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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
7.09.2008 - 10:10am ET
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At The CREF Annual Meeting, Shareholders Will Tell The Pension Giant: "Practice What You Preach On Social Responsibility"
July 15, 9:30 a.m., Colorado Convention Center, 700 14th Street, Denver, CO
(CSRwire) Shareholders and advocacy groups will press TIAA-CREF officers on its
investment in companies with socially irresponsible practices. After years
of pressure, TIAA-CREF agreed to become a shareholder activist on issues of
social responsibility. Now it's time for them to either put pressure on
five industry leaders that consistently display egregious behavior or
divest their stock.
DENVER, CO. - July 8, 2008 - The nation's largest pension fund will once
again come under fire from the Make TIAA- CREF Ethical coalition* at the
CREF annual shareholders' meeting on July 15. Advocacy groups will join
shareholders to demand greater accountability from TIAA-CREF, the $400
billion plus fund that primarily serves college personnel.
In 2007, resolutions were passed by the 600,000 member New York State
United Teachers and 1.4 million member American Federation of Teachers
critical of TIAA-CREF's continued investment in Nike, Coca-Cola, and
Wal-Mart, three of the five companies the TIAA-CREF coalition targets.
They asked TIAA-CREF to hold these and other companies accountable on
labor issues. Educators and those working alongside them have spent their
careers teaching students the truth about the world around them. The truth
is that TIAA-CREF continues to invest funds in these corporate bad
actors.
The Make TIAA- CREF Ethical Coalition notes that TIAA-CREF invests in
companies with reprehensible records despite claims in its advertisements
that it provides "financial services for the greater good" and is "mindful
of its social responsibilities." Its Policy Statement on Corporate
Governance states, "TIAA-CREF recognizes that from the perspective of
shareholder value, boards should carefully consider the strategic impact
of issues relating to the environment and social responsibility. There is
a growing body of research examining the economic consequences of
companies' efforts to promote good environmental and social practices we
believe that companies and boards should pay careful attention
to...Environment...Human Rights...Diversity...the safety and potential
impact of its products and services...the common good of the communities
in which it operates." At the same time, TIAA-CREF invests in: - Nike
and Wal-Mart, condemned for selling products produced by overseas sweatshop
labor;
- Wal-Mart, widely criticized for its domestic labor practices, hurting
local businesses, and promoting urban sprawl;
- Philip Morris/Altria, responsible for Marlboro, the leading cigarette
for youth;
- Costco, which promotes police brutality in Mexico and the destruction
of its cultural heritage and the environment;
- Coke, with complicity in widespread labor, human rights and
environmental abuses; exploits child labor and aggressively markets
harmful products to children.
(TIAA-CREF did divest from harmful World
Bank bonds. It should pledge "no more.")
The Coalition urges that TIAA-CREF "reform them or dump them." TIAA-CREF
should use its considerable shareholder power to influence these corporate
leaders or divest from their stock. They have been in dialogue with
Coca-Cola for at least two years, with no substantive changes in Coke's
actions. TIAA-CREF lists advocacy tools in its promotional materials, from
private talking to public dialogue to collective action to litigation and
regulatory reform. The Coalition says, "Get started on these tougher ways
that will be necessary in order to move Coke." The Coalition was just told
that TIAA-CREF talked with Wal-Mart this year. We applaud that start, but
more aggressive actions will be needed with Wal-Mart, as well.
According to activist and coalition representative Jaime Lagunez, of
Frente Civico por la Defensa del Casino de la Selva, "For a group claiming
leadership in governance and social responsibility, they need to look in
the mirror and recognize their own shortcomings. They need to deal with
corporations in their portfolios involved in human rights violations and
environmental degradation."
"Stockholders by definition are owners of a company and with ownership
comes responsibility," says Corporate Campaign, Inc./Campaign to Stop
Killer Coke director Ray Rogers. "I do not believe TIAA-CREF participants
want to be associated with the tobacco industry or companies like
Coca-Cola that are complicit in widespread human rights abuses including
kidnapping, torture, and murder of union leaders in Colombia; fraudulent
business practices and undermining the health and well-being of children
worldwide."
According to coalition group representative Neil Wollman, a Senior Fellow
at Bentley College in Massachusetts, TIAA-CREF claims that outside of
their socially responsible fund, they cannot use non-financial criteria in
their financial decisions. Yet, Wollman asks, "Would TIAA-CREF have
invested in the production of Nazi gas chambers in World War II if it
meant a healthy financial profit? It's time for TIAA-CREF to answer that
kind of question." He adds, "Our coalition praises TIAA-CREF for changes
over the years in its social responsibility practices often spurred by
participant lobbying; but now they need to move on our companies of
concern."
* The Make TIAA-CREF Ethical Coalition includes: Corporate
Accountability International (formerly Infact), World Bank Bonds Boycott,
Press for Change, Social Choice for Social Change, Canadian Committee To
Combat Crimes Against Humanity (CCCCH) , Citizens Coalition (Frente
Civico), Educating for Justice, National Community Reinvestment Coalition,
Campaign to Stop Killer Coke/Corporate Campaign, Inc., Campaign for a
Commercial-Free Childhood, and Sprawl-Busters.
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