- Resolution calls for company to divulge data about workforce
- Final results of vote will likely be posted next week
Tesla Inc. may join some of the biggest U.S. companies that have been pressed to fully divulge details about the diversity of their workforces and efforts to close any inequities.
A shareholder resolution filed by
The vote came after investors filed a record number of diversity-related proposals to corporations, including
“To have a green company that doesn’t get it right on issues of racial justice, they’re putting themselves in a precarious position,” said
Diversity-related resolutions at companies such as
Calvert, which is one of the oldest socially-responsible investors, said Tesla’s disclosures have lagged behind its peers. It asked the company to
Calvert, a longtime Tesla shareholder, said it filed the resolution to help give stakeholders the information needed to analyze the company’s ability to improve and maintain its “competitive edge.”
“After years of having the market to themselves, Tesla now has to compete with many strong players,”
Streur had said last year that ending racism in America is a responsibility of corporations and added that Calvert will push for greater disclosures of information about racial diversity.
The Tesla resolution came up for a shareholder vote days after the company lost a case against a Black former elevator operator. The court ruled that Tesla must pay an unprecedented $137 million in damages for having turned a blind eye to racial taunts and offensive graffiti the man endured at one of the electric carmaker’s plant.
Tesla’s defensive blog post after the verdict suggests the company isn’t going to change without added pressure and a sustained effort, said Kabrina Chang, a business ethics professor and associate dean for diversity, equity, and inclusion at the Questrom School of Business at Boston University. A growing trend is for investors and employees to team up in areas of interest, which may be an option for the electric car maker.
Separately, a resolution asking Tesla to publish a report on how its mandatory arbitration policy impacts employees and workplace culture probably failed based on preliminary results. A similar
Tesla said it will formally announce the results of the four management proposals and five shareholder resolutions within four business days.
There’s a growing risk for companies that don’t respond to shareholder concerns, particularly related to environment, social and governance topics, said
“Many people don’t just invest in business because they want to generate a positive return or because the business is profitable, they want to feel good about their investment,” he said. “Over the long run, businesses and CEOs, including dominant shareholders, who aren’t sensitive to these changing sentiments, I think they will fall behind.”
(Adds comments from Calvert in seventh and eighth paragraphs)
--With assistance from
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Katrina Nicholas, Tim Quinson
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