Business

Lululemon board member resigns after résumé questioned

A long-serving board member of the popular women’s activewear retailer Lululemon Athlet♏ica has stepped down — just weeks after questions were raised over her résumé.

Rhoda Pitcher, 61, on the company’s board since 2005, two yeꦺars before it went public, exited to “pursue other opportunities,” the company said in a regulatory fili༒ng on Tuesday.

Pitcher, Lululemon’s longest-serving board member, claimed she had a master’s d🍌egree from “University A✨ssociates” — but attempts to verify the degree were unsuccessful, according to a report.

Also, Pitcher never listed an undergraduate degree, , which first inquired i🔯nto Pitcher’s past.

Requests to interview Pitcher were denied and questions about her past went unanswered, the report sa♌id.

In fact, TheStreet had so much difficulty assembling a cre💃dible bio of the director it wounꦕd up asking in a June 17 headline: “Is Lululemon board member Rhoda Pitcher real or a ghost?”

Lululemon said her exit was “not due to any disagreements with us on any of our operations, policies or practi♔ces.”

Founder Chip Wilson, who remains Lululemon’s largest shareholder despitꦬe leaving the company in 2015, in꧒cited interest in the director on June 15 by blaming “long-standing board members” for the chain’s troubles.

Wilson, who aired his complaint on CNBC, d🐼idn’t single out Pitcher in particular.

But her r💦eluctance to explain away the growing mystery around her added 👍to the fears fanned by Wilson about company governance.

Of coursꩵe, board members and executive🌳s with falsified résumés can prove disastrous.

On May 3,🌠 201♐2, hedge fund investor Dan Loeb discovered Yahoo CEO Scott Thompson did not have the degree in computer science he claimed he had.

Thompson was gone 10 days later.

“When the qualifications of a board member becomes a public story, especially when amplified through the💯 business media, shareholders start worrying,” said Francis Byrd, the found♔er of Byrd Governance Advisory.

Byrd added that this transparency-above-all mandate may not appeal to long-standing directors who weren’t subjected to such scrutiny in earlier 🐷years.

Pitcher enjoyed a smooth ride at Lululemon until 2013, when a major recall of “too sheer” yoga pants and Wilson’s m⭕isguided critique of Lululemon’s primary customer — “some women’s bodies just actually don’t work” with the brand, he said during a TV interview — put the company in crisis mode.

“When something like that happens, it’s no longer enough to have a three-sentence bio in a proxy stateme𒐪nt,” Byrd said of companies under stress.

Lululemo🌠n shares fell 1 percent Tuesday, to close at $77.74.