committee retained Mercer Human Resources Consulting (“Mercer”), an outside compensation and executive benefits consulting firm. Mercer was retained to assist the Committee to review market conditions and peer company practices and to benchmark the Company’s executive compensation programs against those parameters. Mercer performed market analyses of peer group companies and the general market for executive talent, and made recommendations to the Committee as to the form of and incentive opportunities for executive compensation.
 
Mercer and the Company’s legal advisors periodically attend the meetings of the Committee. For portions of those meetings, the Chief Executive Officer and the Executive Vice President of Human Resources, Chief Legal and Compliance Officer, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary also attend. The Chief Executive Officer expresses his views on executive compensation to the Committee. Please see the “Compensation Discussion and Analysis” section of this Proxy Statement for more discussion about executive officer compensation.
 
Each of the members of the Personnel and Compensation Committee is a “non-employee director” of the Company as defined under Rule 16b-3 of the Securities Exchange Act of

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1934 and each member is also an “outside director” for the purposes of the corporate compensation provisions contained in Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code.
 
The Compensation Committee Report appears on page 30 of this Proxy Statement.
 
Technology Committee
 
The Technology Committee reviews changing technologies and evaluates how they affect the Company and its technical capabilities.
 
Board and Committee Membership — Director Attendance at Meetings
 
During 2006, the Board of Directors held seven meetings. The Board’s committees consisted of the five standing committees already described and the Executive Committee, which did not meet and was disbanded in 2006. In 2006, all directors attended at least 75% of the total Board meetings and meetings of Board committees of which they were members, except for Mr. Bozzone, who attended 71% of these meetings.
 
The non-management directors meet separately from the other directors in regularly scheduled executive sessions without members of management (except to the extent that the non-management directors request the attendance of a member of management). When, as is currently the case, the Chairman of the Board is a management director, or if the Chairman would otherwise so choose, the position of Chair of the meetings of the non-management directors rotates on a per meeting basis in the order specified in the Corporate Governance Guidelines among the non-management Chairs of the Board’s committees. If not a member of management, the Chairman of the Board would serve as Chair of these meetings.
 
We typically schedule a Board meeting in conjunction with our annual meeting of stockholders and expect that our directors will attend absent good reason, such as a scheduling conflict. In 2006, nine of the ten directors attended our annual meeting of stockholders.
 
The table below identifies the directors that the Board has determined to be independent and provides information with respect to Board committee memberships. The table also sets forth the number of meetings held by each Board committee in 2006.
                                                             
                        Nominating
    Personnel
     
                        and
    and
     
 Director     Independent     Audit     Finance     Governance     Compensation     Technology 
H. K. Bowen
      X                             X                   X *
R. P. Bozzone
                          X                             X  
D. C. Creel
      X         X         X *       X         X            
J. C. Diggs
      X         X         X         X                      
L. P. Hassey
                                                           
M. J. Joyce
      X         X *                                        
W. C. McClelland
      X                             X *       X         X  
J. E. Rohr
      X                                       X *          
L. T. Thomas
      X         X