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Make TIAA-CREF Ethical Coalition
Media Release: For Immediate Use
Contact: Al Norman, Sprawl-Busters: 978-502-3794
Josh Golin, Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood:
617-278-4172
Group Asks Pension Fund To Drop Wal-Mart, Coke Stocks
(Boston) A coalition of activists in Massachusetts is asking the
nation's largest pension fund, TIAA-CREF--a retirement fund with
$300 billion in assets, mainly for educators--to divest its
stock in Wal-Mart and Coke “for the greater good.”
The “Make TIAA-CREF Ethical” (MTCE) Coalition will be passing
out $20 “Walton Bucks” in front of the pension fund’s Boston
office at 28 State Street on Monday, July 11th at noon, along
with “Killer Coke” dollars. The Wal-Mart bucks feature the face
on S. Robson Walton, the Chairman of Wal-Mart’s Board of
Directors, with a message on the back urging TIAA-CREF to drop
its stock in the giant retailer. The Killer Coke dollars will
describe how Coca-Cola’s marketing practices have contributed to
an epidemic of childhood obesity.
The MTCE charges that a pension fund which prides itself on
being responsive to shareholders and a "concerned investor" with
regard to social responsibility, has no business investing in
ethically-challenged companies like Wal-Mart and Coke.
As of January 1, 2005, TIAA-CREF held 23,108,470 shares in
Wal-Mart, which had a value at the time of roughly $1.22
billion. Yet Wal-Mart has been internationally criticized for
its exploitation of sweatshop labor in Third World countries,
its harmful environmental and land use practices in the United
States, its abusive labor practices with its own workforce
(forced work off the clock, sexual, racial and disability
discrimination) and its war against small town quality of life.
TIAA-CREF is also a major investor in Coke and even includes the
company in its Social Choice accounts. The Coca-Cola Company has
come under increasing fire for its human rights and
environmental abuses overseas and for marketing nutritionally
deficient products to children in the U.S. Despite their claims
that they do not advertise to children under twelve, Coke
designs toys for young children, markets their products
extensively in schools to children of all ages, and its product
placement is ubiquitous on programs like American Idol, one of
the top-rated shows for children. Coca-Cola also lobbies
extensively against policies - such as prohibitions on vending
machines in schools - that would help combat childhood obesity.
“Exploiting children’s health for profit is not a social
choice,” said Josh Golin from the Campaign for a Commercial-Free
Childhood. “It’s time for TIAA-CREF to use its considerable
financial clout to pressure Coca-Cola to end all marketing to
children.”
“We shouldn’t have to teach the teacher’s fund,” added Al Norman
of Sprawl-Busters. “Wal-Mart has no place in a socially
responsible investment portfolio.” Norman predicted that
Wal-Mart stock will continue to take a hammering for its
socially unacceptable behavior across the U.S., Mexico and other
nations—and thus is a bad investment for the pension fund
anyway.
Make TIAA-CREF Ethical is a national coalition that urges the
pension giant to divest of shares in corporations involved in
human rights violations, and public health and environmental
degradation, and instead invest in socially responsible
ventures. In Massachusetts, Sprawl-Busters and the Campaign for
a Commercial-Free Childhood are part of the national MTCE
coalition. The Boston event is a run-up to TIAA-CREF’s Annual
Meeting in New York City on July 19th, at which the MTCE will be
holding events inside and outside the TIAA-CREF headquarters in
Manhattan.
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