This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2016, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Health care giant Johnson & Johnson is increasing its dividend for the 54th consecutive year, news that cheered shareholders at a low-key annual meeting Thursday.

CEO Alex Gorsky said the quarterly dividend will rise by 5 cents to 80 cents, "in recognition of our 2015 results, strong financial position and confidence in" J&J's future.

Meanwhile, preliminary totals showed that more than 90 percent of shares voted approved top executives' compensation, the company's auditor and new one-year terms for board members.

A shareholder proposal to require that the board chairman be independent drew nearly 41 percent of votes but failed. Other shareholder proposals all failed. They called for requiring detailed annual reports on lobbying expenditures, making share repurchases the priority for rewarding shareholders, and starting take-back programs for unused medicines.