Toronto Star

California pension trustees want #MeToo costs disclosed

‘Without sufficient data, we really don’t know what companies are paying’

- EMILY CHASAN AND JOHN GITTELSOHN BLOOMBERG

NEW YORK— A group of trustees from some of America’s biggest public pensions are calling on companies to detail costs related to sexual harassment and any measures they’re taking to address the problem.

“We don’t see how it could possibly be accretive to corporate value to have a culture that allows for sexual harassment in the workplace,” said Priya Mathur, the departing president of the $345-billion (U.S.) California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the largest U.S. pension fund. Companies are losing customers, paying settlement­s and higher insur- ance costs and being distracted “from their core strategies because they have to deal with this.”

Together with Sharon Hendricks, the board vice-chair of the $219-billion California State Teachers’ Retirement System, Mathur formed Trustees United, a group of 13 of the state’s female pension fund trustees seeking to improve corporate disclosure­s on sexual harassment, violence and misconduct. They want companies to publicly declare how they investigat­e harassment complaints, disclose settlement costs to investors and publish informatio­n about policies to protect workers and promote diversity. ‘Long-term value’ “Without sufficient data, we really don’t know what companies are paying,” Mathur said in an interview. The first woman to chair the biggest U.S. pension fund, Mathur, will end her tenure this week.

“We can all list ways in which we think this is costly to companies and investors, but for us to do analysis and really identify which companies are developing a culture that is supportive of productivi­ty and long-term value creation, we need more data.”

California has been a leader in promoting diversity and taking action against harassment. As of 2019, new laws prohibit nondisclos­ure agreements in set- tlements of sexual harassment, assault or discrimina­tion; require employee harassment training; and mandate that boards of publicly traded companies based in the state have at least one female director.

The new group, which also includes trustees from the Los Angeles City Employees’ Retirement System and the Los Angeles County Employees’ Retirement Associatio­n, is asking pension fund trustees around the world to sign on to its principles. Joining forces The idea for the group started on a bus ride following a trustees’ network meeting last March on investment risks from sexual harassment. Mathur, Hendricks, CalSTRS board chair Dana Dillon and CalPERS board member Theresa Taylor decided they needed to join forces. Both pension boards have since adopted language in their investment policies aimed at pressing companies to disclose more about harassment.

“I don’t think we’re alone in tackling these issues, but we’re at the top of the investment chain so to speak, and we have a unique opportunit­y and responsibi­lity to take this on,” Mathur said. “There’s clearly an inflection point in our society where we’re saying we’re no longer going to tolerate this behaviour, and that’s an important signal to investors.”

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