NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A1536A
SPONSOR: Ortiz (MS)
 
TITLE OF BILL:
An act to amend the retirement and social security law, in relation to
limitations on investments of public pension funds; and providing for
the repeal of such provisions upon expiration thereof
 
SUMMARY OF SPECIFIC PROVISIONS:
Section 1: Names the bill.
Section 2: Legislative findings.
Section 3: Amends the retirement and social security law by adding a new
section 423-d as follows:
1. Definitions. Defines key terms including "coal producer," "oil and
gas producer," "direct investment," and "indirect investment."
2. Fossil Fuel Producer Exclusion List. Requires the State Comptroller,
within six months, to create a list of all coal producers and oil and
gas producers in which the Common Retirement Fund has direct invest-
ments. The list will be updated biennially. The Comptroller will notify
any company included on the list.
3. Removal From Exclusion List. At any time following publication of the
exclusion list, a company may request removal by .the Comptroller on the
basis of clear and convincing evidence that they are not a coal, oil, or
gas producer, or that they will not meet the definition of coal, oil, or
gas producer by January 1, 2030.
4. Determination of Prudence. Within six months of the publication of
the exclusion, the Comptroller must issue a Determination of Prudence as
to whether divestment from any or all companies on the exclusion list
complies with his or her fiduciary obligations and the prudent investor
rule. If the Comptroller determines it would be imprudent to divest from
any company, that company will be removed from the exclusion list. Any
removed companies will be returned to the exclusion list in five years,
subject to a new determination of prudence at that time.
5. Divestment. Beginning one year after the effective date, subject to
an affirmative• determination of prudence, and in accordance with sound
investment criteria and consistent with his or her fiduciary obli-
gations, the Comptroller shall divest the Common Retirement Fund from
direct investments in any company on the exclusion list, and cease new
direct investments in any company that meets the definition of a coal,
oil, or gas producer. Divestment from oil and gas producers shall take
place within five years of the effective date, while divestment from
coal producers shall take place within two years of the effective date.
6. Limitations on Indirect Investment. Beginning one year after the
effective date, subject to an affirmative determination of prudence, and
in accordance with sound investment criteria and consistent with his or
her fiduciary obligations, the Comptroller shall ensure that the Common
Retirement Fund does not invest in any indirect investment vehicle
unless he or she is satisfied that it is unlikely to have more than 2%
of its assets invested in coal, oil, or gas producers.
7. Reporting. The Comptroller shall issue a biennial report on all
actions taken to comply with this section.
Section 4: Effective Date. This act shall take effect immediately, and
sunset on January 1, 2050'.
 
JUSTIFICATION:
Climate change is a real and serious threat to the health, welfare, and
prosperity of all New Yorkers, now and in the future. Maintaining the
status quo of fossil fuel energy production will lead to catastrophic
results. The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
has determined that in order to keep the increase in global average
temperature below 1..S degrees Celsius, global greenhouse gas emissions
must decline by 45% by 2030, and reach net zero by 2050. As such, New
York State has codified into law a goal of reaching a 40% economy-wide
greenhouse gas emissions reduction relative to 1990 levels by 2030, and
net zero emissions by 2050.
This bill will require the State Comptroller, after due consideration of
his or her fiduciary responsibility and the prudent investor standard,
to divest the state Common Retirement Fund (the Fund) from major coal,
oil, and gas producers. This will protect the fund, as well as its
members and retirees, from the growing risk of rapid devaluation these
companies present, while also sending a powerful message that it is no
longer acceptable to invest in a business model that is driving the
climate crisis.
The threat of climate change and the transformation of the global energy
system that will be necessary to mitigate it will have a serious nega-
tive impact on investors whose assets are not aligned with a 1.5 degree
trajectory. Experts estimate that demand for fossil fuels is likely to
peak within the next decade. In spite of this, the majority of fossil
fuel producers are not adjusting their business models to take•into
account the changing energy market, investing billions of dollars in
exploring and extracting new reserves, creating stranded asset risk and
the potential for rapid, unexpected, and significant loss of value.
Continued investment in fossil fuel producers poses unacceptable risk to
the long-term sustainability of the Fund. Attempting to beat the market
by holding these investments until the last possible moment is a high-
risk . strategy that could result in the loss of investment principal.
In the words of the Decarbonization Advisory Panel for the New York
State Common Retirement Fund, being too early in the avoidance of the
risk of permanent loss is much less of a danger than being too late."
The Legislature is bound by a fiduciary responsibility over the pension
fund This responsibility includes a duty to future as well as current
beneficiaries. It is therefore incumbent upon the Legislature as fiduci-
ary to concern itself with how the Fund rebalances its investments to
meet its financial performance targets, favoring the long-term sustaina-
bility of the fund over seeking short-term gains. Fossil fuel producers
are currently under-performing compared to the broader market. However,
even if they were to produce acceptable returns in the near term, they
present undue long-term risk that compels trustee action on behalf of
future beneficiaries.
Duties to future beneficiaries may also reasonably include consideration
of their human interests, quality of life, and public safety and securi-
ty, and therefore may mandate that trustees try to accelerate the shift
away from fossil fuels to help mitigate the future adverse effects of
climate change. Given the systemic threat of climate change to the econ-
omy as a whole, and therefore to the value of the Fund's entire portfo-
lio, consideration of the climate impact of certain investments is
entirely appropriate. According to the US Department of Labor's inter-
pretive bulletin 2015-1, environmental issues "may have a direct
relationship to the economic value of the plan's investment. In these
instances, such issues are not merely collateral considerations or tie-
breakers, but rather are proper components.of the fiduciary's primary
analysis of the economic merits of competing investment choices."
The Fund is one of the largest and most visible institutional investors
in the world. By divesting from fossil fuels, the Fund will send a
message that it is unacceptable for any institution to attempt to profit
from activities that threaten the future of our society. Divestment
from these companies by the Fund will begin the process of delegitimiz-
ing a business model that is socially and morally, and increasingly
financially, bankrupt. As a state, New York cannot fully commit to the
steps necessary to prevent climate change while maintaining a financial
Interest in companies whose profits depend almost exclusively on the
continuation of practices that cause climate change.
The Fund has set a precedent by choosing to divest from certain indus-
tries in the past due to the moral implications of their business
models, including 'private prisons, firearms manufacturers, and compa-
nies doing business with Sudan. Over 1,100 institutional investors
representing more than $11 trillion in holdings have chosen to fully or
partially divest from fossil fuel producers, including the Teachers
Retirement System of the City' of New York, the New York City Employees
Retirement System, and the sovereign wealth funds of Norway and Ireland.
This bill adopts the prevailing approaches of these similarly situated
fiduciaries, with regard to fossil fuel divestment, and therefore
complies with the prudent investor standard defined instate law.
The Legislature is within its constitutional authority to instruct the
Comptroller to divest from fossil fuel producers along the lines
outlined in this bill. The Court of Appeals ruled in Scaglione v Levitt
that the Comptroller's freedom to invest is "limited by the continuing
power of the Legislature to expand or restrict the classes and kinds of
investments in which he may place the funds in his care," provided that
his or her discretion is not impaired. The Comptroller's discretion is
maintained in this bill through the mechanism of the Determination. of
Prudence. The Court of Appeals further ruled in McDermott v. Regan and
Guzdek v. McCall that a proposed change to the management of the Retire-
ment System would compel "close examination" if, in addition to inter-
fering with the Comptroller's discretion, it destabilized the system or
created an inappropriate level of risk in the management of the Fund.
This bill, if enacted, would not meet any of these thresholds.
Given the severely adverse impact that climate change will have on the
lives of all New Yorkers and all people on the planet, the State has a
responsibility to take all available steps to avert and mitigate it.
Attempting to profit from investments in companies whose business
models, public relations campaigns, and lobbying efforts not only fail
to comply with New York's statutory climate goals, but put the stability
of our society and the safety of our citizens at risk, is neither moral-
ly acceptable nor in compliance with the Legislature's fiduciary respon-
sibility to current and future pension beneficiaries.
Divestment. is financially prudent, morally imperative, responsible
policymaking. The time for action is now.
 
PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:
2017-18 54896A/A 3712-A died in committee
2015-2016: S.8873/A.8011-A. died in committee
 
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS:
Undetermined
 
EFFECTIVE DATE:
Immediately.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
1536--A
2019-2020 Regular Sessions
IN ASSEMBLY
January 15, 2019
___________
Introduced by M. of A. ORTIZ, MOSLEY, FAHY, SIMON, THIELE, GOTTFRIED,
SEAWRIGHT, O'DONNELL, STECK, ENGLEBRIGHT, CARROLL, GLICK, COLTON,
BLAKE, NIOU, JAFFEE, RIVERA, DAVILA, RODRIGUEZ, ZEBROWSKI, BARRON,
L. ROSENTHAL, WOERNER, GUNTHER, DINOWITZ, PEOPLES-STOKES, REYES,
EPSTEIN, GRIFFIN, TAYLOR, ARROYO, RICHARDSON, HYNDMAN, CRUZ,
PHEFFER AMATO -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. COOK, DenDEKKER, RAMOS
-- read once and referred to the Committee on Governmental Employees
-- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended
and recommitted to said committee
AN ACT to amend the retirement and social security law, in relation to
limitations on investments of public pension funds; and providing for
the repeal of such provisions upon expiration thereof
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the "fossil
2 fuel divestment act".
3 § 2. Legislative findings. 1. a. Climate change is a real and serious
4 threat to the health, welfare, and prosperity of all New Yorkers, now
5 and in the future. Maintaining the status quo of fossil fuel energy
6 production will lead to catastrophic results.
7 b. The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has
8 determined that in order to keep the increase in global average temper-
9 ature below 1.5 degrees Celsius, global greenhouse gas emissions must
10 decline by 45% by 2030, and reach net zero by 2050.
11 c. As such, New York State has codified into law a goal of reaching a
12 40% economy-wide greenhouse gas emissions reduction relative to 1990
13 levels by 2030, and net zero emissions by 2050.
14 d. The threat of climate change and the transformation of the global
15 energy system that will be necessary to mitigate it will have a serious
16 negative impact on investors whose assets are not aligned with a 1.5
17 degree trajectory.
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD05278-05-9
A. 1536--A 2
1 2. a. Continued investment in fossil fuel producers poses unacceptable
2 risk to the long-term sustainability of the Common Retirement Fund.
3 b. Experts estimate that demand for fossil fuels is likely to peak
4 within the next decade. In spite of this, the majority of fossil fuel
5 producers are not adjusting their business models to take into account
6 the changing energy market, investing billions of dollars in exploring
7 and extracting new reserves, creating stranded asset risk and the poten-
8 tial for rapid, unexpected, and significant loss of value.
9 c. Attempting to beat the market by holding these investments until
10 the last possible moment is a high-risk strategy that could result in
11 the loss of investment principal. In the words of the Decarbonization
12 Advisory Panel for the New York State Common Retirement Fund, "being too
13 early in the avoidance of the risk of permanent loss is much less of a
14 danger than being too late."
15 3. a. The Legislature is bound by a fiduciary responsibility over the
16 pension fund.
17 b. This responsibility includes a duty to future as well as current
18 beneficiaries. It is therefore incumbent upon the Legislature as fiduci-
19 ary to concern itself with how the Fund rebalances its investments to
20 meet its financial performance targets, favoring the long-term sustaina-
21 bility of the Fund over seeking short-term gains. Fossil fuel producers
22 are currently underperforming compared to the broader market. However,
23 even if they were to produce acceptable returns in the near term, they
24 present undue long-term risk that compels trustee action on behalf of
25 future beneficiaries.
26 c. Duties to future beneficiaries may reasonably include consideration
27 of their human interests, quality of life, and public safety and securi-
28 ty, and therefore may mandate that trustees try to accelerate the shift
29 away from fossil fuels to help mitigate the future adverse effects of
30 climate change.
31 d. Given the systemic threat of climate change to the economy as a
32 whole, and therefore to the value of the Fund's entire portfolio,
33 consideration of the climate impact of certain investments is entirely
34 appropriate. According to the US Department of Labor's interpretive
35 bulletin 2015-1, environmental issues "may have a direct relationship to
36 the economic value of the plan's investment. In these instances, such
37 issues are not merely collateral considerations or tie-breakers, but
38 rather are proper components of the fiduciary's primary analysis of the
39 economic merits of competing investment choices."
40 e. The Common Retirement Fund has set a precedent by choosing to
41 divest from certain industries in the past due to the moral implications
42 of their business models, including private prisons, firearms manufac-
43 turers, and companies doing business with Sudan, all while complying
44 with the Comptroller's fiduciary obligations.
45 f. Over 1,100 institutional investors representing more than $11 tril-
46 lion in holdings have chosen to pursue full or partial divestment from
47 fossil fuel producers, including the Teachers Retirement System of the
48 City of New York, the New York City Employees Retirement System, the
49 endowment and pension funds of the University of California system, and
50 the sovereign wealth funds of Norway and Ireland. This bill adopts the
51 prevailing approaches of these similarly situated fiduciaries with
52 regard to fossil fuel divestment, and therefore complies with the
53 prudent investor standard defined by section 11-2.3 of the estates,
54 powers and trusts law.
A. 1536--A 3
1 4. a. The Legislature is within its constitutional authority to
2 instruct the Comptroller to divest from fossil fuel producers along the
3 lines outlined in this bill.
4 b. The Court of Appeals ruled in Scaglione v. Levitt that the Comp-
5 troller's freedom to invest is "limited by the continuing power of the
6 Legislature to expand or restrict the classes and kinds of investments
7 in which he may place the funds in his care," provided that his or her
8 discretion is not impaired. The Comptroller's discretion is maintained
9 in this bill through the mechanism of the Determination of Prudence.
10 c. The Court of Appeals further ruled in McDermott v. Regan and Guzdek
11 v. McCall that a proposed change to the management of the Retirement
12 System would be deemed "radical" and would compel "close examination"
13 if, in addition to interfering with the Comptroller's discretion, it
14 destabilized the system or created an inappropriate level of risk in the
15 management of the Fund. The Legislature finds that there is extensive
16 evidence that this bill, if enacted, would not meet any of these thresh-
17 olds.
18 d. Existing state law, in effect for decades, provides an example of a
19 limitation on the Comptroller's freedom to invest, placing requirements
20 on the Comptroller to consider certain social and political factors
21 before investing in companies doing business in Northern Ireland.
22 5. a. Given the severely adverse impact that climate change will have
23 on the lives of all New Yorkers and all people on the planet, the State
24 has a responsibility to take all available steps to avert and mitigate
25 it.
26 b. Attempting to profit from investments in companies whose business
27 models, public relations campaigns, and lobbying efforts not only fail
28 to comply with New York's statutory climate goals, but put the stability
29 of our society and the safety of our citizens at risk, is neither moral-
30 ly acceptable nor in compliance with the Legislature's fiduciary respon-
31 sibility to current and future pension beneficiaries.
32 § 3. The retirement and social security law is amended by adding a new
33 section 423-d to read as follows:
34 § 423-d. Fossil fuel divestment. 1. Definitions. As used in this
35 section:
36 a. "coal producer" means any corporation or company, or any subsidiary
37 or parent of any corporation or company, that derives at least twenty
38 percent of annual revenue from thermal coal production, or accounts for
39 more than one percent of global production of thermal coal, or whose
40 reported coal reserves contain more than 0.3 gigatons of potential
41 carbon dioxide emissions;
42 b. "direct investment" means ownership of an individual stock, securi-
43 ty, equity, asset, or other obligation of a corporation or company;
44 c. "exclusion list" means the list created pursuant to paragraph a of
45 subdivision two of this section;
46 d. "indirect investment" means a holding in an investment vehicle that
47 directly or indirectly owns an individual stock, security, equity,
48 asset, or other obligation of a corporation or company;
49 e. "oil and gas producer" means any corporation or company, or any
50 subsidiary or parent of any corporation or company, that derives at
51 least twenty percent of annual revenue from oil or gas production, or
52 accounts for more than one percent of global oil or gas production, or
53 whose reported combined oil and gas reserves contain more than 0.1 giga-
54 tons of potential carbon dioxide emissions;
A. 1536--A 4
1 f. "oil or gas production" means exploration, extraction, drilling,
2 production, refining, processing, or distribution activities related to
3 oil or gas; and
4 g. "thermal coal production" means mining, transport, processing, or
5 exploration activities related to thermal coal.
6 2. Fossil fuel producer exclusion list. a. Within six months of the
7 effective date of this section, the comptroller shall create an exclu-
8 sion list of all coal producers and oil and gas producers in whose
9 stocks, securities, equities, assets, or other obligations the common
10 retirement fund has any moneys or assets directly invested.
11 b. Upon completion of the exclusion list, it shall be made publicly
12 available, and a copy shall be sent to the temporary president of the
13 senate and the speaker of the assembly.
14 c. The comptroller shall submit notification to any corporation or
15 company that has been included in the exclusion list informing them of
16 their inclusion, as well as the requirements of subdivisions three and
17 five of this section.
18 d. At the comptroller's discretion, but no later than two years after
19 the completion of the exclusion list, and no less frequently than bien-
20 nially thereafter, the comptroller shall update the exclusion list to
21 remove any corporation or company that is no longer a coal producer or
22 an oil and gas producer, and add any corporation or company necessary to
23 comply with paragraph a of this subdivision, with the exception of such
24 companies removed from the exclusion list pursuant to paragraph b of
25 subdivision four of this section.
26 3. Removal from the exclusion list. a. At any time following the
27 publication of the exclusion list, any corporation or company included
28 in the list may submit to the comptroller a request for removal on the
29 basis of clear and convincing evidence that they are not currently a
30 coal producer or an oil and gas producer as defined in subdivision one
31 of this section or that they will no longer meet such definition by
32 January first, two thousand thirty.
33 b. Upon satisfaction that a corporation or company has met the
34 requirements of paragraph a of this subdivision, the comptroller shall
35 remove that corporation or company from the exclusion list, and provide
36 a written explanation for such removal to the temporary president of the
37 senate and the speaker of the assembly.
38 4. Determination of prudence. a. Within six months from the completion
39 of the exclusion list the comptroller shall issue a determination as to
40 whether divestment from any or all corporations or companies on the
41 exclusion list, in whole or in part, pursuant to subdivision five of
42 this section complies with his or her fiduciary obligations and the
43 prudent investor rule as defined by section 11-2.3 of the estates,
44 powers and trusts law. The comptroller shall make such determination
45 publicly available and a copy shall be sent to the temporary president
46 of the senate and the speaker of the assembly.
47 b. If the comptroller determines that divestment from any corporation
48 or company on the exclusion list does not comply with his or her fiduci-
49 ary obligations and the prudent investor rule as defined by section
50 11-2.3 of the estates, powers and trusts law, that corporation or compa-
51 ny shall be removed from the exclusion list.
52 c. At any time, subject to the comptroller's discretion, but no later
53 than five years and six months from the effective date of this section,
54 and every five years thereafter, any corporations or companies removed
55 from the exclusion list pursuant to paragraph b of this subdivision
56 shall be returned to the exclusion list, subject to a new determination
A. 1536--A 5
1 of prudence issued at that time pursuant to paragraph a of this subdivi-
2 sion.
3 5. Divestment. a. Commencing one year after the effective date of this
4 section, subject to an affirmative determination of prudence pursuant to
5 subdivision four of this section, and in accordance with sound invest-
6 ment criteria and consistent with his or her fiduciary obligations, the
7 comptroller shall: (i) divest the common retirement fund of any stocks,
8 securities, equities, assets, or other obligations of corporations or
9 companies on the exclusion list in which any moneys or assets of the
10 common retirement fund are directly invested; and (ii) cease new direct
11 investments of any moneys or assets of the common retirement fund in any
12 stocks, securities, or other obligations of any corporation or company
13 that is a coal producer or oil and gas producer.
14 b. Divestment from oil and gas producers pursuant to this subdivision
15 shall be completed no later than five years from the effective date of
16 this section. Divestment from oil and gas producers returned to the
17 exclusion list pursuant to paragraph c of subdivision four of this
18 section shall be completed no later than five years from the date of
19 return to the exclusion list.
20 c. Divestment from coal producers pursuant to this subdivision shall
21 be completed no later than two years from the effective date of this
22 section. Divestment from coal producers returned to the exclusion list
23 pursuant to paragraph c of subdivision four of this section shall be
24 completed no later than two years from the date of return to the exclu-
25 sion list.
26 6. Limitations on indirect investment. Commencing one year after the
27 effective date of this section, and no later than five years from the
28 effective date of this section, subject to an affirmative determination
29 of prudence pursuant to subdivision four of this section, and in accord-
30 ance with sound investment criteria and consistent with his or her fidu-
31 ciary obligations, the comptroller shall endeavor to ensure that no
32 moneys or assets of the common retirement fund are invested in an indi-
33 rect investment vehicle unless he or she is satisfied on reasonable
34 grounds that such indirect investment vehicle is unlikely to have in
35 excess of two percent of its assets, averaged annually, directly or
36 indirectly invested in coal producers and oil and gas producers.
37 7. Reporting. Commencing two years after the effective date of this
38 section and annually thereafter the comptroller shall issue a report to
39 the temporary president of the senate and the speaker of the assembly,
40 and shall make such report publicly available, outlining all actions
41 taken to comply with this section.
42 § 4. This act shall take effect immediately and shall expire and be
43 deemed repealed January 1, 2050.