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View Article  Socially Responsible Investing
Socially Responsible Investing

Union of Concerned Scientists
 
Many people do their part for the environment by driving a fuel-efficient car, buying organic foods, or using energy-efficient appliances. You can also promote environmental values through socially responsible investing (SRI), also known as “green” investing. SRI gives corporations an incentive to improve their environmental stewardship and can also provide investors with a more secure financial future — a “double bottom line.”

Though socially responsible stocks have a reputation for poor performance, recent data from Lipper, a fund tracking and research firm, show that returns from SRI funds are now competitive with — and, in some cases, have even outperformed — the overall stock market.

Here are a few things to keep in mind when you’re preparing to become a socially responsible investor:

Mutual Funds

Mutual funds pool the money of multiple shareholders and invest it in the stocks of corporations that meet certain criteria; investors then share the fund’s gains and losses. In the case of green investing, the companies chosen to make up the fund have been screened according to environmental, social, and/or political criteria.

The success of mutual funds is measured against an index — a collection of stocks meant to represent the overall stock market or a specific segment of the market (SRI in this case). Mutual funds known as index funds simply attempt to duplicate the performance of a particular index; the Calvert Social Index, for example, is a socially responsible index fund.

Screening Criteria

When selecting a socially responsible mutual fund, it is important to know the business sectors in which the fund invests and the method it uses to screen corporations. Negative screens, for example, exclude companies that behave in an unacceptable manner or develop products that investors do not wish to support, such as tobacco, casinos, alcohol, weapons, or nuclear energy. Positive screens give recognition to companies that engage in issues such as conservation, civil rights, labor relations, or animal rights.

One fund might choose to invest in renewable energy corporations exclusively, while another might invest in any company except those that produce weapons. The Pax World Balanced Fund uses both positive and negative screens to invest in businesses that provide life-supporting goods and services such as health care, pollution control, and education.

Comparing Funds

Several websites can help you compare mutual funds and choose which ones are right for you. Calvert’s “Know What You Own” service lets you run the holdings of various funds through the screens used by its Calvert Social Index. The nonprofit Social Investment Forum lets you compare the screens used by different funds and presents the distinctions in an easy-to-follow chart.

Please note: The fund names and services mentioned in this article are used for identification purposes only and do not imply endorsement. UCS is not responsible for any investments made as a result of the information provided in this article.

(For further information on socially-responsible investing, click here.)


View Article  Iowa School Board Overturns Committee Recommendation, Bans Book; Anti-bullying Workshop in Ames in January (GLBT)
Iowa School Board Overturns Committee Recommendation, Bans Book (GLBT)

The North Scott Press

by Bill Tubbs
  
The United Methodist Church defrocked the Rev. Irene Elizabeth Stroud on a 7-6 vote for being honest about her sexual orientation....The church's decision appears to be, at best, an effort to achieve unity by sacrificing reality and truth.

[That] very week, the networks, who flooded the airwaves all fall with half-truths disguised as political ads, rejected as "too controversial" a 30-second commercial of the United Church of Christ which showed a bouncer standing guard outside a church and choosing whom to allow into services. Among those rejected are people of color and a same-sex couple.

Just when you think all the issues are national, the school board of the Pleasant Valley [Iowa] School District sent shudders through academia with a 4-3 vote to overturn a committee's recommendation that it is OK to continue using the book, "The Misfits" by James Howe, in an elementary classroom. Parents protested when they learned that Linda Goetz, a sixth-grade teacher at Bridgeview Elementary in LeClaire, was reading the book aloud in an effort to curb name-calling. Their objection? One of the characters is gay.

(click here to read the entire story)



Iowa Department of Education Hosts Conference on Bullying and Harassment


"Bullying in Our  Schools: Power and Empowerment"


The GLBT Youth in Iowa Schools Task Force is one of several sponsors of this conference which will take  place on Thursday, January 27, 2005, at the Scheman Conference Center  in Ames.

This conference is designed to help school teams (including youth and community) create plans to prevent bullying and harassment  against all students, including those that are gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT).  

Sessions will help team members learn what works, how to effectively intervene when bullying happens, and how to recognize the many forms that bullying can take.  A special strand is being offered for middle school and high school youth team members, in addition to a strand to address bullying/harassment against diverse  populations (GLBT students, students of color, students with  disabilities, religious minorities).

Click here for more information and to register your team

Brad Clark
Project Director,
GLBT Youth in Iowa Schools Task Force
PO Box 1797
Des Moines, IA  50306-1797

Contact Brad here:
Send an e-mail

Click here for more contact info:
www.iowasafeschools.org


Join your fellow Iowans in the fight to take back the media for ordinary citizens.  Click here to join RapidResponse - Iowa.


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