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Corporate Social Responsibility
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5.30.2007 - 09:24am ET
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Remarkable 45 Percent of Shareholders Support Sustainability/PVC Resolution at Hasbro
PVC Chemical Issue Also Raised with Target and Bed, Bath and Beyond; Toy/Game Maker Hasbro Lags Other Companies, Progress Seen at Sears and Mohawk Industries.
(CSRwire) PAWTUCKET, R.I. – May 30, 2007 – In a vote that ranks among the highest
ever for resolutions on sustainability and toxic chemicals opposed by
management, almost half (44.776 percent) of Hasbro Inc. (HAS) shareholders
endorsed a proxy resolution calling on the toy/game company to produce a
sustainability report by December 2007. The resolution highlighted the
hazards to public health and company finances posed by the chemical
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) used in toys and packaging. The resolution noted
that Hasbro lags other companies in addressing this issue.
Hasbro shareholders registered their strong support for the resolution
during the company's annual meeting Thursday (May 24). Speaking for the
resolution filers, Margaret Weber, coordinator of Corporate Responsibility
for the Adrian Dominican Sisters in Adrian, Michigan, and also a
representative for the Camilla Madden Charitable Trust, commented, "The
high vote for this proposal from shareholders indicates that Hasbro needs
to meet the standard for accountability on sustainability issues and also
that shareholders understand the potential liabilities with continued use
of PVC in children’s toys."
The filers at Hasbro had noted in a recent letter to shareholders, filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission, that Wal-Mart had recently
reached a voluntary agreement with the attorneys-general of New York and
Illinois on a recall of PVC baby bibs laced with lead; Wal-Mart committed
to support a voluntary industry standard to eliminate PVC from all
products intended for use by children. Wal-Mart is Hasbro’s largest
customer, representing 24 percent of Hasbro’s consolidated net revenues
in 2006.
The Hasbro resolution was voted on the same day that shareholders were
raising PVC issues at Target’s (TGT) Annual General Meeting.
Shareholders began a dialogue with senior management in September 2006
asking the company to review health concerns related to PVC, as well as
product alternatives and procurement options. Shareholders have found
Target unresponsive to questions about the company’s PVC sales practices
and management goals. These issues were raised again at the annual meeting.
Michael Passoff, associate director of As You Sow Foundation commented,
“Despite consumer and investor concern Target can still not answer basic
questions such as what is the company’s commitment to exploring
alternatives to PVC? What is the process, who is responsible, what is the
timeframe?”
The Hasbro and Target responses stand in marked contrast to those from
Sears Holdings and Mohawk Industries, where earlier this year shareholders
withdrew resolutions following fruitful meetings with both companies
regarding their plans for PVC.
The PVC issue will surface one more time during the current proxy season,
in a resolution filed at Bed, Bath, and Beyond (BBBY), whose annual
meeting is scheduled for July 10 in Morristown, New Jersey. BBBY
shareholders are asking the company to address management options for
addressing the scientific and business concerns raised by PVC, toxic
chemicals in cosmetics, and the toxic chemical PFOA that is used to
provide stain and grease resistant coatings for carpets, cookware, and
food packaging.
The Hasbro and Target meetings occurred on the same day that 200
scientists meeting at an international environmental health conference
issued a statement warning that exposure to common toxic chemicals in the
womb can cause health problems later in life. In "The Faroes Statement:
Human Health Effects of Developmental Exposure to Environmental
Toxicants", http://www.pptox.dk/Consensus/tabid/72/Default.aspx
, the scientists note the need to move beyond the "old paradigm" of "the
dose makes the poison". For early in life exposures (such as those that
can result from the chemicals found in common household products and
office environments), "the timing makes the poison".
Richard A. Liroff, director of the Investor Environmental Health Network
(IEHN), commented, "The new statement by the scientists elevates the
concern investors have been expressing to companies this season —
emerging science casts in doubt the viability of keeping various toxic
chemicals in products. The parallel to global warming is obvious—science
is building up, regulators are taking action, and if companies don't
respond they’re at financial, reputational, and litigation risk."
The resolution asked Hasbro to prepare a sustainability report by December
2007. The resolution recites scientific concerns about PVC, notes
regulatory action to outlaw PVC products containing certain toxic
additives, and adds that prominent competing toy companies and retailers
such as Wal-Mart and Ikea are phasing out PVC in products and/or
packaging.
The resolutions at Hasbro and Bed, Bath, and Beyond are two of 13
resolutions addressing toxic chemicals in products introduced this proxy
season, according to The Investor Environmental Health Network (IEHN).
IEHN is a collaborative partnership of investment managers concerned with
the use of toxic chemicals in products of their portfolio companies. IEHN
and its participants have documented the need for investor concerns in the
March 2007 "Fiduciary Guide to Toxic Chemical Risk" and in a 20 minute
video, "Toxic Chemicals in Products: Financial Risks and Opportunities."
Both are available on-line at http://iehn.org.
CONTACT: Richard A. Liroff, (703) 243-0085 and rliroff@iehn.org.
Note to editors: Other sustainability resolutions receiving high votes
include machinery manufacturer Terex Corporation (48.4 percent) in 2006
and electronics and tool manufacturer Cooper Industries (44.3 percent) in
2003. A resolution at Canadian steel producer IPSCO on toxic releases and
greenhouse gas emissions received 49.2 percent in 2003.
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