A shareholder proposal put forth by Catholic Health Initiatives and the Northwest Coalition for Responsible Investment for a vote by Ruger shareholders passed. The proposal which was opposed by the board of directors requires the company to prepare a report on “on how it tracks violence associated with its firearms, what kind of research it is conducting related to so-called smart gun technology and its assessment of the risks that gun-related crimes pose to the company’s reputation and finances.”
The measure was spearheaded by Colleen Scanlon who is the chief advocacy officer for Catholic Health Initiatives which is an organization of over 100 Catholic run hospitals.
The proposal was spearheaded by Colleen Scanlon, senior vice president and chief advocacy officer for Catholic Health Initiatives, a system of hospitals and academic institutions. Her organization was one of four shareholders who spoke at the meeting, and all of them asked the Ruger executives what they were going to do about gun violence and gun safety.
“We as shareholders are saying that gun violence is significant enough that you, as a gun company, need to address what your responsibility to gun safety is,” said Scanlon to CNNMoney.
She said that hospitals within the Catholic health system have treated many patients with gunshot wounds, and she wants Ruger to focus on smart gun technology. She said that her institution was one of 11 religious shareholder organizations to draft the proposal
“Wouldn’t it be wonderful to see them leading an effort about making a smarter gun, like fingerprint activated guns and tracking systems for finding lost or stolen guns, like with iPhones?” she said. “We know that gun owners are responsible and sensible people, but we know that guns can end up in the wrong hands.”
You can read the shareholder proposal here along with the rationale given for its passage. I would note that any supporting documentation that relies on the Violence Policy Center is suspect. The firm Institutional Investor Services which advises on shareholder proposal urged passage which I assume is the reason some of the major institutional investors vote for it.
Ruger sent out an email this evening with their response to the passage of the shareholder proposal.
The same coalition that pushed this anti-gun nonsense on Ruger will be attempting to do the same thing to American Outdoor Brands Company aka Smith & Wesson. This is the danger that we should come to expect in the future for firearms companies and those that do business with them. I foresee a time in the not too distant future when you will see most of these public companies going private to avoid having to deal with this.
I think it is important that you know just which religious orders are behind these proposals. I’m Catholic but I’ll be damned if I agree with any of these nuns. I certainly wouldn’t be making any contributions to their orders.
Northwest Coalition for Responsible Investment
- Adrian Dominican Sisters
- Benedictine Sisters of Cottonwood, Idaho
- Benedictine Sisters of Mt Angel
- Congrégation des Soeurs des Saints Noms de Jésus et de Marie
- Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace
- Jesuits West
- PeaceHealth
- Providence Health & Services
- Northwest Women Religious Investment Trust
- Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, U.S. Ontario Province
- Sisters of Providence, Mother Joseph Province
- Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia
- Sisters of St. Mary of Oregon
- Tacoma Dominicans
Thirteen congregations of women religious either founded or later joined Catholic Health Initiatives. These congregations support and influence the mission of Catholic Health Initiatives and its public juridic person, Catholic Health Care Federation. Each Congregation appoints a person to represent them at semi-annual meetings with the Board of Stewardship Trustees.
Esther Anderson, OSF, PhD
Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Alice Armata, OP
Congregation of the Dominican Sisters of St. Catherine of Siena
Taos, New Mexico
Nadine Heimann, OSF
Sisters of St. Francis of Colorado Springs
Colorado Springs, Colorado
Joanne Klinnert, OSF
Franciscan Sisters of Little Falls, Minnesota
Little Falls, Minnesota
Joan Elizabeth Cook, SC
Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati
Cincinnati, Ohio
Sharon Ford, RSM
Sisters of Mercy of the Americas, West Midwest Community
Omaha, Nebraska
Sally Marie Kiepura, CSFN
Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth
Des Plaines, Illinois
Mary Jo Lewis, MD
Associate Member
Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Fargo, North Dakota
Ann Marie Friederichs, OSF
Sisters of St. Francis of the Immaculate Heart of MaryHankinson, North Dakota
Hankinson, North Dakota
Susan Gatz, SCN
Sisters of Charity of Nazareth
Nazareth, Kentucky
Francis Schumacher, OSB
Benedictine Sisters of Mother of God Monastery
Watertown, South Dakota
Diane Traffas, OP
Dominican Sisters of Peace
Columbus, Ohio
Sr. Mary Jon Wagner, OSF
Sylvania Franciscans
Sylvania, Ohio
Representative of Partnering Congregations
Sr. Nancy Miller, OSB
Benedictine Sisters of Annunciation Monastery
Bismarck, ND
UPDATE: The full transcript of the Ruger annual meeting can be found here. You will note some of the nonsensical questions posed to Ruger CEO Chris Killoy by “religious leaders”.
UPDATE II: For an excellent summary of the shareholder proposal accomplished, please read this editorial by Jim Shepherd of the Outdoor Wire. He compared it to a fly buzzing around a cow. It is pestering rather than the steering claimed by proponents.
Excellent response from Ruger, with ONE exception: the Bill of Rights does not confer our rights. They exist with or without the Bill of Rights or the Constitution. The Bill of Rights _recognizes_ our rights and states clearly that government is not entitled or empowered in _any_ way to infringe upon those rights. The Bill of Rights was written as a reminder – to the government and to us – that those rights are_not_ conferred by government but are G-d given/naturally possessed by all citizens.
The reason our rights have indeed been infringed upon is because we lost control of our government not long after it was convened, and over the years it has abridged those rights in spite of the Bill of Rights and the Constitution. It continually seeks to limit them further.
I assume that those Catholic health organizations are tax exempt. They, therefore, are not supposed to participate in politics. Time for an IRS investigation.
Richard beat me to it… And time to take a HARD look at how those charities and I use that term loosely, are spending their money.