Letter from Investors to SEC Investor Advisory Committee

 October 24, 2024 

Brian L Schorr, Chair 

Colleen Honigsberg, Secretary 

Investor Advisory Committee 

Securities and Exchange Commission 

100 F Street, N.E. 

Washington, D.C. 20549 

Dear Chair Schorr and Secretary Honigsberg, 

 We are writing to the Investor Advisory Committee (Committee) concerning the discussion 

about shareholder proposals and the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) Rule 14a-8 

that took place at the Committee’s September 19, 2024, meeting. 

 Based on the Committee’s agenda for the meeting, it seems the original intent of the 

session was to discuss the implications of securities litigation, including the lawsuit of Exxon v. 

Arjuna. The impact of the suit certainly merits the attention of the Committee, particularly for its 

chilling effect on investors’ ability to raise material concerns with our companies through the 

shareholder proposal process. 

 The focus on shareholder proposals merits continued engagement by the Committee.  

Shareholder proposals are a vital right of shareholders, and we urge the Committee to defend 

these rights against current and what we believe to be misguided and misleading assaults.   

 Investors file shareholder proposals that they believe address important concerns. Voting 

outcomes provide a practical assessment of whether a significant number of the company’s other 

investors also view the issues as important. In this way, the company is able to gauge the 

collective voice of all of its investors, not just the largest investors that they may otherwise be 

engaging with, and take that collective view into account in determining what issues are material 

to its “reasonable investors”. 

 In the last year, the number of environmental and social shareholder proposals actually 

dropped, if anti-ESG proposals are excluded. In our view, the modest growth in environmental 

and social shareholder proposals over the last several years reflects the fact that major enterprise 

and systemic risks posed by our companies threaten the economy and our portfolios, as well as 

the quality of life of communities around the globe. Informed investors are often the first movers 

on addressing a range of risks relevant to their investments, long before such risks are addressed 

by government regulations. The market prices these risks, often based on incomplete information 

and disclosure, and voting on shareholder proposals is an essential investor tool to improve the 

baseline of available information from issuers on issues such as climate risk management and 

human rights due diligence as well as emerging topics such as the ethical use of artificial 

intelligence and the impact of corporate policy on biodiversity. 

 The SEC’s Rule 14a-8 and the SEC Staff’s administration is a dynamic process. By and 

large it is working effectively to allow shareholders to express our collective voice on important 

issues and to screen out inappropriate proposals.  It can always be fine-tuned.  

 We hope that when the Committee further explores this topic, it will invite proponents and 

their counsel to provide a more complete picture of the “what and why” of shareholder 

proposals. In the meantime, we enclose some notes to provide some additional perspective on 

some of the points raised in the meeting.    

Sincerely, 

Frederick Alexander, The Shareholder Commons 

John Chevedden 

Lauren Compere, Boston Common Asset Management, LLC  

Danielle Fugere, As You Sow 

Julie Goodridge, NorthStar Asset Management, Inc. 

Julie Gorte, Impax Asset Management 

John Harrington, Harrington Investments, Inc. 

Michael Kramer, Natural Investments PBLLC 

Sanford Lewis, Shareholder Rights Group  

Katie McCloskey, Mercy Investment Services 

Jim McRitchie, CorpGov.net 

Brandon Rees, AFL-CIO 

Tim Smith, Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility 



Full letter and Appendices