City
officials have called on two dozen companies that have collectively received
billions of dollars of local pension investments to ban workplace discrimination
based on sexual orientation and gender identification. City Comptroller William
Thompson and the New York City Pension Funds asked these companies to amend
their policies, but have no plans to withdraw investments if the companies do
not comply.
"This is a huge message for the rest of corporate America
that companies need to
begin to talk about non-discrimination policies for the lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender community," said Daryl Herrschaft, director of the
Workplace Project at the Human Rights Campaign. "You can't foster an
inclusive work environment without having basic protections in place for every
employee to feel that they're protected from discrimination on the job."
New York City's five pension plans, which include the Employees' Retirement
System, Police Pension Fund, Fire Department Pension Fund, Teachers' Retirement
System and Board of Education Retirement System, have more than $110 billion in
holdings. About $2.2 billion of that is invested in the targeted companies.