Press
Release
For Immediate Release - April 11, 2001
Contact: Betsy Leondar-Wright
(617) 423-2148 x13
Shareholders Challenge
Citigroup on Social Responsibility
CEO's Pay Doubled in
2000 While Criticism Mounted
"There
are hundreds and hundreds of organizations across the country that
now believe Citigroup will do everything for a buck."
Martin
Eakes, Self-Help Credit Union, in The New York Times
Citigroups
latest ad campaign enjoins customers to "live richly,"
but some shareholders question "whos living richly off
of whom?" At Citigroups annual meeting on Tuesday, April
17, 2001, at Carnegie Hall in New York City, Martin Eakes, founder
of Self-Help Credit Union, will present a Responsible Wealth resolution
linking CEO pay to accountability on issues such as predatory lending,
racial discrimination, and environmental abuses.
In 2000, while
Citigroups Sandy Weill was the second highest paid CEO in
the U.S., Citigroup was charged by the EEOC with racial discrimination
at the companys Salomon Smith Barney subsidiary. Citigroup
was also criticized for weak environmental lending standards and
its role in such controversial projects as Chinas Three Gorges
Dam.
Associates First
Capital, owned by Citigroup and one of the nations largest
consumer lenders, was charged last month by federal regulators with
routinely deceiving and lying to customers and tricking them into
costly loan refinancings. Associates practices primarily victimized
poor borrowers, Federal Trade Commission officials told the New
York Times.
The proposed
resolution provides a mechanism to evaluate the companys officers
on meeting social responsibility objectives and gives company leaders
a positive incentive to ensure that Citigroup meet its responsibilities
to employees, customers, the community and the environment. "In
a year when the company faced a race discrimination suit, a consumer
boycott by environmentalists and a pending suit by the Federal Trade
Commission, Mr. Weills bonus and restricted stock payments
both doubled. Citigroup hasnt disclosed whether these ethical
lapses played a role in setting his pay," said Scott Klinger,
co-director of Responsible Wealth.
PHOTO OPPORTUNITY:
Citigroup will also be challenged outside the meeting by activists
carrying the companys signature red umbrellas.
Responsible
Wealth has filed shareholder resolutions related to executive compensation
at seven companies: Disney, FleetBoston, Raytheon, Household International,
Exxon Mobil and AT&T, as well as Citigroup. Supporting the resolutions
is a recent study by Scott Klinger which concludes that skyrocketing
CEO pay foreshadows poor stock performance. The report and the texts
of the shareholder resolutions can be found at: www.responsiblewealth.org.
Responsible
Wealth, a project of United for a Fair Economy, is a growing network
of over 450 businesspeople, investors and affluent Americans in
the top 5 percent of income and wealth who work to promote widely
shared prosperity.
United for a
Fair Economy is a national, independent non-profit that spotlights
growing economic inequality and inspires action to narrow the wage
gap.
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