[1] Taking activist positions on issues of society is not
a new endeavor for United Methodists and followers of the Church's
founder, John Wesley. Historically, the denomination is known for
its involvement with political and social struggles that impact
individuals locally and globally. The General Board of Pension and
Health Benefits of The United Methodist Church (General Board)
continues the tradition of social advocacy.
[2] The General Board administers a pension fund of $10
billion for more than 66,000 employees. The fund's investment
portfolio is screened to prohibit investments in companies that
derive significant revenues from alcohol, tobacco, gambling,
pornography and armaments. In addition, the General Board invests
nearly $1 billion in its affordable housing program.
[3] The board of directors through its Social
Responsibility Committee is charged in the General Board's
"Investment Strategy Statement" with a mandate that includes
ensuring that Board investments are consistent with the Social
Principles of the United Methodist Church, providing oversight of
the Board's investment portfolio to ensure compliance with socially
responsible investing policies, and establishing guidelines and
providing oversight of proxy voting
[4] The Social Principles offer directions to the
denomination on addressing contemporary issues in society from a
biblical and theological perspective. The Book of Discipline
describes the Social Principles:
The Social Principles provide our most recent official summary
of stated convictions that seek to apply the Christian vision of
righteousness to social, economic, and political issues... our
struggles for human dignity and social reform have been a response
to God's demand for love, mercy, and justice in the light of the
Kingdom. We proclaim no personal gospel that fails to express
itself in relevant social concerns; we proclaim no social gospel
that does not include the personal transformation of sinners. It is
our conviction that the good news of the Kingdom must judge,
redeem, and reform the sinful social structures of our time. The
Book of Discipline and the General Rules convey the expectation of
discipline within the experience of individuals and the life of the
Church. Such discipline assumes accountability to the community of
faith by those who claim the community's support. Support without
accountability promotes moral weakness; accountability without
support is a form of cruelty. A church that rushes to punishment is
not open to God's mercy, but a church lacking the courage to act
decisively on person and social issues loses its claim to moral
authority.
[5] Every four years the Social Principles are reviewed by
the Church's General Conference and revised as appropriate. The
Social Principles revolve around seven areas:
a. The Natural World-sustaining all creation
b. The Nurturing Community-caring for humanity
c. The Social Community-responsibility of human beings toward one
another
d. The Economic Community-influencing economic policies
e. The Political Community-ordering society in political
systems
f. The World Community-interactions between nations
[6] Biblical references and theological perspectives and
links resolutions to selected Social Principles. The resolutions
provide suggested actions for churches, individuals, church boards
and agencies and local, state or national governments.
[7] Methodism's founder, John Wesley provided a new
approach to social reform in the 1700s. On the subject of acquiring
riches through "unhealthy" occupations such as gaming, dishonesty,
over charging and unfair competition, John Wesley declared, "None
can gain by swallowing up his neighbor's substance without gaining
the damnation of hell." The General Board in keeping with the
Social Principles has avoided investments in companies with
significant interests in alcohol, tobacco, gambling and
pornography. Some of the Church's positions are stated in the
Social Principles:
J) Alcohol and Other
Drugs: We affirm our long-standing support of abstinence
from alcohol as a faithful witness to God's liberating and
redeeming love for persons. We support abstinence from the use of
any illegal drugs. Since the use of alcohol and illegal drugs is a
major factor in crime, disease, death, and family dysfunction, we
support educational programs encouraging abstinence from such
use… We commit ourselves to assisting those who have become
dependent, and their families, in finding freedom through Jesus
Christ and in finding good opportunities for treatment, for ongoing
counseling, and for reintegration into society
K) Tobacco: We affirm our historic tradition of
high standards of personal discipline and social responsibility. In
light of the overwhelming evidence that tobacco smoking and the use
of smokeless tobacco are hazardous to the health of persons of all
ages, we recommend total abstinence from the use of
tobacco…Further, we recognize the harmful effects of passive
smoke and support the restriction of smoking in public areas and
workplaces.
The Economic Community- G)
Gambling: Gambling is a menace to society, deadly
to the best interests of moral, social, economic, and spiritual
life, and destructive of good government. As an act of faith and
concern, Christians should abstain from gambling and should strive
to minister to those victimized by the practice….The Church
should promote standards and personal life-styles that would make
unnecessary and undesirable the resort to commercial
gambling-including public lotteries-as a recreation, as an escape,
or as a means of producing public revenue or funds for support of
charities or government.
The Nurturing Community - G) Human
Sexuality: We recognize that sexuality is God's good gift
to all persons. We believe persons may be fully human only when
that gift is acknowledged and affirmed by themselves, the church,
and society. …We believe that sexual relations where one or
both partners are exploitative, abusive, or promiscuous are beyond
the parameters of acceptable Christian behavior and are ultimately
destructive to individuals, families, and the social order. We
deplore all forms of the commercialization and exploitation of sex,
with their consequent cheapening and degradation of human
personality. We call for strict global enforcement of laws
prohibiting the sexual exploitation or use of children by adults
and encourage efforts to hold perpetrators legally and financially
responsible.
[8] The General Board's Social responsibility committee
finds suggested guidelines on structuring the pension fund's
socially responsible investing program in resolution 202
"Investment Ethics" which is an elaboration of the social principle
on "The Economic Community".
[9] Through proactive advocacy, the General Board seeks to
constructively influence corporate management. The channels used to
"persuade corporations to end irresponsible behavior and live up to
high moral standards" are enumerated in the "Investment Ethics"
resolution as follows: "letter of inquiry, dialogue with
management, voting proxies, sponsoring shareholder resolutions,
speaking at shareholder meetings, working in coalitions with other
concerned shareholders and petitioning the Securities and Exchange
Commission on proxy rule changes."
[10] During the 2003 proxy season, the General Board filed
32 shareholder resolutions with selected corporations. Companies
that usually receive shareholder resolutions are those in which the
General Board has large share positions, they are leaders in their
respective industry and are frequently located in the Chicago
metropolitan area.
[11] The seven general areas of focus this year are
corporate governance, the environment, diversity, financial
accountability, global accountability, affordable drugs and sale of
weapons to foreign military governments. All of these subjects are
addressed either in the Social Principles or The Book of
Resolutions. Representatives of the General Board favor meeting
with corporate management because we are better able to encourage,
motivate, and persuade the company to adopt a revised position.
When mutually agreeable positions are established between the
General Board and corporate management we routinely withdraw
shareholder resolutions.
[12] The General Board's shareholder advocacy includes not
only raising issues of concern with corporations, but also
commending them for positive actions. Letters are routinely sent to
companies acknowledging boards that contain a majority of
independent directors and also include women and persons of
color.
[12] The General Board's Social Responsibility Committee
is strongly committed to advocating on issues of diversity. The
Social Principles - "The Social Community" states the Church's
position as follows:
A) Rights of Racial
and Ethnic Persons …We rejoice in the gifts that
particular ethnic histories and cultures bring to our total
life…We further assert the right of members of racial and
ethnic groups to equal opportunities in employment and promotion;
to education and training of the highest quality; …and to
positions of leadership and power in all elements of our life
together. We support affirmative action as one method of addressing
the inequalities and discriminatory practices within our Church and
society. …
F) Rights of Women We affirm women and men to be
equal in every aspect of their common life…. We affirm the
right of women to equal treatment in employment, responsibility,
promotion, and compensation. We affirm the importance of women in
decision-making positions at all levels…We support
affirmative action as one method of addressing the inequalities and
discriminatory practices within our Church and
society….
[13] Further The Book of Resolutions in resolution 150.
"Affirmative Action" stipulates: "…The United Methodist
Church calls upon all its members to: …
(3) declare our
support of efforts throughout the society to sustain and,
where needed, strengthen affirmative action legislation and
programs;
(4) collaborate with movements and initiatives
seeking to ensure effective participation of ethnic and racial
minorities, women, and persons with disabilities in all sectors of
our society;…
[14] Consistent with the Church's directives, the General
Board wrote letters dated March 5, 2003 to 37 companies thanking
them for their proactive public support of the Supreme Court's
affirmative action case at the University of Michigan.
[15] Since 1999, the General Board has filed board diversity, and
glass ceiling review resolutions with the Bed, Bath and Beyond
Corporation. The 2001 and 2002 resolutions received 27.2% and 18.9%
of shareholders voting in favor of the company adding women and
persons of color to the board and reporting on initiatives taken to
address challenges of workforce diversity in decision making
positions in the company. It is encouraging that after four years
of resolutions being filed, management of Bed, Bath and Beyond has
agreed to meet with shareholders in April of this year.
[16] The General Board was pleased with the recent
Securities and Exchange Commission decision that requires mutual
funds to disclose how they vote proxies on their client's behalf. A
copy of the General Board's proxy voting guidelines, record of
proxies voted and other shareholder advocacy documents are
available on the web site at: www.gbophb.org.
[17] The General Board remains committed to the premise
that the investor and corporate management can work together to
achieve positive results. We are encouraged that the General
Board's shareholder advocacy initiatives have resulted in
corporations diversifying their board of directors, publishing
environmental, diversity and corporate responsibility reports and
adopting ethical codes of conduct.
[18] In partnership with the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America and other investors affiliated with the Interfaith
Center on Corporate Responsibility, the General Board served as an
advocate on behalf of the Pimicikamak Cree Nation with the Xcel
Corporation. In a 2002 shareholder resolution the company was asked
to consider the use of renewable energy that does not harm
indigenous peoples. In a letter dated March 7, 2003 to
representatives of the General Board, Chief John Miswagon of the
Pimicikamak Cree wrote:
As a result of the
shareholder resolution and campaign, Xcel management came to be
aware of our plight and how they had a role to play to ensure the
Manitoba Hydro power they buy is as clean and humane as
possible…While we waited for 25 years for this first sign of
justice, we know we might have had to wait many more years if
people like you had not become involved to support us…You
have brought hope to my people.
[19] The General Board continues to use its investor influence
to hold companies accountable for high standards of corporate
citizenship. We welcome the opportunity to work in partnership with
other socially responsible investors to advocate for social
change.