Health and Safety Audits Needed for Fast Food Industry

In recent years, the food service industry has been rife with workplace health safety issues. Food service workers have been attacked, stabbed, shot, and killed by customers in the restaurants where they work. According to one study, between 2017 and 2020, at least 77,000 violent or threatening incidents took place at California fast-food restaurants. Recent data indicate that the cost of workplace violence could be as much as $56 billion annually – and that’s likely an undercount. However, workplace health and safety issues are not limited to customer violence. Workers have also been made to work under unsafe and unsanitary conditions, such as restaurants with high kitchen temperatures and restaurants infested with vermin.  

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New SEC Rules Undermine Lobbying Disclosure Proposals

Since 2011, investors have filed over 600 shareholder proposals asking for lobbying disclosure reports that include federal and state lobbying amounts, payments to trade associations and social welfare groups used for lobbying, and payments to tax-exempt organizations that write and endorse model legislation. The proposal has been voted on at nearly 400 companies, produced more than 125 settlements for improved disclosure, and notched 13 majorities, including Exxon and McDonald’s. 

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Big Tech Lobbies Against Child Safety

The exponential growth of online child sexual exploitation, cyberbullying, and teen mental health issues is directly linked to the growth of social media. These negative impacts on children and teens are primarily due to algorithms designed to send streams of unsolicited materials that entice children into online engagements with strangers, exploit their personal data, and keep them online for longer periods of time at the same time that age verification features remain insufficient, enabling adults and children to pretend to be different ages – increasing the rates of child sexual abuse.

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A Human Rights Due Diligence Framework for Artificial Intelligence

The widespread adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) by companies has the potential to unleash broad-based economic prosperity by enhancing employee productivity. But, it also carries risks to workers’ rights as AI algorithms increasingly set productivity quotas, make human resource decisions, and direct workers on how to perform their jobs. For example, the use of AI in human resources decisions can result in unlawful employment discrimination. 

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Shareholders Support Corporate Workplace Diversity Regardless of Politics

President Trump’s DEI-related executive orders, and the implications they have on the private and corporate sectors, have caused disruption to longstanding employment practices. There have been concerns raised around the legality and risks of collecting and sharing data on a company’s workforce and utilizing that data to strengthen its human capital management strategies as it relates to its diverse staff. The concerns being raised may feel like new additions to the corporate reporting landscape; however, they are similar to what we heard from 2018 to 2020 around the EEO-1 disclosure form (a government-mandated form showing a company’s demographic workforce data by sex, race, and ethnicity).  

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Corporate Climate Disclosure Will Go on Despite SEC Retreat

In just the last half year, climate change has supercharged some of the costliest disasters the U.S. has ever experienced. Hurricanes Helene and Milton and the Los Angeles wildfires caused hundreds of billions of dollars of damage that will take years to recover from and leave deep financial scars for families, businesses, and governments.  

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Nature is Critical to Business: Urgent Need to Address Biodiversity Risk

Global biodiversity is deteriorating faster than at any time in human history, largely due to human activity. Such massive biodiversity loss poses serious economic and financial risk as more than half the world’s economy is moderately or highly dependent on nature. To reverse this trend, companies must start by meaningfully assessing, disclosing, and addressing their nature-related impacts, dependencies, risks, and opportunities. 

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Legal Efforts to Hobble Shareholder Rights

We are in an anti-democratic moment. People with money and power refuse to heed those who have neither. This is true in Washington. But, it is also true in statehouses where state officials try to intimidate into non-action and silence investors who believe sustainability is key to long-term investment success.  

There is nothing “free market” about this effort. Instead, it is an attempt to bolster the fossil fuel industry at the expense of shareholder prerogatives.  

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2025 Update on SEC Rules for Shareholder Proposals

In order to help companies and investors determine whether a shareholder proposal qualifies to appear on the proxy statement under SEC Rule 14a-8, the SEC has developed a process to allow companies to inquire in advance whether a proposal must be included. The “no action” process is an informal review process through which the SEC staff advises companies and their investors on whether the SEC staff would recommend enforcement action if a company fails to include a submitted shareholder proposal on its annual proxy statement.  

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Board Diversity Reduces Material Risk and Increases Long-Term Sustainable Growth

The push for board diversity has gained momentum in recent years, in part as an acknowledgment that a board’s needs are changing in response to an increasingly complex, competitive, and dynamic operating environment. The advent of disruptive technologies, geopolitical shifts, and evolving consumer behaviors and expectations has compelled boards to adopt a more expansive approach to oversight, strategy, and widening the lens on the risks that could harm the company. Recent retreats by ISS, Vanguard, and others of a full-throated endorsement of board diversity should be viewed for what they are – a calculated risk mitigation strategy in response to the current political climate and recent legal decisions around diversity mandates. The factors that underpin a commonsense business case for demographic diversity on boards are as relevant as ever.

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Strong Shareholder Support for Code of Conduct for Corporate Political Spending

It’s head spinning to watch the second Trump administration unfold. Daily directives – many unlawful – from Washington have upended the nation. Grant freezes, proposed tariffs, mass deportations, and ending federal DEI programs; attempted dissolution of congressionally created executive agencies; and restrictions on shareholder proposals are overwhelming. 

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The Net-Zero Banking Alliance, Climate Finance, and Banks' Accountability to Shareholders

The Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA) formed in the spring of 2021 to great fanfare. Banks in the alliance made a voluntary commitment, signed by their CEO, to set and publish targets that are aligned with pathways for net zero by 2050, reduce emissions associated with their material financing activities in carbon-intensive sectors, and develop transition plans to achieve the targets. 

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The Future of Freight: Decarbonization of Heavy-Duty Trucking is Accelerating

The transportation sector is the largest source of U.S. greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Medium- and heavy-duty vehicles are the fastest-growing source of transport emissions, driven by the expansion of e-commerce and consumer demand for fast delivery. Trucks’ disproportionate impact on emissions and community health underscores the urgency of adopting cleaner, more efficient technologies and practices.  

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Marching Steadily Toward an Uninsurable Future

Insurance is the climate crisis canary in the coal mine, and the canary is expiring. Last year, insurers globally had a record $154 billion in natural catastrophe losses. In the U.S., insured natural catastrophe losses were a record $117 billion; 2025 is on track to be another record setting year, with the LA wildfires alone costing insurers an estimated $25 to $35 billion. 

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