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Act now! The
deadline is December 6, 2002…
Email
the SEC directly from this site to support the proposed rule!
Every
year, your mutual fund casts proxy votes for each company in its portfolio on
a broad range of issues from executive compensation to social and
environmental performance. Currently, there are no rules requiring that these
funds disclose to their investors how the are voting. We believe that shareholders have an absolute right to know how the voting rights in the stocks they own
through mutual funds are being used. The SEC has stated very clearly that
proxy voting is a fiduciary duty mutual funds owe to their investors. Are
these votes being used to encourage greater diversity on boards of directors
or more responsible environmental practices? Or are they being used to
rubberstamp excessive executive compensation packages or to permit
corporations to avoid paying their fair share of taxes by reincorporating in
Bermuda?
[PLEASE
CONFIRM WITH TOBY SERKIN AT BINGHAM THAT THIS PRACTICES IS STILL PERMITTED.]
When voting no longer happens in secret, shareholders will
be able to identify those fund managers that are doing their part to encourage
greater corporate accountability, and those who simply rubberstamp
management, to the detriment of shareholders and other stakeholders. When
funds need to disclose their proxy voting policies, investors will be able to
judge whether they are acting in their shareholder’s best interests, or are
bowing to corporate pressure when, for example, they are seeking admission to
the firm’s 401(k) plan. Proxy voting transparency is critical to good mutual
fund governance and is critical to protecting shareholders’ interests. That
is why Domini has been a pioneer in the fight for proxy voting disclosure.
In 1999 we set out to try to reform our corner of the block — the
mutual fund industry — by publishing our proxy votes on our website, and
encouraging others to do the same. We became the first mutual fund manager in
America to reveal its proxy votes. That same year, the California Public
Employees’ Retirement System became the first public retirement system to do
so. Since then, others including the Calvert Group, MMA Praxis, Pax World
Funds, the University of Wisconsin, and Walden Asset Management have decided
to reveal how they vote.
The rest of the mutual fund industry, however, responded to our
challenge with silence. Some argued that there is simply no demand for this
type of information.
We responded by filing a rulemaking petition with the SEC in 2001, asking them to
require that all mutual funds publish their proxy voting policies and votes.
The SEC received rulemaking petitions on this issue from the AFL-CIO and the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters as well.
On September 19, 2002, the SEC responded to these petitions,
announcing a proposed rule that would require mutual funds to disclose their
proxy voting policies, procedures, and votes. The
SEC praised Domini and other mutual fund managers that took the initiative to
voluntarily disclose this information.
On the same day, the SEC issued a companion rule regarding proxy
voting disclosure by investment advisers.
“Several mutual fund complexes voluntarily provide
information to investors, often on their websites, and, in some cases, their
actual proxy voting decisions,” the SEC wrote. “The Internet provides a
medium for these funds to make information about their proxy voting available
to shareholders quickly and in a cost-effective manner. We applaud these
voluntary efforts of mutual funds to disclose proxy voting information to
shareholders, and we encourage all funds to provide similar information
without delay.”
What
You Can Do
We urge our shareholders and all other concerned
investors to submit comments in support of the proposed rules. The deadline for comments is December 6, 2002.
The text of the proposed rules, “Disclosure of Proxy
Voting Policies and Proxy Voting Records by Registered Management Investment
Companies,” and “Proxy Voting by Investment Advisers” is
published in the Federal Register and is available on the SEC’s
website. Mail your comments (in triplicate) to the following address, or
submit them by email to rule-comments@sec.gov:
Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary
Securities and Exchange Commission
450 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20549-0609
Refer
in your letter to File No. S7-36-02 (and File No. S7-38-02 for the investment
adviser rule) and include the file number in the subject line of email
messages. Electronically submitted comment letters will be posted on the
SEC’s website. For more information on how to submit comments to the SEC,
visit http://www.sec.gov/rules/submitcomments.htm
Links and
Resources:
Securities and
Exchange Commission (www.sec.gov)
The Securities
and Exchange Commission is the federal agency responsible for protecting
investors and maintaining the integrity of the securities markets.
Shareholder Action Network (www.shareholderaction.org)
The Shareholder Action Network (SAN) serves as a clearinghouse
of information and analysis on shareholder advocacy to the socially
responsible investing community. Their website includes a discussion of proxy
voting, including a comprehensive list of financial institutions that
post their votes and voting guidelines. SAN is a project of the Social
Investment Forum, the trade association for the socially responsible
investment industry.Domini
Social Investments is a sponsor of the Shareholder Action Network (SAN), and
a member of the Social Investment Forum.
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