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State Pension Divestment Bill Signed

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  • State Pension Divestment Bill Signed

    STATE PENSION DIVESTMENT BILL SIGNED
    By Nancy Vogel, Times Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Times, CA -
    Sept 26 2006

    The law requires the teachers and public employees retirement systems
    to withdraw funds from firms aiding Sudan's government.

    SACRAMENTO - California's giant public pension systems must rid
    themselves of investments in companies that help the Sudanese
    government, under a measure that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed
    into law Monday.

    University of California students and others who led a campaign for
    divestment said they hoped that it would persuade other states to
    do the same. Ultimately, they want to pressure the Arab-dominated
    government of Sudan, which is blamed for the deaths of at least
    200,000 non-Arabs since 2003 and the displacement of more than 2.5
    million people in the nation's western Darfur region.

    ADVERTISEMENT "Divestment will show our defiance against the murderers
    and their inhumanity," Schwarzenegger said at a bill-signing ceremony
    at the Hilton Burbank Airport and Convention Center, recalling that
    a similar divestment movement two decades ago helped end apartheid
    in South Africa.

    Joining him at the ceremony were actors Don Cheadle and George Clooney,
    and UC student activist Adam Sterling. "State by state, pension fund
    by pension fund, your genocide will not occur on our watch and it
    will not occur on our dime," Sterling vowed.

    When the law takes effect in January, it will require the California
    Public Employees' Retirement System and the California Teachers'
    Retirement System to liquidate their holdings in certain companies
    that operate in Sudan if, after 90 days' warning, the companies fail
    to halt business activities there.

    About two dozen oil, energy and telecommunications firms - most of them
    Chinese, Russian, Malaysian, Indian or French - are the targets of the
    divestment, said Jason Miller, a UC San Francisco medical student who,
    with Sterling, helped create the Sudan Divestment Task Force.

    The bill, AB 2941 by Assemblyman Paul Koretz (D-West Hollywood), is
    narrowly tailored to force divestment of only those companies that
    provide revenue or weapons to the Sudanese government and refuse to
    change their practices.

    No American companies are on the list for potential divestment, Miller
    said, and American companies must get U.S. permission to do business
    in Sudan because the nation is considered a state sponsor of terrorism.

    Miller conceded that divestment of the two state pension systems
    won't be enough to change the stock price of any potential divestment
    targets.

    But he and others see the Koretz bill as model legislation that
    may spur enough divestment nationwide to pressure the companies and
    thus Sudan.

    Said Clooney: "As more states begin to adopt it, and they just might,
    then perhaps we can take a giant step in making sure that a government
    that systematically eliminates its citizens at the very least doesn't
    profit from it."

    Four other states - Illinois, Maine, Oregon and New Jersey - also
    have ordered pension funds to divest from companies operating in
    Sudan. Legislation that is modeled on the Koretz bill is pending in
    15 other states, Miller said.

    "It's a more sophisticated route than a couple of other states have
    tried," Koretz said. "If it's too broad of a brush, you wind up
    picking up companies that are there and doing good."

    The legislation, which passed with the opposition of 13 Republicans in
    the Assembly and seven Republicans in the Senate, hastens a movement
    already underway at the teachers and public employees pension systems
    and the University of California.

    In March, pressured by student activists, UC regents voted to liquidate
    holdings, worth tens of millions of dollars, in nine foreign companies
    that do business with Sudan. The governor signed another, related bill,
    AB 2179 by Assemblyman Tim Leslie (R-Tahoe City), that indemnifies
    UC regents, employees and investment managers from litigation that
    may arise out of the Sudanese divestment.

    The teachers pension system on Monday reported holding $12 million
    worth of stock in 10 companies operating in Sudan, including Sinopec
    Corp., PetroChina Co., Bharat Heavy Electrical of India and Sudan
    Telecom Co. Those companies are targeted for divestment under a policy
    the teachers pension board adopted in April.

    "They have gone through quite an extensive back-and-forth with
    a number of these companies," teachers pension system spokeswoman
    Brenna Neuharth said. "The bill just speeds the process along."

    Public employees pension system spokesman Brad Pacheco said the fund,
    with $207 billion in assets, has invested in 39 companies doing
    business in Sudan, none of them the nine companies from which UC has
    divested. He said he could not estimate how much the system may need
    to divest under the legislation because system officials are still
    trying to determine the nature of the firms' Sudanese operations.

    Last December, the public employees pension system warned three
    European companies that it would sell its hundreds of millions of
    dollars worth of shares if they did not sever ties with the Sudanese
    government. "We're still working with those companies" to achieve
    change, Pacheco said.

    Phil Angelides, the Democratic candidate for governor, who as state
    treasurer sits on the public employees pension system board, has
    pushed for several years for divestment in firms complicit in what
    the U.S. Congress has declared genocide.

    He praised the signing of the Koretz bill, saying, "Californians have
    a moral responsibility to help end the genocide in Sudan."

    On Monday, Schwarzenegger also signed a bill that would allow any
    Californian who was a victim of the Armenian genocide or an heir
    or beneficiary of a victim to sue financial institutions to recover
    assets stolen or lost between 1890 and 1923. Under SB 1524 by Sen.

    Jackie Speier (D-Hillsborough), Californians of Armenian descent
    would have through 2016 to file claims.

    Schwarzenegger signed another bill that would require insurance
    companies to disclose how much money they are investing in low- and
    middle-income communities. Some insurers had opposed the bill, as had
    the governor's insurance advisor, Kathleen Webb, a former State Farm
    official. In May, Webb sent a letter to the author, Assemblyman Mark
    Ridley-Thomas (D-Los Angeles), stating her office's opposition.

    "The question is, what is there to hide?" Ridley-Thomas said.

    "Disclose what you're doing: the good, the bad and the ugly."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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