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The divestment resolution had been carefully crafted over the past year and had the buy-in of environmental activists as well as the UUA administration. Any amendments might have jeopardized the agreement.
The agreement allows the UUA to keep some fossil fuel stocks in cases where the UUA is engaged in shareholder actions seeking environmental justice. UUA Treasurer Tim Brennan is a strong advocate of shareholder actions and the UUA has had significant successes in modifying behavior of corporations in several areas including worker rights.
The Rev. Peggy Clarke, of the First Unitarian Society of Westchester, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY, did propose one amendment, but it was defeated. Clarke asked that the UUA not be allowed to keep any fossil fuel investments. She said she didn’t believe that shareholder activism would work with this issue. “We’re not talking about asking a company to make a minor modification. We’re talking about the core of the industry. No activism will work in this case.”
Environmental activists say that if life on earth is to continue to be sustainable fossil fuel companies would have to leave much of their oil, gas, and coal reserves in the ground.
Clarke’s amendment got only a handful of votes from the sixty-or-so people in the miniassembly. At the end of the session Clarke agreed to withdraw her amendment. If she hadn’t done that the amendment could have been debated again by the full delegate body on Saturday. Now the resolution cannot be amended and will have a straight up or down vote.
Terry Wiggins, a lay leader at First Unitarian Society of Milwaukee, Wisc. has led the effort to gain divestment. She was inspired in 2013 when she went to hear environmental activist Bill McKibben speak. “He terrified me,” she said. She and others went home and led a successful divestment movement in their congregation.
The Rev. Drew Kennedy, senior minister of First Unitarian Society in Milwaukee, told the miniassembly the goal was not necessarily to directly change the behavior of companies, but to “gain the world’s attention to this issue. We need a movement that mobilizes politicians to do something.”
In addition, supporters of this measure hope that it will inspire UU congregations to also divest. Wiggins said she was “very gratified” by the miniassembly vote.