Toronto Star

TAKING A STAND

Report says companies increasing­ly take stand on firearms policy

- POLLY MOSENDZ BLOOMBERG

Corporate America is making itself heard on firearms policy,

With little movement in Congress, gun-control advocates are turning to the private sector to drum up support for their cause. A new report from the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence has found that corporate America is increasing­ly taking a stance on firearms policy.

In the wake of a mass shooting at a Parkland, Fla., high school in February, a social-media movement sought boycotts of companies that offered discounts to members of the National Rifle Associatio­n. A slew of companies cut ties with the group. Institutio­nal investors were also pressured to engage with the publicly traded firearms manufactur­ers they in- vest in, and retailers were encouraged to change their firearms sales policies.

“In addition to the concrete actions corporatio­ns are taking to reform their own policies or require more accountabi­lity from the gun industry, some businesses are taking extra steps and putting pressure on Congress to pass meaningful gun reforms,” the report found, citing action by Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc., Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp., Kroger Co. and L.L. Bean Inc. “Companies that provide services to gun makers and sellers — like bankers, accountant­s, and lawyers — as well as institutio­nal shareholde­rs, can help save lives in America by requiring that their gun clients adhere to commonsens­e policies.”

The trend reminds some of how corporatio­ns showed support for marriage equality and condemned the tobacco industry, said Avery Gardiner, co-president of Brady. While she’s “heartened” by corporate America’s stance, Gardiner said congressio­nal action is “absolutely the lynch pin.”

But in Washington, the firearms industry and its allies are fighting back. After Dick’s Sporting Goods hired gun-control lobbyists, the National Shooting Sports Foundation expelled the retailer from the industry group and hired lobbyist Will Hollier, whose work will focus on “discrimina­tory banking actions against (the) firearms industry,” according to a disclosure document.

Citigroup and Bank of America, which both made changes to their firearms-industry lending policies, faced blowback from conservati­ves in Washington. “It looks like we’re heading towards red banks and blue banks,” Republican Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana said during a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in early April.

 ?? SEAN PROCTOR/BLOOMBERG ?? Dick’s Sporting Goods is among the American companies taking action toward gun reform.
SEAN PROCTOR/BLOOMBERG Dick’s Sporting Goods is among the American companies taking action toward gun reform.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada