SCHEDULE
14A INFORMATION
PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(A)
OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [ ]
Check the Appropriate Box:
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Preliminary Proxy Statement
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
14a-6(e)(2))
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[X]
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Definitive Proxy Statement
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Definitive Additional Materials
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[ ]
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Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule
14a-12
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ALLSPRING UTILITIES AND HIGH INCOME FUND
(Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
Payment of filing fee (check the appropriate
box):
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[X]
[ ]
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No fee required.
Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and
0-11.
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(a) Title of each class of securities to which transaction
applies:
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(b) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction
applies:
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(c) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction
computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount
on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was
determined):
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(d) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
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(e) Total fee paid:
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Fee paid previously with preliminary material
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Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange
Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the
offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by
registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date
of its filing.
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(a) Amount Previously Paid: ______________
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(b) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.: ____
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(c) Filing Party: ______________________
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(d) Date Filed: _______________________
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ALLSPRING UTILITIES AND HIGH INCOME
FUND
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
SHAREHOLDERS
TO BE HELD ON DECEMBER 5, 2022
525 Market Street, 12th Floor, San
Francisco, California 94105
TO THE SHAREHOLDERS OF
ALLSPRING UTILITIES AND HIGH INCOME FUND
Notice is hereby given that the
Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the “Meeting”) of the Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund (the “Fund”) will be held on
December 5, 2022 at 10:00 a.m. Pacific time, at the principal
office of the Fund, 525 Market Street, 12th Floor, San Francisco,
California 94105, for the following purposes:
1. |
To elect three Trustees to the Board of Trustees of the Fund to
serve for the term indicated herein and until their successors
shall have been duly elected and qualified; and |
2. |
To transact such other business as may properly come before the
Meeting or any adjournments thereof. |
Shareholders of record at the
close of business on October 7, 2022 will be entitled to vote at
the Meeting to the extent described in the accompanying proxy
statement.
It is hoped that you will attend
the Meeting, but if you cannot do so, please complete and sign the
enclosed proxy card and return it in the accompanying envelope as
promptly as possible or vote by telephone or Internet. Any
shareholder attending the Meeting can vote in person even though a
proxy may have already been designated by the shareholder.
Instructions for the proper execution of the proxy card, as well
as instructions on how to vote by telephone and Internet, are set
forth at the end of the proxy statement.
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE FUND
UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF EACH
NOMINEE AS A TRUSTEE.
By Order of the Board of
Trustees,
R. Matthew Prasse
Secretary
October 31, 2022
ALLSPRING UTILITIES AND HIGH INCOME
FUND
PROXY
STATEMENT
This proxy statement is furnished
in connection with the solicitation of proxies by and on behalf of
the Board of Trustees (the “Board”) of the Allspring Utilities and
High Income Fund (the “Fund”) for the Annual Meeting of
Shareholders (the “Meeting”) to be held at 525 Market Street, 12th
Floor, San Francisco, California 94105, on December 5, 2022 at
10:00 a.m. Pacific time. If you wish to participate in the Meeting,
you may submit the proxy card included with this proxy statement by
mail, vote by telephone or Internet, or attend the Meeting in
person. (See “Instructions for Executing Proxy Card” at the end of
this proxy statement for voting instructions.) If you wish to
attend the Meeting in person, please call the Fund’s proxy
solicitor, Computershare Fund Services, at 888-916-1721 for
instructions.
Special Note Regarding the
Meeting
We intend to hold the Meeting in person. However, we are sensitive
to the public health and travel concerns our shareholders may have
and recommendations that public health officials may issue in light
of the evolving coronavirus (COVID-19) situation. As a result, we
may impose additional procedures or limitations on Meeting
attendees or may decide to hold the Meeting in a different location
or solely by means of remote communication. We plan to announce any
such updates on our website (allspringglobal.com), and we encourage
you to check this website prior to the Meeting if you plan to
attend.
This proxy statement, the
accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders, the proxy
card and the Annual Report for the Fund for the fiscal year ended
August 31, 2022 will be first sent to shareholders on or about
October 31, 2022.
IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING THE
AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF
SHAREHOLDERS TO BE HELD ON DECEMBER 5, 2022.
You may obtain a copy of this
proxy statement, the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting of
Shareholders, the proxy card and the Annual Report for the Fund for
the period ended August 31, 2022 without charge by visiting the
website indicated on your proxy card.
PROXY
SOLICITATION
The Board intends to bring before
the Meeting the matter set forth in the accompanying notice.
Holders of common shares (“Shares”) of the Fund (“Shareholders”)
are being asked to vote for the re-election of Messrs. Timothy
Penny and James Polisson and Ms. Pamela Wheelock as Trustees. You
can vote by returning your properly executed proxy card in the
envelope provided or you may vote by telephone or Internet by
following the instructions at the end of this proxy statement. When
you complete and sign your proxy
1 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
card, the proxies named will vote
on your behalf at the Meeting (or any adjournments thereof) exactly
as you have indicated. If you return a signed proxy card but no
choice is specified, your Shares will be voted FOR the election of
each of the nominees named in the enclosed proxy card. If any other
matters are properly presented at the Meeting for action, the
persons named as proxies will vote in accordance with the views of
management of the Fund. Shareholders, including a broker who may
hold Shares on your behalf, may revoke a proxy prior to the Meeting
by giving timely written notice of such revocation to the Fund at
the address above, by submitting a subsequent proxy timely and in
accordance with the methods prescribed by this proxy statement, or
by attending the Meeting and voting in person.
The Fund’s Amended and Restated
Agreement and Declaration of Trust (the “Declaration”) provides
that the holders of thirty-three and a third percent (33 1/3%) of
the Shares issued and outstanding, present in person or by proxy,
shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at the
Meeting. With regard to the election of Trustees, votes may be cast
FOR all nominees or votes may be WITHHELD either with respect to
all of the nominees or any individual nominee. Abstentions, broker
non-votes (i.e., Shares held by brokers or nominee entities as to
which (i) instructions have not been received from the beneficial
owners or other persons entitled to vote and (ii) the broker or
nominee entity does not have discretionary voting power on a
particular matter), and votes that are withheld will count for
purposes of determining whether a quorum is present but will have
no effect with respect to the election of Trustees.
A plurality vote of the shares
represented in person or by proxy at the Meeting and entitled to
vote is required for the election of Trustees.
In the event a quorum is not
present at the Meeting or a quorum is present but sufficient votes
to approve a proposal are not received, the persons named as
proxies may propose one or more adjournments of the Meeting to
permit further solicitation of proxies as to a proposal. The
persons named as proxies will vote in favor of an adjournment those
votes that may be voted in favor of the proposal. The persons named
as proxies will vote against any such adjournment those votes
marked as withheld. The Meeting, whether or not a quorum is
present, may be adjourned from time to time by the vote of a
majority of the Shares represented at the Meeting, either in person
or by proxy; or by the chair of the Meeting, in his or her
discretion. Abstentions and broker non-votes will not be voted on a
motion to adjourn.
Any proposal for which sufficient
favorable votes have been received by the time of the Meeting may
be acted upon and considered final regardless of whether the
Meeting is adjourned to permit additional solicitation with respect
to any other proposal. In certain circumstances in which the Fund
has received sufficient votes to approve a matter being recommended
for approval by the Board, the Fund may request that brokers and
nominee entities, in their
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 2
discretion, withhold or withdraw
submission of broker non-votes in order to avoid the need for
solicitation of additional votes in favor of the
proposal.
The Fund will bear the costs
typically associated with the election of Trustees. Solicitation
may be undertaken by mail, telephone, facsimile and personal
contact. The Fund has engaged Computershare Fund Services to
solicit proxies from brokers, banks, other institutional holders
and individual Shareholders for a fee of approximately $3,911. This
fee will be borne by the Fund.
Voting Securities and
Principal Holders Thereof
Shareholders of record at the
close of business on October 7, 2022 are entitled to vote at the
Meeting or any adjournment thereof to the extent set forth in this
proxy statement. As of October 7, 2022, the Fund had outstanding
9,292,257 Shares. Each Share is entitled to one vote for each
dollar, and a fractional vote for each fraction of a dollar, of net
asset value per Share for each Share held, as to any matter on
which the Share is entitled to vote.
As of October 7, 2022, the
Depository Trust Company owned of record approximately 100% of the
outstanding Shares. No person is reflected on the books and records
of the Fund as owning beneficially 5% or more of the outstanding
Shares of the Fund as of October 7, 2022.
As of October 7, 2022, the
officers and Trustees of the Fund as a group beneficially owned in
the aggregate less than 1% of the Shares of the Fund and, together
with their immediate family members, less than 1% of the
outstanding securities of Allspring Global Investments Holdings,
LLC, the parent company of Allspring Funds Management, LLC
(“Allspring Funds Management”), the Fund’s investment adviser, and
Allspring Global Investments, LLC (“Allspring Investments”), the
Fund’s sub-adviser.
I. ELECTION OF TRUSTEES (PROPOSAL
1)
The Board has nominated three
persons for election to the Fund’s Board. Each of these nominees
currently serves on the Fund’s Board and is thus sometimes referred
to as a “nominee Trustee”. In accordance with the Declaration, the
Trustees have been divided into three classes (each a “Class”):
Class I, Class II and Class III. The Trustees in each Class serve
until the annual meeting for the year indicated: Class I, 2023;
Class II, 2024; and Class III, 2025; or, if later, until their
respective successors are elected and qualified. At each subsequent
annual meeting, the persons elected to the Class of Trustees whose
terms are expiring will generally be nominated for a three-year
term. Staggered terms are adopted by many closed-end fund boards
and can have the effect of promoting greater stability and
long-term perspective. Staggered terms also have the effect of
limiting the ability of other entities or persons to acquire
control of a board by delaying replacement of a majority of the
board. If any nominee Trustee for any reason becomes unable to
serve or is unwilling to serve, the persons named as proxies in the
enclosed proxy card, in consultation with the
3 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
Board, will vote for the election
of such other person or persons as they may consider qualified.
Each of the three nominee Trustees has agreed to continue to serve
as a Trustee on the Board if elected by Shareholders. The nominee
Trustees for Class III are expected to serve the full term until
the 2025 annual meeting.
The Board of the Fund proposes the
following nominee Trustees for election at the Meeting:
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Nominee Trustee
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Class
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Expiration of Term if
Elected
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Timothy J. Penny
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Class III
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20251
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James G. Polisson
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Class III
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20251
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Pamela Wheelock
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Class III
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20251
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1. |
Or, if later, until their respective successors are elected and
qualified. |
You cannot vote by proxy for
anyone other than the three nominee Trustees currently proposed to
serve on the Board.
Trustee and Nominee Trustee
Information
The following table contains
specific information about each Trustee and nominee Trustee, as of
August 31, 2022, including: name and year of birth, principal
occupation(s) during the past five years or longer, position held
with the Fund, length of time served, any other directorships held
outside the Allspring Funds family of funds (the “Fund Complex”)
and number of portfolios in the Fund Complex overseen by such
Trustee and nominee Trustee. The address for each Trustee and
nominee Trustee is c/o Allspring Utilities and High Income Fund,
525 Market Street, 12th Floor, San Francisco, California 94105. The
Board has established a standing Nominating and Governance
Committee, a standing Audit Committee and a standing Valuation
Committee, each of which is made up of the Trustees listed in the
table below.
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 4
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Name and Year of
Birth
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Position Held with Fund/Length
of Time Served
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Principal Occupation(s) During
Past 5 Years
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Number of Portfolios in Fund
Complex Overseen by Trustee1
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Other Directorships Held by
Trustee During Past 5 Years
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Class I - Non-Interested
Trustees to serve until 2023 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders
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Isaiah Harris, Jr.,
1952
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Trustee, since 2010; Audit
Committee Chair, since 2019
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Retired. Chairman of the Board of
CIGNA Corporation from 2009 to 2021, and Director from 2005 to
2008. From 2003 to 2011, Director of Deluxe Corporation. Prior
thereto, President and CEO of BellSouth Advertising and Publishing
Corp. from 2005 to 2007, President and CEO of BellSouth Enterprises
from 2004 to 2005 and President of BellSouth Consumer Services from
2000 to 2003. Emeritus member of the Iowa State University
Foundation Board of Governors. Emeritus Member of the Advisory
Board of Iowa State University School of Business. Advisory Board
Member, Palm Harbor Academy (private school). Mr. Harris is a
certified public accountant (inactive status).
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124
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CIGNA Corporation
(2005-2021)
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David F. Larcker, 1950
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Trustee, since 2010
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James Irvin Miller Professor of
Accounting at the Graduate School of Business (Emeritus), Stanford
University, Director of the Corporate Governance Research
Initiative and Senior Faculty of The Rock Center for Corporate
Governance since 2006. From 2005 to 2008, Professor of Accounting
at the Graduate School of Business, Stanford University. Prior
thereto, Ernst & Young Professor of Accounting at The Wharton
School, University of Pennsylvania from 1985 to 2005.
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124
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None
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5 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
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Name and Year of
Birth
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Position Held with Fund/Length
of Time Served
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Principal Occupation(s) During
Past 5 Years
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Number of Portfolios in Fund
Complex Overseen by Trustee1
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Other Directorships Held by
Trustee During Past 5 Years
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Olivia S. Mitchell, 1953
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Trustee, since 2010; Nominating
and Governance Committee Chair, since 2018
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International Foundation of
Employee Benefit Plans Professor, Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania since 1993. Director of Wharton’s Pension Research
Council and Boettner Center on Pensions & Retirement Research,
and Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Previously, Cornell University Professor from 1978 to
1993.
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124
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None
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Class II - Non-Interested
Trustees to serve until 2024 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders
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William R. Ebsworth, 1957
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Trustee, since 2015
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Retired. From 1984 to 2013,
equities analyst, portfolio manager, research director and chief
investment officer at Fidelity Management and Research Company in
Boston, Tokyo, and Hong Kong, and retired in 2013 as Chief
Investment Officer of Fidelity Strategic Advisers, Inc. where he
led a team of investment professionals managing client assets.
Prior thereto, Board member of Hong Kong Securities Clearing Co.,
Hong Kong Options Clearing Corp., the Thailand International Fund,
Ltd., Fidelity Investments Life Insurance Company, and Empire
Fidelity Investments Life Insurance Company. Audit Committee Chair
and Investment Committee Chair of the Vincent Memorial Hospital
Endowment (non-profit organization). Mr. Ebsworth is a CFA®
charterholder.
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124
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None
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Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 6
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Name and Year of
Birth
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Position Held with Fund/Length
of Time Served
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Principal Occupation(s) During
Past 5 Years
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Number of Portfolios in Fund
Complex Overseen by Trustee1
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Other Directorships Held by
Trustee During Past 5 Years
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Jane A. Freeman, 1953
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Trustee, since 2015; Chair
Liaison, since 2018
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Retired. From 2012 to 2014 and
1999 to 2008, Chief Financial Officer of Scientific Learning
Corporation. From 2008 to 2012, Ms. Freeman provided consulting
services related to strategic business projects. Prior to 1999,
Portfolio Manager at Rockefeller & Co. and Scudder, Stevens
& Clark. Board member of the Harding Loevner Funds from 1996 to
2014, serving as both Lead Independent Director and chair of the
Audit Committee. Board member of the Russell Exchange Traded Funds
Trust from 2011 to 2012 and the chair of the Audit Committee. Ms.
Freeman is also an inactive Chartered Financial Analyst.
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124
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None
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Class III - Non-Interested
Nominee Trustees to serve until 2025 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders
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Timothy J. Penny, 1951
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Trustee, since 2010; Chair, since
2018
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President and Chief Executive
Officer of Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation, a non-profit
organization, since 2007. Vice Chair of the Economic Club of
Minnesota, since 2007. Co-Chair of the Committee for a Responsible
Federal Budget, since 1995. Member of the Board of Trustees of
NorthStar Education Finance, Inc., a non-profit organization, since
2007. Senior Fellow of the University of Minnesota Humphrey
Institute from 1995 to 2017.
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124
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None
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7 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
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Name and Year of
Birth
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Position Held with Fund/Length
of Time Served
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Principal Occupation(s) During
Past 5 Years
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Number of Portfolios in Fund
Complex Overseen by Trustee1
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Other Directorships Held by
Trustee During Past 5 Years
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James G. Polisson, 1959
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Trustee, since 2018
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Retired. Chief Marketing Officer,
Source (ETF) UK Services, Ltd, from 2015 to 2017. From 2012 to
2015, Principal of The Polisson Group, LLC, a management
consulting, corporate advisory and principal investing company.
Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director at Russell
Investments, Global Exchange Traded Funds from 2010 to 2012.
Managing Director of Barclays Global Investors from 1998 to 2010
and Global Chief Marketing Officer for iShares and Barclays Global
Investors from 2000 to 2010. Trustee of the San Francisco
Mechanics’ Institute, a non-profit organization, from 2013 to 2015.
Board member of the Russell Exchange Traded Fund Trust from 2011 to
2012. Director of Barclays Global Investors Holdings Deutschland
GmbH from 2006 to 2009. Mr. Polisson is an attorney and has a
retired status with the Massachusetts and District of Columbia Bar
Associations.
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124
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None
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Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 8
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Name and Year of
Birth
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Position Held with Fund/Length
of Time Served
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Principal Occupation(s) During
Past 5 Years
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Number of Portfolios in Fund
Complex Overseen by Trustee1
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Other Directorships Held by
Trustee During Past 5 Years
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Pamela Wheelock,
1959
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Trustee, since January 2020;
previously Trustee from January 2018 to July 2019
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Retired. Executive and Senior
Financial leadership positions in the public, private and nonprofit
sectors. Interim President and CEO, McKnight Foundation, 2020.
Interim Commissioner, Minnesota Department of Human Services, 2019.
Chief Operating Officer, Twin Cities Habitat for Humanity,
2017-2019. Vice President for University Services, University of
Minnesota, 2012-2016. Interim President and CEO, Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Minnesota, 2011-2012. Executive Vice-President and
Chief Financial Officer, Minnesota Wild, 2002-2008. Commissioner,
Minnesota Department of Finance, 1999-2002. Chair of the Board of
Directors of Destination Medical Center Corporation. Board member
of the Minnesota Wild Foundation.
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124
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None
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1. |
As of August 31, 2022, the Fund Complex consisted of 124
funds. |
9 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
The following table contains
specific information about the dollar range of equity securities
beneficially owned by each Trustee and nominee Trustee in the Fund
and the aggregate dollar range of equity securities in other funds
in the Fund Complex overseen by the Trustees.
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Name of Trustee
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Dollar Range of Equity
Securities in the Fund as of August 31, 2022
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Aggregate Dollar Range of
Equity Securities in the Fund Complex as of August 31,
2022
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Non-Interested Nominee
Trustees
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Timothy J. Penny
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$1-$10,000
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Over $100,000
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James G. Polisson
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$10,001-$50,000
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Over $100,000
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Pamela Wheelock
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$1-$10,000
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Over $100,000
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Non-Interested
Trustees
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William R. Ebsworth
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$10,001-$50,000
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Over $100,000
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Jane A. Freeman
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$1-$10,000
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Over $100,000
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Isaiah Harris, Jr.
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$1-$10,000
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Over $100,000
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David F. Larcker
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$1-$10,000
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Over $100,000
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Olivia S. Mitchell
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$1-$10,000
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Over $100,000
|
The Board of Trustees and Its
Leadership Structure
Overall responsibility for
oversight of the Fund rests with the Board. The Board has engaged
Allspring Funds Management to manage the Fund on a day-to-day
basis. The Board is responsible for overseeing Allspring Funds
Management and other service providers in the operation of the Fund
in accordance with the provisions of the Investment Company Act of
1940 (the “1940 Act”), applicable provisions of Delaware law, other
applicable laws and the Declaration.
The Board is currently composed of
nine members, each of whom is not an “interested person” of the
Fund, as defined in the 1940 Act (an “Independent Trustee”). The
Board typically conducts regular in-person meetings five times a
year. In addition, the Board may hold special in-person or
telephonic meetings or informal conference calls to discuss
specific matters that may arise or require action between regular
meetings.
The Independent Trustees have
engaged independent legal counsel to assist them in performing
their oversight responsibilities. The Board has appointed an
Independent Trustee to serve in the role of Chairman. The
Chairman’s role is to preside at all meetings of the Board and to
act as a liaison with respect to governance-related matters with
service providers, officers, attorneys, and other Trustees
generally between meetings. The Chairman may also perform such
other functions as may be delegated by the Board from time to time.
Timothy Penny serves as Chairman of the Board. In order to assist
the Chairman in
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 10
maintaining effective
communications with the other Trustees and Allspring Funds
Management, the Board has appointed a Chair Liaison to work with
the Chairman to coordinate Trustee communications and to help
coordinate timely responses to Trustee inquiries relating to board
governance and fiduciary matters. The Chair Liaison serves for a
one-year term, which may be extended with the approval of the
Board. Ms. Freeman serves as Chair Liaison. Except for any duties
specified herein or pursuant to the Declaration, the designation of
Chairman or Chair Liaison does not impose on such Independent
Trustee any duties, obligations or liability that are greater than
the duties, obligations or liability imposed on such person as a
member of the Board generally.
The Board also has established a
Nominating and Governance Committee and an Audit Committee to
assist the Board in the oversight and direction of the business and
affairs of the Fund and from time to time may establish informal
working groups to review and address the policies and practices of
the Fund with respect to certain specified matters. Additionally,
the Board has established an investment team to review in detail
the performance of the Fund, to meet with portfolio managers, and
to report back to the full Board. The Board occasionally engages
independent consultants to assist it in evaluating initiatives or
proposals. The Board believes that the Board’s current leadership
structure is appropriate because it allows the Board to exercise
informed and independent judgment over matters under its purview,
and it allocates areas of responsibility among committees of
Trustees and the full Board in a manner that enhances effective
oversight. The leadership structure of the Board may be changed, at
any time and in the discretion of the Board, including in response
to changes in circumstances or the characteristics of the
Fund.
As noted above, the Board has
established a standing Nominating and Governance Committee and a
standing Audit Committee to assist the Board in the oversight and
direction of the business and affairs of the Fund. The Nominating
and Governance Committee and Audit Committee operate pursuant to
charters approved by the Board. Each Independent Trustee is a
member of the Fund’s Nominating and Governance Committee and Audit
Committee.
Nominating
and Governance Committee. Except with respect to any trustee
nomination made by an eligible Shareholder or Shareholder group as
permitted by applicable law and applicable provisions of the
Declaration and By-Laws of the Fund, the Nominating and Governance
Committee shall make all nominations for membership on the Board.
The Nominating and Governance Committee shall evaluate each
candidate’s qualifications for Board membership and his or her
independence from the Fund’s investment adviser and sub-adviser
and, as it deems appropriate, other principal service providers.
Olivia Mitchell serves as the Chair of the Nominating and
Governance Committee.
The Nominating and Governance
Committee has adopted procedures by which a Shareholder may
properly submit a nominee recommendation for the
11 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
Nominating and Governance
Committee’s consideration, which are set forth in Appendix A to the
Fund’s Nominating and Governance Committee Charter. The Shareholder
must submit any such recommendation (a “Shareholder
Recommendation”) in writing to the Fund, to the attention of the
Fund’s Secretary, at the address of the principal executive office
of the Fund. The Nominating and Governance Committee has full
discretion to reject candidates recommended by Shareholders, and
there is no assurance that any such person properly recommended and
considered by the Nominating and Governance Committee will be
nominated for election to the Board. For more information relating
to Shareholder recommendations, please see the Fund’s Nominating
and Governance Committee Charter attached as Exhibit A.
The Nominating and Governance
Committee may from time-to-time propose nominations of one or more
individuals to serve as members of an “advisory board,” as such
term is defined in Section 2(a)(1) of the 1940 Act.
Audit
Committee. The Audit Committee oversees the Fund’s
accounting and financial reporting policies, including their
internal controls over financial reporting; oversees the quality
and objectivity of the Fund’s financial statements and the
independent audit thereof; and interacts with the Fund’s
independent registered public accounting firm on behalf of the full
Board and with appropriate officers of the Fund. Isaiah Harris, Jr.
serves as the Chairman of the Audit Committee.
The Board and individual
committees met the following number of times during the most
recently completed fiscal year:
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Number of Meetings During Last
Fiscal Year
|
Regular Meetings
|
6
|
Special Meetings
|
3
|
Nominating and Governance Committee
Meetings
|
3
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Audit Committee Meetings
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6
|
Each Trustee attended at least 75%
of the aggregate of the total number of meetings of the Board and
committees on which he or she served.
The Board of Trustees and
Risk Oversight
The Fund is subject to a number of
risks, including investment, compliance, operational, and valuation
risks, among others. Day-to-day risk management functions are
subsumed within the responsibilities of Allspring Funds Management,
Allspring Investments and other service providers (depending on the
nature of the risk), who carry out the Fund’s investment management
and business affairs. Each of Allspring Funds Management, Allspring
Investments and other service providers have their own, independent
approach to risk
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 12
management, and their policies and
methods of carrying out risk management functions will depend, in
part, on their individual priorities, resources and
controls.
Risk oversight forms part of the
Board’s general oversight of the Fund and is addressed as part of
various Board and Committee activities. The Board recognizes that
it is not possible to identify all of the risks that may affect the
Fund or to develop processes and controls to eliminate or mitigate
their occurrence or effects and that it is necessary for the Fund
to bear certain risks (such as investment-related risks) to pursue
its goals. As part of its regular oversight of the Fund, the Board,
directly or through a Committee, interacts with and reviews reports
from, among others, Allspring Funds Management, Allspring
Investments, the Chief Compliance Officer of the Fund, the Chief
Risk Officer of Allspring Funds Management, the independent
registered public accounting firm for the Fund, and internal
compliance auditors for Allspring Funds Management or its
affiliates, as appropriate, regarding risks faced by the Fund and
relevant risk functions. The Board, with the assistance of its
investment teams, also reviews investment policies and risks in
connection with its review of the Fund’s performance. The Board has
appointed a Chief Compliance Officer who oversees the
implementation and testing of the Fund’s compliance program and
regularly reports to the Board regarding compliance matters for the
Fund and its principal service providers. Allspring Funds
Management has appointed a Chief Risk Officer to enhance the
framework around the assessment, management, measurement and
monitoring of risk indicators and other risk matters concerning the
Fund and develop periodic reporting of risk management matters to
the Board. In addition, as part of the Board’s periodic review of
the Fund’s advisory, sub-advisory and other service provider
agreements, the Board may consider risk management aspects of their
operations and the functions for which they are responsible. With
respect to valuation, the Board oversees a management valuation
team comprised of officers and employees of Allspring Funds
Management, has approved and periodically reviews written valuation
policies and procedures applicable to valuing the Fund portfolio
investments, and has established a valuation committee of Trustees.
The Board may, at any time and in its discretion, change the manner
in which it conducts its risk oversight role.
Qualifications of Trustees
and Nominee Trustees
The Declaration does not set forth
any specific qualifications to serve as a Trustee. The Charter and
the Statement of Governance Principles of the Nominating and
Governance Committee also do not set forth any specific
qualifications, but do set forth certain factors that the
Nominating and Governance Committee may take into account in
considering Trustee candidates and a process for evaluating
potential conflicts of interest, which identifies certain
disqualifying conflicts.
13 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
Among the attributes or skills
common to all Trustees are their ability to review critically,
evaluate, question and discuss information provided to them, to
interact effectively with the other Trustees, Allspring Funds
Management, the Fund’s sub-adviser(s), other service providers,
counsel and the independent registered public accounting firm, and
to exercise effective and independent business judgment in the
performance of their duties as Trustees. Each Trustee’s ability to
perform his or her duties effectively has been attained through the
Trustee’s business, consulting, public service, professional and/or
academic positions and through experience from service as a board
member of the Fund and the other funds in the Fund Complex (and/or
in other capacities, including for any predecessor funds), other
registered investment companies, public companies, and/or
non-profit entities or other organizations. Each Trustee’s ability
to perform his or her duties effectively also has been enhanced by
his or her educational background, professional training, and/or
other life experiences. The specific experience, qualifications,
attributes and/or skills that led to the conclusion that a Trustee
should serve as a Trustee of the Fund are as set forth
below.
William R. Ebsworth. Mr.
Ebsworth has served as a Trustee of the Trusts in the Fund Complex
since January 1, 2015. He also served as a trustee of Asset
Allocation Trust from 2015 to 2018. From 1984 to 2013, he held
positions as an equities analyst, portfolio manager, and research
director at Fidelity Management and Research Company in Boston,
Tokyo, and Hong Kong, and retired in 2013 as Chief Investment
Officer of Fidelity Strategic Advisers, Inc., where he led a team
of investment professionals managing client assets. Prior thereto,
he served as a Board member of Hong Kong Securities Clearing Co.,
Hong Kong Options Clearing Corp., the Thailand International Fund,
Ltd., Fidelity Investments Life Insurance Company, and Empire
Fidelity Investments Life Insurance Company. Mr. Ebsworth is a CFA®
charterholder.
Jane A. Freeman. Ms.
Freeman has served as a Trustee of the Trusts in the Fund Complex
since January 1, 2015, and as Chair Liaison since 2018. She also
served as a trustee of Asset Allocation Trust from 2015 to 2018.
From 2012 to 2014 and 1999 to 2008, Ms. Freeman served as the Chief
Financial Officer of Scientific Learning Corporation. From 2008 to
2012, Ms. Freeman provided consulting services related to strategic
business projects. Prior to joining Scientific Learning, Ms.
Freeman was employed as a portfolio manager at Rockefeller &
Co. and Scudder, Stevens & Clark. She served as a board member
of the Harding Loevner Funds from 1996 to 2014, serving as both
Lead Independent Director and chair of the Audit Committee. She
also served as a board member of the Russell Exchange Traded Funds
Trust from 2011 to 2012 and as chair of the Audit Committee. Ms.
Freeman is also an inactive Chartered Financial Analyst.
Isaiah Harris, Jr. Mr.
Harris has served as a Trustee of the Trusts in the Fund Complex
since 2009 and as Chair of the Audit Committee since 2019 and was
an Advisory Board Member from 2008 to 2009. He also served as a
trustee of
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 14
Asset Allocation Trust from 2010
to 2018. He served as the Chair of CIGNA Corporation from 2009 to
2021, and served as a director of CIGNA Corporation from 2005 to
2008. He served as a director of Deluxe Corporation from 2003 to
2011. As a director of these and other public companies, he has
served on board committees, including governance, audit and
compensation committees. Mr. Harris served in senior executive
positions, including as president, chief executive officer, vice
president of finance and/or chief financial officer, of operating
companies for approximately 20 years. Mr. Harris has been
determined by the Board to be an audit committee financial expert
as such term is defined in the applicable rules of the
SEC.
David F. Larcker. Mr.
Larcker has served as a Trustee of the Trusts in the Fund Complex
since 2009 and was an Advisory Board member from 2008 to 2009. He
also served as a trustee of Asset Allocation Trust from 2010 to
2018. Mr. Larcker is the James Irvin Miller Professor of Accounting
at the Graduate School of Business (Emeritus) of Stanford
University. He is also the Morgan Stanley Director of the Center
for Leadership Development and Research and Co-director of The Rock
Center for Corporate Governance at Stanford University. He has been
a professor of accounting for over 30 years. He has written
numerous articles on a range of topics, including managerial
accounting, financial statement analysis and corporate
governance.
Olivia S. Mitchell. Ms.
Mitchell has served as a Trustee of the Trusts in the Fund Complex
since 2006 and as Chair of the Nominating and Governance Committee
since 2018. She also served as a trustee of Asset Allocation Trust
from 2010 to 2018. Ms. Mitchell is the International Foundation of
Employee Benefit Plans Professor at the Wharton School of the
University of Pennsylvania, where she is also Professor of
Insurance/Risk Management and Business Economics/Policy. She also
serves in senior positions with academic and policy organizations
that conduct research on pensions, retirement, insurance, risk
management, and related topics, including as Executive Director of
the Pension Research Council and Director of the Boettner Center on
Pensions and Retirement Research, both at the University of
Pennsylvania. She has taught on and served as a consultant on
economics, insurance, and risk management, served as Department
Chair, advised numerous governmental entities, and written numerous
articles and books on topics including retirement systems, private
and social insurance, and health and retirement policy.
Timothy J. Penny. Mr. Penny
has served as a Trustee of the Trusts in the Fund Complex and their
predecessor funds since 1996, and Chair of the Board of Trustees
since 2018. He also served as a Trustee of Asset Allocation Trust
from 2010 to 2018. He has been President and Chief Executive
Officer of Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation since 2007. He
has served as Vice Chair of the Economic Club of Minnesota since
2007 and as Co-Chair of the Committee for a Responsible Federal
Budget since 1995. He also serves as a member of the board of
another non-profit organization and served as a Senior Fellow of
the University of Minnesota Humphrey Institute from 1995 to 2017.
Mr. Penny was a
15 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
member of the U.S. House of
Representatives for 12 years representing Southeastern Minnesota’s
First Congressional District.
James G. Polisson. Mr.
Polisson has served as a Trustee of the Trusts in the Fund Complex
since 2018 and was an Advisory Board member in 2017. Mr. Polisson
has extensive experience in the financial services industry,
including over 15 years in the ETF industry. From 2015 to July 31,
2017, Mr. Polisson was the Chief Marketing Officer of Source (ETF)
UK Services, Ltd., one of the largest providers of exchange-traded
products in Europe. From 2012 to 2015, Mr. Polisson was Principal
of The Polisson Group, LLC, a management consulting, corporate
advisory and principal investing firm. Prior to 2012, Mr. Polisson
was Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of Russell
Investments’ global ETF business from 2010 to 2012. He was also a
member of the Board of Trustees of Russell Exchange Traded Funds
Trust, where he served as Chairman, President and Chief Executive
Officer from 2011 to 2012. Mr. Polisson also served as Chief
Marketing Officer for Barclays Global Investors from 2000 to 2010,
where he led global marketing for the iShares ETF
business.
Pamela Wheelock. Ms.
Wheelock has served as a Trustee of the Trusts in the Fund Complex
since January 2020 and previously from January 2018 until July 2019
and was an Advisory Board member in 2017. Ms. Wheelock has more
than 25 years of leadership experience in the private, public and
nonprofit sectors. She is currently Chair of the Board of Directors
of Destination Medical Center Corporation and a Board member of the
Minnesota Wild Foundation, where she previously served as Executive
Vice-President and Chief Financial Officer from 2002-2008. She was
Interim President of the McKnight Foundation from January to
September 2020. She served as the acting Commissioner of the
Minnesota Department of Human Services from July 2019 through
September 2019 and as a consultant (part-time) of the Minnesota
Department of Human Services from October 2019 through December
2019. Ms. Wheelock was the Chief Operating Officer of Twin Cities
Habitat for Humanity from 2017 through 2019. Prior to joining
Habitat for Humanity in 2017, Ms. Wheelock was the Vice President
of University Services at the University of Minnesota from 2012,
where she served as chief operations officer of the University. She
also served as Interim President and Chief Executive Officer of
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota from 2011 to 2012, Vice
President of the Bush Foundation from 2009 to 2011.
Consideration of Diversity by
the Nominating and Governance Committee
The Nominating and Governance
Committee takes the overall diversity of the Board into account
when considering and evaluating nominees for Trustee. While the
Nominating and Governance Committee has not adopted a specific
policy on diversity or a particular definition of diversity, when
considering nominees, the Nominating and Governance Committee
generally considers the manner in which each nominee’s professional
experience, background, skills in matters that are relevant to the
oversight of the funds (e.g., investment management, distribution,
accounting, trading, compliance and legal), and
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 16
general leadership experience are
complementary to the existing Trustees’ attributes.
Nominating and Governance
Committee
The members of the Nominating and
Governance Committee are “independent” as defined in the NYSE
American Exchange’s listing standards. The Board has adopted a
written Nominating and Governance Committee Charter which is
attached to this proxy statement as Exhibit A. The Nominating and
Governance Committee Charter describes the Nominating and
Governance Committee functions. The Nominating and Governance
Committee reviews the Nominating and Governance Committee Charter
at least annually and may recommend changes to the
Board.
The Board has approved a policy
pursuant to which the Board may consider nominees for election as
Trustees, which is described further in the Nominating and
Governance Committee Charter. The policy states the minimum nominee
qualifications, the process for identifying and evaluating trustee
nominees and the process for considering nominees recommended by
Shareholders.
Communications with Board
Members
The Board has approved a policy
for communications with Board members. Any Shareholder who wishes
to send a communication to the Board should send the communication
to the Allspring Utilities and High Income Fund Board of Trustees,
525 Market Street, 12th Floor, San Francisco, California 94105. If
a Shareholder wishes to send a communication directly to an
individual Trustee or to a committee of the Fund’s Board, the
communication should be specifically addressed to such individual
Trustee or committee and sent to the above address.
Trustee Attendance Policy at
Annual Shareholder Meetings
Funds that are listed on the NYSE
American Exchange are required each year to hold an Annual Meeting
of Shareholders. It is the policy of the Fund to encourage at least
one Trustee to attend each such Annual Meeting of Shareholders
either in person, by video conference, or by teleconference. Mr.
Jim Polisson attended the previous year’s Annual Meeting of
Shareholders telephonically.
Current
Officers
The following table contains
specific information about each executive officer of the Fund as of
August 31, 2022, including: name, address and year of birth,
position held with the Fund, length of time served and principal
occupation(s) during the past five years or longer, including
offices held with Allspring Funds Management, Allspring Global
Investments Holdings, LLC and their affiliated
companies.
17 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
|
|
|
Name, Address and Year of
Birth
|
Position with
Fund
|
Principal Occupation(s) During
Past 5 Years or Longer
|
Andrew Owen
525 Market Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
Year of Birth: 1960
|
President, since 2017
|
President, Chief Executive Officer
and Director of Allspring Funds Management, LLC since 2017 and
co-president of Galliard Capital Management, LLC, an affiliate of
Allspring Funds Management, LLC, since 2019. Prior thereto, Head of
Affiliated Managers, Allspring Global Investments, from 2014 to
2019 and Executive Vice President responsible for marketing,
investments and product development for Allspring Funds Management,
LLC, from 2009 to 2014. In addition, Mr. Owen was an Executive Vice
President of Wells Fargo & Company from 2014 to
2021.
|
Jeremy M. DePalma
101 Seaport Blvd
Boston, MA 02210
Year of Birth: 1974
|
Treasurer since, 2012 (for certain
funds in the Fund Complex); since 2021 (for the remaining funds in
the Fund Complex)
|
Senior Vice President of Allspring
Funds Management, LLC since 2009. Senior Vice President of
Evergreen Investment Management Company, LLC from 2008 to 2010 and
head of the Fund Reporting and Control Team within Fund
Administration from 2005 to 2010.
|
Kate McKinley
101 Seaport Blvd
Boston, MA 02210
Year of Birth: 1977
|
Chief Legal Officer, since
2021
|
Chief Legal Officer of Allspring
Global Investments since 2021. Prior thereto, held various roles at
State Street Global Advisors, Inc. beginning in 2010, including
serving as Senior Vice President and General Counsel from 2019 to
2021. Previously served as Assistant General Counsel for Bank of
America Corporation from 2005 to 2010 and as an Associate at
WilmerHale from 2002 to 2005.
|
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 18
|
|
|
Name, Address and Year of
Birth
|
Position with
Fund
|
Principal Occupation(s) During
Past 5 Years or Longer
|
Christopher Baker
101 Seaport Blvd
Boston, MA 02210
Year of Birth: 1976
|
Chief Compliance Officer, since
2022
|
Global Chief Compliance Officer
for Allspring Global Investments since 2022.Prior thereto, Chief
Compliance Officer for State Street Global Advisors from 2018 to
2021. Senior Compliance Officer for the State Street divisions of
Alternative Investment Solutions, Sector Solutions, and Global
Marketing from 2015 to 2018.From 2010 to 2015 Vice President,
Global Head of Investment and Marketing Compliance for State Street
Global Advisors.
|
Matthew Prasse
101 Seaport Blvd
Boston, MA 02210
Year of Birth: 1983
|
Secretary, since 2021
|
Senior Counsel of the Allspring
Legal Department since 2021. Senior Counsel of the Wells Fargo
Legal Department from 2018 to 2021. Previously, Counsel for Barings
LLC from 2015 to 2018. Prior to joining Barings, Associate at
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP from 2008 to 2015.
|
Remuneration of Officers and
Trustees
Fees, salaries or other
remuneration of officers of the Fund who also serve as officers or
employees of Allspring Funds Management or any of its affiliated
companies are borne by Allspring Funds Management or the Allspring
Global Investments Holdings, LLC affiliate for whom the individual
serves. The Fund’s principal executive officers did not receive any
compensation or expense reimbursement from the Fund for the fiscal
year ended August 31, 2022. The Fund reimburses all Trustees for
expenses incurred in connection with attending meetings of the
Board. The Trustees do not receive any pension or retirement
benefits from the Fund. For the fiscal year ended August 31, 2022,
the Trustees earned the following compensation from the Fund and
the Fund Complex:
|
|
|
Name of Person and Position with the
Fund
|
Compensation From the
Fund
|
Total Compensation From the
Fund and Fund Complex Paid to Trustees1
|
Non-Interested Nominee
Trustees
|
Timothy J. Penny
|
$3,296
|
$408,750
|
James G. Polisson
|
$2,673
|
$331,500
|
Pamela Wheelock
|
$2,673
|
$331,500
|
Non-Interested
Trustees
|
19 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
|
|
|
Name of Person and Position with the
Fund
|
Compensation From the
Fund
|
Total Compensation From the
Fund and Fund Complex Paid to Trustees1
|
William R. Ebsworth
|
$2,673
|
$331,500
|
Jane A. Freeman
|
$2,840
|
$352,250
|
Isaiah Harris, Jr.
|
$2,927
|
$363,000
|
David F. Larcker
|
$2,673
|
$331,500
|
Olivia S. Mitchell
|
$2,840
|
$352,250
|
1. |
As of August 31, 2022, the Fund Complex consisted of 124
funds. |
Section 16(a) Beneficial
Ownership Reporting Compliance
Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act
requires the Fund’s Trustees, principal executive officers and
certain other persons (“Reporting Entities”) to file reports
regarding ownership of, and transactions in, the Fund’s securities
with the SEC. Copies of the required filings must also be furnished
to the Fund. During the most recent fiscal year, the Fund believes
that all reports required to be filed by the Reporting Entities
were filed on a timely basis, except that a Form 4 was not timely
filed for Ms. Jane Freeman, a Trustee of the Fund.
Forms 3, 4, and 5 for the officers
and Trustees of the Fund may be accessed through the Allspring
Funds website at www.allspringglobal.com.
Service
Providers
Allspring Funds Management, a
wholly owned subsidiary of Allspring Global Investments Holdings,
LLC, a holding company indirectly owned by certain private funds of
GTCR LLC and Reverence Capital Partners, L.P., currently serves as
both the Fund’s adviser and administrator. The principal business
address of Allspring Funds Management is 525 Market Street, San
Francisco, California 94105.
Allspring Investments, a wholly
owned subsidiary of Allspring Global Investments Holdings, LLC and
an affiliate of Allspring Funds Management, currently serves as the
sub-adviser to the Fund. The principal business address of
Allspring Investments is 525 Market Street, San Francisco,
California 94105.
Computershare Fund Services is the
Fund’s transfer agent and is located at P.O. Box 43006, Providence,
Rhode Island 02940-3078.
KPMG LLP (“KPMG”), Two Financial
Center, 60 South Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02111, has been
approved by the Trustees of the Fund as the independent registered
public accounting firm of the Fund for the current fiscal year
ending August 31, 2022.
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 20
The Audit Committee of the Board
unanimously recommended the selection of KPMG, and the Board
unanimously approved such selection, at meetings held on August 16,
2022.
The Fund’s Audit Committee has
established and adopted policies and procedures whereby the Audit
Committee Chairman is authorized to pre-approve: (1) audit services
to the Fund; (2) non-audit tax or compliance consulting or training
services provided to the Fund by its independent registered
accounting firm if the fees for any particular engagement are not
anticipated to exceed a specified dollar amount; and (3) non-audit
tax or compliance consulting or training services provided by the
independent registered public accounting firm to the Fund’s
investment adviser and its adviser affiliates (where pre-approval
is required because the engagement relates directly to the
operations and financial reporting of the Fund) if the fee for any
particular engagement is not anticipated to exceed a specified
dollar amount. For any pre-approval sought from the Chairman, the
adviser shall prepare a brief description of the proposed services.
If the Chairman approves such service, he or she shall sign the
statement prepared by the adviser, and such written statement shall
be presented to the full Audit Committee at its next regularly
scheduled meeting.
A representative of KPMG, if
requested in advance by any Shareholder, will be present via
telephone at the Meeting to respond to appropriate questions from
Shareholders and will have an opportunity to make a statement if he
or she chooses to do so. Absent such a Shareholder request, it is
not expected that such representative will be present at the
Meeting.
In approving the selection of KPMG
for the Fund, the Audit Committee considered, in addition to other
practices and requirements relating to the selection of the Fund’s
independent registered public accounting firm, whether any services
performed by KPMG for the Fund and the investment adviser and for
certain related parties for which KPMG received non-audit fees are
compatible with maintaining the independence of KPMG as the Fund’s
independent registered public accounting firm.
On October 20, 2022, the Audit
Committee reviewed and discussed with management the Fund’s audited
financial statements for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2022. The
Audit Committee has reviewed and discussed with KPMG the matters
required to be discussed by Statements on Auditing Standards, No.
114, Communication with Audit Committees. The Audit Committee has
received the written disclosures and the letter from KPMG required
by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board regarding certain
communications, and has discussed with KPMG its independence. Based
on these reviews and discussions, the Audit Committee recommended
to the Board that the audited financial statements be included in
the annual report to Shareholders for the previous fiscal year for
filing with the SEC.
21 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
The following table presents fees
billed for professional audit services rendered by KPMG for the
audit of the Fund’s annual financial statements for the past two
fiscal years and for fees billed for other services rendered by
KPMG to the Fund. There were no fees paid to KPMG during the fiscal
years where the de minimis exception was used.
|
|
|
|
2022
|
2021
|
Audit fees
|
$59,320
|
$57,180
|
Audit-related fees
|
$0
|
$0
|
Tax fees1
|
$4,565
|
$4,440
|
Non-audit fees
|
$0
|
$0
|
All other fees
|
$0
|
$0
|
1. |
Tax fees consist of fees for tax compliance, tax advice, tax
planning and excise tax. |
The Board has adopted a written
charter for the Audit Committee which is attached to this proxy
statement as Exhibit B. The Audit Committee reviews the charter at
least annually and may recommend changes to the Board.
Other Business
As of the date of this proxy
statement, neither the Fund’s officers nor Allspring Funds
Management are aware of any other business to come before the
Meeting other than as set forth in the Notice of Annual Meeting of
Shareholders. If any other business is properly brought before the
Meeting or any adjournment thereof, the persons named as proxies in
the enclosed proxy card will vote in accordance with the views of
management of the Fund.
Required Vote for
Proposal
The vote of a plurality of the
votes cast by Shareholders present in person or represented by
proxy at the Meeting is required for the election of
trustees.
Notice
A Certificate of Trust in respect
of the Fund is on file with the Secretary of the State of Delaware.
As provided in the Declaration, the obligations of any instrument
made or issued by any Trustee or Trustees or by any officer or
officers of the Fund are not binding upon any of them or the
Shareholders individually, but are binding only upon the assets and
property of the Fund.
Shareholder
Proposals
Proposals intended to be presented
by a Shareholder at the annual meeting of Shareholders to be held
in 2023 must be received by the Fund’s Secretary at the Fund’s
principal executive office by July 3, 2023 in order to be
considered for inclusion in the Fund’s proxy statement and proxy
card relating to that meeting
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 22
pursuant to Rule 14a-8 under the
Exchange Act. If a Shareholder wishes to present a proposal at the
annual meeting of Shareholders to be held in 2023 without having
the proposal included in the Fund’s proxy statement, including a
proposal to nominate any persons for election to the Board, such
proposal must be delivered to the Fund’s Secretary at the Fund’s
principal executive office not earlier than the close of business
on July 3, 2023 and not later than the close of business on August
2, 2023. Timely receipt or delivery of a proposal does not
necessarily mean that such proposal will be included in the Fund’s
proxy statement or presented at the meeting, given that such
inclusion and presentation are subject to various conditions and
requirements, including those specified by applicable law and by
the Fund’s governing documents. The Chair of the meeting may refuse
to acknowledge a nomination or other proposal by a Shareholder that
is not made in the manner described above.
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE FUND
UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE ELECTION OF EACH
NOMINEE AS A TRUSTEE.
R. Matthew Prasse
Secretary
October 31, 2022
23 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
INSTRUCTIONS FOR EXECUTING PROXY
CARD
The following general rules for
signing proxy cards may be of assistance to you and may help to
avoid the time and expense involved in validating your vote if you
fail to sign your proxy card properly.
1. INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNTS: Sign your
name exactly as it appears in the Registration on the proxy
card.
2. JOINT ACCOUNTS: Either party
may sign, but the name of the party signing should conform exactly
to a name shown in the Registration on the proxy card.
3. ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS: The
capacity of the individual signing the proxy card should be
indicated unless it is reflected in the form of Registration. For
example:
|
|
CORPORATE ACCOUNTS
REGISTRATION
|
VALID SIGNATURE
|
(1) ABC Corp.
|
ABC Corp.
|
(2) ABC Corp.
|
John Doe, Treasurer
|
(3) ABC Corp. c/o John Doe,
Treasurer
|
John Doe
|
(4) ABC Corp. Profit Sharing
Plan
|
John Doe, Trustee
|
TRUST ACCOUNTS
REGISTRATION
|
|
(1) ABC Trust
|
Jane B. Doe, Trustee
|
(2) Jane B. Doe, Trustee u/t/d
12/28/78
|
Jane B. Doe, Trustee
|
CUSTODIAL OR ESTATE ACCOUNTS
REGISTRATION
|
|
(1) John B. Smith, Cust. f/b/o John B. Smith,
Jr. UGMA
|
John B. Smith
|
(2) John B. Smith
|
John B. Smith, Jr.,
Executor
|
After completing your proxy card,
return it in the enclosed postage-paid envelope.
OTHER WAYS TO VOTE YOUR
PROXY
VOTE BY TELEPHONE:
1. Read the proxy statement and
have your proxy card at hand.
2. Call the toll-free number on your proxy card.
VOTE BY INTERNET:
1. Read the proxy statement and
have your proxy card at hand.
2. Go to the website indicated on your proxy card and follow the
voting instructions.
The telephone and Internet voting
procedures are designed to authenticate Shareholder identities, to
allow Shareholders to give their voting instructions, and to
confirm that Shareholders’ instructions have been recorded
properly. Please note that, although there is no charge to you for
voting by telephone or Internet, there may be costs associated with
electronic access, such as usage
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | 24
charges from telephone companies
and Internet service providers, that must be borne by the
Shareholders.
Voting by telephone or Internet is
generally available 24 hours a day. Do not mail the proxy card if
you are voting by telephone or Internet. If you have any questions
about voting, please call Computershare Fund Services, our proxy
solicitor, at 888-916-1721 (toll free).
25 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
EXHIBIT A
ALLSPRING FUNDS TRUST
ALLSPRING MASTER TRUST
ALLSPRING VARIABLE TRUST
ALLSPRING GLOBAL DIVIDEND OPPORTUNITY FUND
ALLSPRING INCOME OPPORTUNITIES FUND
ALLSPRING MULTI-SECTOR INCOME FUND
ALLSPRING UTILITIES AND HIGH INCOME FUND
(collectively, the “Trusts”)
CHARTER OF THE NOMINATING AND GOVERNANCE
COMMITTEES
Nominating
and Governance Committee Membership and Chair
The Nominating and Governance
Committee of each Trust (the “Committee”) shall be composed only of
Trustees who are not “interested persons” of the Trusts, or of any
investment adviser or principal underwriter of the Trusts or any
series thereof (a “Fund”), as defined in the Investment Company Act
of 1940 (“Independent Trustees”). The full Boards shall designate
the members of the Committee, after due consideration of
nominations, if any, from the Committee, and shall designate the
Chair.
Board
Nominations
1. Except with respect to any
trustee nomination made by an eligible shareholder or shareholder
group as permitted by applicable law (and, with respect to each
Trust that is a registered closed-end management investment company
(“Closed-End Fund”), in accordance with the By-Laws of such
Closed-End Fund), the Committee shall make all nominations for
membership on the Board of Trustees of each Trust. The Committee
shall evaluate each candidate’s qualifications for Board membership
and his or her independence from the Funds’ investment adviser(s)
and principal underwriter(s) and, as it deems appropriate, other
principal service providers. Any person nominated to serve as an
Independent Trustee must not be, on the effective date of his or
her appointment or election, an “interested person” of the Trusts,
or of any investment adviser or principal underwriter of the Funds,
as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”),
and, with respect to each Closed-End Fund, such person must also
satisfy, on such date, applicable independence requirements of the
listing standards of securities exchanges on which shares of such
Closed-End Fund are traded.
a. The Committee may take into
account a wide variety of factors in considering Trustee
candidates, including (but not limited to): (i) availability and
commitment of a candidate to attend meetings and perform his or her
responsibilities on the Board, (ii) relevant industry, business,
professional and related experience and accomplishments, (iii)
educational background, (iv) financial expertise, (v) an assessment
of the candidate’s ability, judgment and
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Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
expertise and the candidate’s
ability to work effectively and collaboratively with other members
of the Board, and (vi) overall diversity of the Board’s composition
and how the candidate’s skills, experiences and attributes would
contribute to the mix of relevant skills and experience on the
Board.
b. The Committee will consider and
evaluate nominee candidates properly submitted by shareholders on
the same basis as it considers and evaluates candidates recommended
by other sources. Appendix A to this Charter, as it may be amended
from time to time by the Committee, sets forth procedures that must
be followed by shareholders to properly submit a candidate for
nomination by the Committee. Shareholder recommendations not
properly submitted in accordance with the requirements of Appendix
A will not be considered for nomination by the
Committee.
2. Process for evaluating
independence and potential conflicts of interest of Independent
Trustee candidates.
a. As a threshold matter, the
background of a candidate to serve as an Independent Trustee must
be reviewed to confirm that the person meets or, on the effective
date of his or her appointment or election will meet, the technical
requirements under the 1940 Act for being an Independent Trustee,
and, with respect to Independent Trustee candidates for the Board
of each Closed-End Fund, that such person satisfies or, on the
effective date of his or her appointment or election will satisfy,
applicable independence requirements of the listing standards of
securities exchanges on which shares of such Closed-End Fund are
traded.
b. In addition to satisfying the
applicable technical requirements set forth in 2.a., above, the
candidate’s business and personal connections (as reflected in the
responses to questions in the Trustees’ and Officers’ Questionnaire
completed by each current and prospective Trustee) must be reviewed
to confirm that they do not create any actual or potential
impairment to the person’s independence with respect to the
Funds.
c. With respect to any candidate,
the Committee shall elicit such information from senior management
that the Committee deems appropriate, if any, to evaluating the
merits of the candidate.
d. Disqualifying
factors:
i. No candidate shall be nominated
for membership on the Board if, upon appointment or election to the
Board, that candidate serves or has agreed to serve on the board of
any registered investment company outside of the Allspring Funds
family, unless otherwise approved by the Committee. No candidate
shall be nominated for membership on the Board if that candidate
serves or has agreed to serve as an officer, partner, employee, or
in any similar capacity with a firm that serves as an investment
adviser, sub-adviser, or principal underwriter of any registered
investment company outside of the Allspring Funds family.
Similarly, if a candidate serves in such capacity for a
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | A-2
registered investment adviser or
registered broker-dealer, but that firm currently does not serve as
an investment adviser, sub-adviser, or principal underwriter for
any such registered investment company, such candidate shall be
nominated only upon the express agreement that he or she would
resign from the Board in the event that his or her firm
subsequently undertakes such a role for any registered investment
company outside of the Allspring Funds family; provided, that if a
candidate is an officer, partner, or employee of, or serves in a
similar capacity for, a broker-dealer, nothing herein is intended
to confer on such candidate eligibility for nomination as an
Independent Trustee if he or she would be an “interested person” of
the Funds pursuant to the 1940 Act by virtue of the activities of
such broker-dealer.
ii. No candidate shall be
nominated for membership on the Board if that candidate serves on
the board of a firm that serves as an investment adviser,
sub-adviser or principal underwriter of any registered investment
company outside of the Allspring Funds family, unless an exception
from this policy is expressly approved by the Committee. Similarly,
if a candidate serves on the board of a registered investment
adviser or registered broker-dealer, but that firm currently does
not serve as an investment adviser, sub-adviser, or principal
underwriter of any such registered investment company, such
candidate shall be nominated only upon the express agreement that
he or she would, unless an exception from this policy is expressly
approved by the Committee, resign from the Board in the event that
his or her firm subsequently undertakes such a role for any
registered investment company outside of the Allspring Funds
family. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if a candidate is a director
of a broker-dealer, nothing herein is intended to confer on such
candidate eligibility for nomination as an Independent Trustee if
he or she would be an “interested person” of the Funds pursuant to
the 1940 Act by virtue of the activities of such
broker-dealer.
3. The Committee shall review the
composition of the Board when it deems it appropriate to do so to
determine whether it may be appropriate to recommend adding
individuals with backgrounds or skill sets that differ from those
of the individuals already on the Board and/or recommend expanding
or contracting the size of the Board.
Committee
Nominations and Functions
1. The Committee shall propose
nominations for membership on all committees and shall review
committee assignments when it deems it appropriate to do
so.
2. The Committee shall review as
necessary the responsibilities of any committees of the Board,
whether there is a continuing need for each committee, whether
there is a need for additional committees of the Board, and whether
committees should be combined or reorganized. The Committee shall
make recommendations for any such action to the Board. With respect
to any committee of the Board of a Closed-End Fund, the powers,
functions, size, membership and other aspects of the committee
shall conform with any applicable requirements of the By-Laws of
such Closed-End Fund.
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Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
Chair
of the Nominating and Governance Committee
1. Chair of the Nominating and
Governance Committee.
a. In addition to any powers and
duties specified in this Charter, the Chair of the Committee’s role
is to preside at all meetings of the Committee and to act as a
liaison with respect to governance-related matters with service
providers, officers, attorneys, and other Committee members
generally between meetings.
b. The Chair of the Committee
shall be entitled to receive an additional annual fee in such
amount, and payable in such frequency and manner, determined from
time to time by the Board, for the additional work and time devoted
by the Chair of the Committee.
c. The Chair of the Committee
shall serve for a three-year term, which may be extended with the
approval of the Board. However, the Chair shall not serve more than
two consecutive three-year terms, unless such term limit is waived
by the Board. This term limit shall not apply to non-consecutive
terms.
2. Except for any duties specified
herein or pursuant to a Trust’s charter document, the designation
of Chair of the Committee does not impose on such Trustee any
duties, obligations or liability that are greater than the duties,
obligations or liability imposed on such person as a member of the
Board generally.
Compensation
1. The Committee shall
periodically review and recommend any appropriate changes to
trustee compensation to the Board.
Fund
Share Ownership
1. The Committee shall
periodically review and recommend any appropriate changes in
respect of policies regarding share ownership in Allspring Funds by
Trustees.
Board
Leadership Structure
1. The Committee shall
periodically review the Board leadership structure and shall
recommend any appropriate leadership structure changes to the
Board.
Advisory
Trustee Nominations
1. The Committee may from
time-to-time propose nominations of one or more individuals to
serve as members of an “advisory board,” as such term is defined in
Section 2(a)(1) of the 1940 Act (“Advisory Trustees”). An
individual shall be eligible to serve as an Advisory Trustee only
if that individual meets the requirements to be an Independent
Trustee and does not otherwise serve the Trusts in any other
capacity. Any Advisory Trustee shall serve at the pleasure of the
Board and may be removed, at any time, with or without cause, by
the Board. An Advisory Trustee may be nominated and appointed or
elected as a
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | A-4
Trustee, at which time he or she
shall cease to be Advisory Trustee. Any Advisory Trustee may resign
at any time.
Other
Powers and Responsibilities
1. The Committee shall review this
Charter at least annually and recommend changes, if any, to the
Board.
2. The Committee shall at least
annually review and address matters relating to the engagement and
independence of legal counsel employed by the Independent Trustees
and shall recommend any appropriate actions to the
Board.
3. The Committee shall have the
resources and authority to discharge its responsibilities,
including authority to retain special counsel and other experts or
consultants, advisers or employees at the expense of the
appropriate Fund(s).
4. In consultation with
independent legal counsel to the Independent Trustees, the
Committee shall consider the processes to be undertaken by the
Board in connection with the annual assessment of the performance
of the Board and the committees of the Board pursuant to Rule
0-1(a)(7)(v) under the 1940 Act and under any applicable listing
requirements.
5. The Committee shall set forth
and periodically review governance principles for the Board and its
committees and shall recommend changes, if any, to the Board. Those
principles have been outlined in a separate document (Statement of
Governance Principles).
6. The actions taken at meetings
of the Committee shall be recorded in the minutes of such meetings.
Meetings of the Committees may be conducted in person,
telephonically, or via video-conference.
7. If the Committee’s membership
does not include all of the Trustees, the Committee will report on
actions taken at its meetings to the Board.
8. The Committee shall have such
further responsibilities as are given to it from time to time by
the Board.
Date of most recent Charter
amendment: May 24, 2022
Appendix A
Procedures for Shareholders to
Submit Nominee Candidates
A shareholder of any series of the
Trust must follow the following procedures in order to submit
properly a nominee candidate recommendation for the Committee’s
consideration.
The shareholder must submit any
nominee candidate recommendation (a “Shareholder Recommendation”)
in writing to the Trust, to the attention of the Trust’s Secretary,
at the address of the principal executive offices of the
Trust.
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Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
The Shareholder Recommendation
must include: (i) a statement in writing setting forth (A) the
name, age, date of birth, business address, residence address and
nationality of the person recommended by the shareholder (the
“candidate”); (B) the series (and, if applicable, class) and number
of all shares of the Trust owned of record or beneficially by the
candidate, as reported to such shareholder by the candidate; (C)
any other information regarding the candidate called for with
respect to director nominees by paragraphs (a), (d), (e) and (f) of
Item 401 of Regulation S-K or paragraph (b) of Item 22 of Rule
14a-101 (Schedule 14A) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
as amended (the “Exchange Act”), adopted by the Securities and
Exchange Commission (or the corresponding provisions of any
regulation or rule subsequently adopted by the Securities and
Exchange Commission or any successor agency applicable to the
Trust); (D) any other information regarding the candidate that
would be required to be disclosed if the candidate were a nominee
in a proxy statement or other filing required to be made in
connection with solicitation of proxies for election of directors
pursuant to Section 14 of the Exchange Act and the rules and
regulations promulgated thereunder; and (E) whether the
recommending shareholder believes that the candidate is or will be
an “interested person” of the Trust (as defined in the 1940 Act)
and information regarding the candidate that will be sufficient for
the Trust to make such determination; (ii) the written and signed
consent of the candidate to be named as a nominee and to serve as a
Trustee if elected; (iii) the recommending shareholder’s name as it
appears on the Trust’s books; (iv) the series (and, if applicable,
class) and number of all shares of the Trust owned beneficially and
of record by the recommending shareholder; and (v) a description of
all arrangements or understandings between the recommending
shareholder and the candidate and any other person or persons
(including their names) pursuant to which the recommendation is
being made by the recommending shareholder. In addition, the
Committee may require the candidate to interview in person and
furnish such other information as it may reasonably require or deem
necessary to determine the eligibility of such candidate to serve
as a Trustee of the Trust. With respect to each Closed-End Fund,
the Shareholder Recommendation also must comply with any timing or
additional requirements applicable to shareholder nominations, as
set forth in the By-Laws of such Closed-End Fund. In the event of
any conflict or inconsistency with respect to the requirements
applicable to a Shareholder Recommendation as between those
established in these procedures and those in the By-Laws of a
Closed-End Fund, the requirements of the By-Laws of such Closed-End
Fund shall control.
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | A-6
EXHIBIT B
ALLSPRING FUNDS TRUST
ALLSPRING VARIABLE TRUST
ALLSPRING MASTER TRUST
ALLSPRING GLOBAL DIVIDEND OPPORTUNITY FUND
ALLSPRING INCOME OPPORTUNITIES FUND
ALLSPRING MULTI-SECTOR INCOME FUND
ALLSPRING UTILITIES AND HIGH INCOME FUND
AUDIT COMMITTEES CHARTER
1. Composition,
Chair and Audit Committee Financial Expert. The Audit
Committees (“Committees”) of the Boards of Trustees (the “Boards”)
of Allspring Funds Trust, Allspring Variable Trust, and Allspring
Master Trust (collectively, the “Open-End Trusts”), Allspring
Global Dividend Opportunity Fund (“EOD”), Allspring Income
Opportunities Fund (“EAD”), Allspring Multi-Sector Income Fund
(“ERC”), and Allspring Utilities and High Income Fund (“ERH”)
(collectively, the “Closed-End Funds” and together, with the
Open-End Trusts, the “Trusts”) shall be composed entirely of
Trustees who are not “interested persons” of the Trusts or of any
series thereof, or of any investment adviser or principal
underwriter, as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940
(“Independent Trustees”). The Committees of the Closed-End Funds
(the “Closed-End Fund Committees”) shall have at least three
members who are “independent” as that term is interpreted under
Rule 10A-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and under the
listing standards of each exchange on which shares of the
Closed-End Funds are traded, except as otherwise set forth by
statute, rule, or listing standard. The full Boards shall designate
the members of the Committees, after due consideration of
nominations, if any, from the Governance Committee, and shall
designate the Chair. Except for any duties specified herein or
pursuant to a Trust’s charter document, the designation of Chair of
the Audit Committee does not impose on such Trustee any duties,
obligations or liability that are greater than the duties,
obligations or liability imposed on such person as a member of the
Committees and the Boards in the absence of such
designation.
The Boards shall determine as
often as they deem appropriate whether any member of the Committees
is an “audit committee financial expert” as defined in Item 3 of
Form N-CSR. Any member of the Committees who is determined to be
such an expert shall not bear any duties, obligations or
liabilities that are greater than the duties, obligations and
liabilities imposed on such member as a member of the Committees
and the Boards in the absence of such determination.
2. Primary
Responsibilities. The primary responsibilities of the
Committees are:
■ |
to oversee the accounting and financial reporting policies of the
Trusts or their series, as applicable (a Trust or any such series
being referred to as a |
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Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
|
“Fund”, and collectively as the “Funds”), including their internal
controls over financial reporting and, as a Committee deems
appropriate, the internal controls over financial reporting of key
service providers; |
■ |
to oversee the quality and objectivity of the Funds’ financial
statements and the independent audit thereof; |
■ |
to interact with the Funds’ registered public accounting firm (the
“Auditors”) on behalf of the Boards, and to interact with the
appropriate officers of the Trusts, and the investment managers,
advisers, sub-advisers, administrators (collectively, “Management”)
and other key service providers other than the Auditors regarding
accounting and financial reporting matters; |
■ |
to oversee or, as appropriate, assist with the Board’s oversight
of, the Funds’ compliance with legal and regulatory requirements
that relate to the Funds’ accounting and financial reporting,
internal controls and independent audits; and |
■ |
to approve the engagement of the Auditors and their fees annually
and, in connection therewith, to review and evaluate the
qualifications, independence and performance of the
Auditors. |
The function of the Committees is
oversight. Management is responsible for: (1) the preparation,
quality and objectivity of the Funds’ financial statements; (2) the
implementation of appropriate accounting and financial reporting
principles and policies; and (3) the design and maintenance of
internal controls and procedures designed to assure compliance with
all applicable accounting standards, laws and regulations. The
Auditors are responsible for planning and carrying out proper
audits of the Funds’ financial statements and for performing other
procedures as deemed necessary under applicable professional
standards. Nothing in this Charter shall be construed to reduce the
responsibilities or liabilities of Management or the
Auditors.
Although the Committees are
expected to take a detached and questioning approach to the matters
that come before them, any review of the Funds’ financial
statements by the Committees is not an audit, nor does any review
by the Committees substitute for the responsibilities of Management
for preparing, or the Auditors for auditing, the Funds’ financial
statements. Members of the Committees are not employees of the
Funds and, in serving on these Committees, are not, and do not hold
themselves out to be, acting as accountants or auditors. As such,
it is not the duty or responsibility of the Committees or their
members to conduct “field work” or other types of auditing or
accounting reviews or procedures. In addition, the authority and
responsibilities set forth in this Charter do not reflect or create
any duty or obligation of the Committees to plan or conduct any
audit, to determine or certify that any Fund’s financial statements
are complete, accurate, fairly presented, or in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles or applicable laws, or to
guarantee any report of the Auditors.
In discharging their duties, the
members of the Committees are entitled to rely on information,
opinions, reports, or statements, including financial
statements
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | B-2
and other financial data prepared
or presented by: (1) one or more officers of the Trusts whom the
member reasonably believes to be reliable and competent in the
matters presented; (2) legal counsel, the Auditors or other public
accountants, or other persons as to matters the member reasonably
believes are within the person’s professional or expert competence;
or (3) another Board committee on which the member does not
sit.
3. Duties
and Powers. To carry out their responsibilities, the
Committees shall have the following duties and powers, to be
discharged in such a manner as the Committees deem appropriate, in
their sole discretion:
• |
to approve the engagement of the Auditors to annually audit and
provide audit and tax services necessary to support their audit
opinion on a Fund’s financial statements, to recommend to the
Independent Trustees the selection, retention or termination of the
Auditors and, in connection therewith, to review and evaluate
matters brought to their attention potentially affecting the
independence and capabilities of the Auditors; |
• |
to approve the engagement of the Auditors to provide non-audit
services to a Fund, or to an investment adviser (not including a
sub-adviser whose role is primarily investment management and is
sub-contracted or overseen by another investment adviser) (“covered
adviser”) or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common
control with a covered adviser (“control affiliate”) that provides
ongoing services to a Fund, if the engagement relates directly to
the operations and financial reporting of the
Fund; |
• |
to implement any policies and procedures for pre-approval of the
engagement of the Auditors as are set forth in this Charter to
provide audit or non-audit services to a Fund and/or to provide
non-audit services to a covered adviser or a control affiliate that
provides ongoing services to the Fund, which services relate
directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Fund,
provided in either case that the policies and procedures are
detailed as to the particular services covered; |
• |
to consider whether the provision by the Auditors of non-audit
services to a covered adviser or a control affiliate that provides
ongoing services to the Fund, which services were not required to
be pre-approved by the Committees, is compatible with maintaining
the Auditors’ independence; |
• |
to assess the Auditors’ independence at least annually, in
connection with which the Committees shall receive and review a
report by the Auditors disclosing all relationships that may affect
the Auditors’ independence, including the disclosures required by
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (“PCAOB”) Rule 3526 or
any other applicable auditing standard and any relationships of the
Auditors’ affiliates that could reasonably be thought to bear on
the independence of the Auditors; |
• |
to receive from, to review and to discuss with the Auditors, and
with Management and other key service providers to the extent the
Committees deem appropriate, the matters about which PCAOB Auditing
Standard No. 1301 (Codification of PCAOB Statements on Auditing
Standards) (“AS |
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Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
|
1301”) requires communication, including those specifically
mentioned in this Charter; provided that, pursuant to Section 12 of
this Charter, the Audit Committee Chair shall communicate with the
Auditors on behalf of the Committees with respect to matters about
which AS 1301 requires communication, and it is the duty of each
member of the Committees to communicate promptly with the Audit
Committee Chair if such member becomes aware of any matters
relevant to an audit of a Fund that is required to be communicated
to the Auditors pursuant to AS 1301, including, but not limited to,
violations or possible violations of laws or
regulations; |
• |
to review the arrangements for and scope of the Funds’ annual
audits and any special audits; |
• |
to review and approve the fees proposed to be charged to the Funds
by the Auditors for all audit and non-audit
services; |
• |
to meet with, and consider information and comments from, the
Auditors with respect to the Funds’ financial statements and the
Funds’ accounting and financial reporting policies, procedures and
internal controls (including the Funds’ critical accounting
policies and practices and any adjustments to a Fund’s financial
statements recommended by the Auditors), and to consider
Management’s responses to any such comments and, to the extent the
Committees deem necessary or appropriate, to promote improvements
in the quality of the Funds’ accounting and financial
reporting; |
• |
to review the form of engagement letter used by the Funds to engage
the Auditors for all audit and non-audit
services; |
• |
to oversee the resolution of any material disagreements between
Management and the Auditors regarding financial reporting that are
brought to the Committees’ attention; |
• |
to review with the Funds’ principal executive officer and/or
principal financial officer, in connection with their
certifications of any filings by the Funds on Form N-CSR any
successor form, any significant deficiencies in the design or
operation of disclosure controls and procedures or material
weaknesses therein or in internal controls over financial reporting
and any reported evidence of fraud involving Management or any
other key service providers or any of their employees who have a
significant role in the Funds’ disclosure controls and
procedures; |
• |
to investigate or initiate investigation of reports of
improprieties or suspected improprieties in connection with the
Funds’ accounting or financial reporting; |
• |
to report their activities to the respective Boards on a regular
basis and to make such recommendations with respect to the matters
described above and other matters as the Committees may deem
necessary or appropriate; |
• |
to inquire of the Auditors and Management as to whether appropriate
staffing levels are being maintained within the audit engagement
team, internal accounting and administration staff;
and |
• |
to perform such other functions and to have such powers as may
be |
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | B-4
|
necessary or appropriate in the efficient and lawful discharge of
the foregoing. |
4. All
Closed-End Fund Committees. The Closed-End Fund Committees
shall be directly responsible for the appointment, compensation,
retention and oversight of the work of any Auditor engaged
(including resolution of disagreements between Management and the
Auditor regarding financial reporting) for the purpose of preparing
or issuing an audit report or performing other audit, review or
attest services for the Closed-End Funds, and each such Auditor
must report directly to its respective Closed-End Fund
Committee.
The Closed-End Fund Committees
shall also establish procedures for (1) the receipt, retention, and
treatment of complaints received by the Closed-End Funds regarding
accounting, internal accounting controls, or auditing matters; and
(2) the confidential, anonymous submission by employees of the
Closed-End Funds, the Closed-End Funds’ investment adviser,
administrator, principal underwriter (if any) or any other provider
of accounting-related services for the Closed-End Funds, of
concerns regarding questionable accounting or auditing
matters.
Each of the Closed-End Fund
Committees shall have the power, in addition to the
responsibilities, duties and powers included elsewhere in this
Charter, to be discharged in such a manner as the Committee deems
appropriate in its sole discretion, to review such disclosures or
statements made by the respective Closed-End Fund Committee in the
Closed-End Funds’ annual or semi-annual report or proxy
statement.
5. NYSE
American Closed-End Fund Committees. Any Closed-End Fund
with shares listed on the NYSE American exchange (the “NYSE
American”) must comply with applicable listing standard
requirements.1 Accordingly, each member of an audit committee
of a fund listed on the NYSE American (“NYSE American Closed-End
Fund Committee”) must be able to read and understand fundamental
financial statements, including a company’s balance sheet, income
statement, and cash flow statement. Further, at least one member of
a NYSE American Closed-End Fund Committee must be “financially
sophisticated,” as such term is defined in the listing standards of
the NYSE American2.
The purpose of a NYSE American
Closed-End Fund Committee includes, in addition to the
responsibilities, duties and powers included elsewhere in this
Charter, overseeing the accounting and financial reporting
processes and audits of the Closed-End Fund. NYSE American
Closed-End Fund Committees must actively engage in a dialogue with
the Auditors with respect to any disclosed relationships or
services that may impact the objectivity and independence of the
Auditors and are responsible for taking, or recommending that the
Boards take, appropriate action to oversee the independence of the
Auditors. Committee members must not have participated in the
preparation of the financial statements of the Closed-End Fund at
any time during the three years prior to appointment to the NYSE
American Closed-End Fund Committee. The
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Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
NYSE American Closed-End Fund
Committees shall meet on a regular basis, as often as necessary to
fulfill their responsibilities, including at least annually in
connection with the issuance of audited financial
statements.
6. New
York Stock Exchange Closed-End Fund Committees. Any
Closed-End Fund with shares listed on the New York Stock Exchange
(the “NYSE”) must comply with applicable listing standard
requirements.3 Accordingly, each member of an audit committee
of a fund listed on the NYSE (“NYSE Closed-End Fund Committee”)
must be “financially literate” (or become so within a reasonable
time after his or her appointment to the
committee).4
Further, at least one member of an
NYSE Closed-End Fund Committee must have “accounting or related
financial expertise”.5
The purpose of a NYSE Closed-End
Fund Committee includes, in addition to the responsibilities,
duties and powers included elsewhere in this Charter, assisting
with the Board’s oversight of the integrity of the Closed-End
Fund’s financial statements, the Closed-End Fund’s compliance with
legal and regulatory requirements, the qualifications and
independence of the Closed-End Fund’s Auditors, and the performance
of the Closed-End Fund’s internal audit functions (if any) and
Auditors.
The NYSE Closed-End Fund Committee
shall have the following duties and powers, in addition to the
responsibilities, duties and powers included elsewhere in this
Charter, to be discharged in such a manner as the Committee deems
appropriate, in its sole discretion:
■ |
to obtain and review at least annually a report from the Auditors
describing (1) the accounting firm’s internal quality-control
procedures, (2) any material issues raised (a) by the Auditors’
most recent internal quality-control review or peer review or (b)
by any governmental or other professional inquiry or investigation
performed within the preceding five years respecting one or more
independent audits carried out by the firm, and any steps taken to
address any such issues, and (3) all relationships between the
Auditors and the Closed-End Fund to assess the Auditor’s
independence;6 |
■ |
to meet to review and discuss with Management the Closed-End Fund’s
audited annual and unaudited semi-annual financial statements, as
well as the annual “Management’s Discussion of Fund Performance”
prior to inclusion, in its Form N-CSR; |
■ |
to discuss any press releases regarding the Closed-End Fund’s
investment performance, distributions and/or other financial
information about the Closed-End Fund, as well as any financial
information provided to analysts or rating agencies. The NYSE
Closed-End Fund Committee may discharge this responsibility by
discussing the general types of information to be disclosed by the
Fund and the form of presentation (i.e., a case-by-case review is
not required) and need not discuss in advance each such release of
information; |
■ |
to discuss guidelines and policies with respect to risk assessment
and risk management; |
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | B-6
■ |
to review with the Auditors any audit problems or difficulties
encountered in the course of their audit work and Management’s
responses thereto;7 |
■ |
to set clear policies for the hiring by the Closed-End Fund of
employees or former employees of the Closed-End Fund’s Auditors, to
the extent that the Closed-End Fund intends to have
employees; |
■ |
to report regularly to the Closed-End Fund Board;
and |
■ |
to consider whether to recommend to the Board that the audited
financial statements be included in the annual report for the
Closed-End Fund. |
The performance of the NYSE
Closed-End Fund Committee shall be reviewed at least annually by
the Committee or by the Board and may be conducted as part of the
Board’s annual self-assessment. Unless otherwise determined by the
Board, no member of the NYSE Closed-End Fund Committee may serve on
the audit committee of more than two other public
companies.8
7. Meetings.
The Committees shall meet at least twice annually, and are
empowered to hold special meetings as circumstances require. The
Committees shall record minutes of their meetings and shall invite
Trustees who are not members of the Committees, Management, counsel
and representatives of service providers to attend meetings and
provide information as the Committees, in their sole discretion,
consider appropriate. The Committees shall periodically meet
separately in executive session with the Auditors. Meetings of the
Committees may be conducted in person, telephonically, or via
video-conference.
8. Auditor
Pre-Approval. The Auditors are hereby pre-approved to: (a)
audit newly created Funds; (b) perform “agreed upon procedures”
reviews in connection with Fund reorganizations and/or provide
comfort letters in connection with securities offerings; (c) review
special Fund registration statement filings; (d) provide comments
to regulatory filings; and (e) perform non-audit services for a
Fund, and for the Fund’s covered adviser and its control affiliates
that provide ongoing services to the Fund where the engagement
relates directly to the operations and financial reporting of the
Fund, provided that any such non-audit services fall within the
specified categories of services listed on Tab A and that the fees
for such services do not exceed the pre-approved dollar amounts
listed on Tab A. To the extent that the non-audit services or fees
would fall outside of the aforementioned pre-approvals, such
services or fees may be pre-approved by the Committees, or by the
Chair pursuant to delegated authority in accordance with Section 9
below.
9. Pre-Approval
Procedure. The Audit Committee Chair is authorized to
pre-approve: (1) audit services to the Funds; (2) non-audit tax or
other categories of services identified in Section 8 above or
compliance consulting or training services provided to the Funds by
the Auditors if the fees for any particular engagement are not
anticipated to exceed $50,000; and (3) non-audit tax or compliance
consulting or training services provided by the Auditors to a
Fund’s covered adviser and its control affiliates (where
pre-approval is required
B-7 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
because the covered adviser or its
control affiliate provides ongoing services to the Fund and the
engagement relates directly to the operations and financial
reporting of the Fund) if the fee to the Auditors for any
particular engagement is not anticipated to exceed $50,000. For any
such pre-approval sought from the Chair, Management shall prepare a
brief written statement describing the proposed services. If the
Chair approves of such service, he or she shall sign the statement
prepared by Management or otherwise evidence in writing his or her
approval, which may be given by electronic mail. Such written
statement, or the written engagement for the proposed services
described in the statement, shall be reported to the full
Committees at their next regularly scheduled meeting.
10. Availability.
The Committees shall be reasonably available to meet with the
Treasurer and other appropriate officers of the Trusts, and with
internal accounting staff, and individuals with internal audit
responsibilities, for consultation on audit, accounting, and
related financial matters.
11. Resources.
The Committees shall be given the resources and shall have the
authority appropriate to discharge their responsibilities,
including the authority to retain special or independent counsel
and other experts, advisors or consultants at the expense of the
appropriate Fund(s) and to determine the appropriate funding for
payment of compensation to Auditors for the purpose of preparing or
issuing an audit report or performing other audit, review or attest
services for a Fund and the Committees’ ordinary administrative
expenses that are necessary or appropriate in carrying out their
duties.
12. Audit Committee
Chair.
■ |
The Chair’s role is to preside at all meetings of the Committees
and to act as a liaison with respect to audit, accounting and
related financial matters with the Auditors, Management, and other
Committee members generally between meetings. Without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, the Chair shall communicate with the
Auditors on behalf of the Committees with respect to matters
relevant to the audit under AS 1301, as provided in Section 3(f) of
this Charter. |
■ |
The Chair shall be entitled to receive an additional annual fee in
such amount, and payable in such frequency and manner, determined
from time to time by the Boards, for the additional work and time
devoted by the Chair. |
■ |
The Chair shall serve for a three-year term, which may be extended
with the approval of the Board. However, the Chair shall not serve
more than two consecutive three-year terms, unless such term limit
is waived by the Board. This term limit shall not apply to
non-consecutive terms. |
13. Miscellaneous.
The Committees shall review and reapprove this Charter as often as
they deem appropriate, but not less often than annually, and
recommend any changes that they deem appropriate to the Boards. The
Committees shall have such further responsibilities as are given to
them from time to time by the Boards. The Committees shall consult
as they deem appropriate with Management, the Auditors and counsel
as to legal or
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | B-8
regulatory developments affecting
their responsibilities, as well as relevant tax, accounting and
industry developments. The actions taken at meetings of the
Committees shall be recorded in the minutes of such meetings. If
the Committees’ membership does not include all of the Trustees or
if otherwise requested by the Boards, the Committees will report on
actions taken at their meetings to the Boards. The Committees shall
have such further responsibilities as are given to them from time
to time by the Boards.
Nothing in this Charter shall be
interpreted as diminishing or derogating the responsibilities of
the Boards.
Date of most recent Charter
Amendment: May 24, 2022
1. |
As of August 2021, shares of EAD, ERC and ERH were listed on the
NYSE American. Although the NYSE American Company Guide exempts
closed-end funds from certain listing requirements, this Charter
has been drafted according to the view expressed by regulators that
they may, in fact, apply some of those requirements to closed-end
funds. |
2. |
One is “financially sophisticated” if that individual qualifies as
an “audit committee financial expert” under Item 3 of Form
N-CSR. |
3. |
As of August 2021, shares of EOD were listed on the
NYSE. |
4. |
“Financial literacy” is generally interpreted to signify the
ability to read and understand fundamental financial statements,
including a company’s balance sheet, income statement and cash flow
statement. |
5. |
One has “accounting or related financial expertise” if that
individual qualifies as an “audit committee financial expert” under
the Item 407(d)(5)(ii) of Regulation S-K standard, which is
identical to that of Item 3 of Form N-CSR. |
6. |
The NYSE Closed-End Fund Committee may evaluate the lead partner of
the independent auditor team. |
7. |
The NYSE Closed-End Fund Committee may consider and discuss with
the Auditors any material issues on which the national office of
the Auditors was consulted by the Closed-End Fund’s audit
team. |
8. |
Service on multiple boards in the same fund complex is counted as
service on one board for the purposes of this
requirement. |
B-9 | Allspring
Utilities and High Income Fund Proxy Statement
TAB A
Allspring Funds
Schedule of Pre-Approved Non-Audit Services
(Pre-approval amounts are for each calendar year
period)
|
|
Non-Audit Services
|
Fee Range
|
Assistance with Internal Revenue Code Sections
851(b) and 817(h) diversification testing (upon specific request as
Allspring Fund Tax Department is currently responsible for
diversification testing).
|
Not to exceed $3,500 per
fund
|
Tax assistance and advice regarding tax
consequences of new investment products or proposed changes to
existing products.
|
Not to exceed $15,000
|
Tax assistance and advice regarding statutory,
regulatory or administrative developments.
|
Not to exceed $15,000
|
Services related to contesting any assessed
Internal Revenue Service penalties for incorrect reporting of Fund
Forms 1120-RIC and Form 1099.
|
Not to exceed $10,000
|
Other International tax services (generally
related to foreign tax withholding).
|
Not to exceed $15,000
|
Tax assistance and advice regarding evaluation
of complex security transactions.
|
Not to exceed $30,000
|
Tax and/or other non-audit services associated
with Fund mergers and liquidations.
|
Not to exceed $8,000 per fund
merger/ liquidation
|
Date of most recent Schedule
approval: December 16, 2021
Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund Proxy Statement | B-10
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EVERY SHAREHOLDER’S VOTE IS
IMPORTANT
EASY VOTING
OPTIONS:
VOTE ON THE INTERNET
Log on to:
www.proxy-direct.com
or scan the QR code
Follow the on-screen instructions
Available 24 hours
VOTE BY PHONE
Call 1-800-337-3503
Follow the recorded instructions
available 24 hours
VOTE BY MAIL
Vote, sign and date this Proxy Card
and return in the postage-paid
envelope
VOTE IN PERSON
Attend Shareholder Meeting
525 Market Street, 12th Floor
San Francisco, CA 94105
on December 5, 2022
Please detach at perforation
before mailing.
PROXY
ALLSPRING UTILITIES AND HIGH
INCOME FUND
PROXY FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS TO BE HELD ON DECEMBER
5, 2022
This Proxy is solicited on
behalf of the Board of Trustees of the Allspring Utilities and High
Income Fund (the “Fund”) for the Annual Meeting of
Shareholders. The undersigned, revoking any previously executed
proxies, hereby appoints R. Matthew Prasse, Maureen E. Towle and
Johanne F. Castro, or each of them acting individually, as proxies
of the undersigned, each with full power of substitution, to
represent and vote all of the shares of the Fund that the
undersigned would be entitled to vote at the 2022 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders of the Fund to be held at the principal office of the
Fund, 525 Market Street, 12th Floor, San Francisco, California
94105 on December 5, 2022, at 10:00 a.m., Pacific time, and at any
and all adjournments thereof.
Receipt of the Notice of Meeting
and the accompanying Proxy Statement, which describes the matters
to be considered and voted on, is hereby acknowledged.
VOTE VIA THE TELEPHONE:
1-800-337-3503
VOTE VIA THE INTERNET: www.proxy-direct.com
ERH_32991_100322
UNLESS VOTING BY TELEPHONE OR INTERNET, PLEASE SIGN, DATE ON THE
REVERSE SIDE AND MAIL THIS PROXY CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED
ENVELOPE.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx code
EVERY SHAREHOLDER’S VOTE IS
IMPORTANT
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF
SHAREHOLDERS AND IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY
OF PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS TO BE
HELD ON DECEMBER 5, 2022:
You may obtain a copy of this
proxy statement, the accompanying Notice of Annual Meeting of
Shareholders, the
proxy card and the Annual Report of the Fund for the period ended
August 31, 2022 without charge by visiting the following Website:
https://www.proxy-direct.com/all-32991
PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN
YOUR
PROXY TODAY
Please detach at perforation
before mailing.
The Shares represented by this
proxy will be voted as specified in the following Item 1, but if
you return a signed proxy card and no choice is specified, they
will be voted FOR the election of the three (3) persons named below
as nominee Trustees under “Election of Trustees (Proposal 1).” If
any nominee for any reason becomes unable to serve or is unwilling
to serve or for good cause will not serve, the persons named as
proxies on the other side of this proxy card will vote for the
election of such other person or persons as they may consider
qualified. The Board of Trustees has no reason to believe that any
of the three (3) nominee Trustees will be unable or unwilling to
serve.
If any other matters about
which the Fund did not have timely notice properly come before the
meeting, authorization is given to the proxy holders to vote in
accordance with the views of management of the Fund.
TO VOTE MARK BLOCKS BELOW IN
BLUE OR BLACK INK AS SHOWN IN THIS Example: X
A Proposal THE BOARD OF
TRUSTEES OF THE FUND UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE FOR THE
ELECTION OF EACH NOMINEE AS A TRUSTEE.
|
|
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|
|
1. Election of
Trustees:
|
|
FOR ALL
|
WITHHOLD ALL
|
FOR ALL EXCEPT
|
Nominees:
|
|
|
|
|
01. Timothy J. Penny 02. James G.
Polisson 03. Pamela Wheelock
|
|
|
|
|
To withhold authority to vote for
any individual nominee(s) mark the box “FOR ALL EXCEPT” and write
the nominee number(s) on the line provided.
|
|
|
|
|
2. To transact such other business
as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment
thereof
|
|
|
|
|
B Authorized Signatures - This
section must be completed for your vote to be counted.- Sign and
Date Below
Note: Please sign exactly
as your name(s) appear(s) on this proxy card, and date it. When
shares are held jointly, each holder should sign. When signing as
attorney, executor, administrator, trustee, officer of corporation
or other entity or in another representative capacity, please give
the full title under the signature.
___________________________________________________
Date (mm/dd/yyyy) - Please print date below
___________________________________________________
Signature 1 - Please keep signature within the box
___________________________________________________
Signature 2 - Please keep signature within the box
Scanner bar code
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx ERH 32991 xxxxxxxx
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