By: Ellis, et al. S.B. No. 247
 
 
 
   
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
relating to prohibiting the investment of state funds in certain
private business entities doing business in Sudan.
       BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
       SECTION 1.  LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS. (a)  On July 23, 2004,
the United States Congress declared that "the atrocities unfolding
in Darfur, Sudan, are genocide."
       (b)  On September 9, 2004, Secretary of State Colin L. Powell
told the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations that
"genocide has occurred and may still be occurring in Darfur" and
"the Government of Sudan and the Janjaweed bear responsibility."
       (c)  On September 21, 2004, addressing the United Nations
General Assembly, President George W. Bush affirmed the secretary
of state's finding and stated, "At this hour, the world is
witnessing terrible suffering and horrible crimes in the Darfur
region of Sudan, crimes my government has concluded are genocide."
       (d)  On December 7, 2004, the United States Congress noted
that the genocidal policy in Darfur has led to reports of
"systematic rape of thousands of women and girls, the abduction of
women and children, and the destruction of hundreds of ethnically
African villages, including the poisoning of their wells and the
plunder of their crops and cattle upon which the people of such
villages sustain themselves."
       (e)  Also on December 7, 2004, the United States Congress
found that "the Government of Sudan has restricted access by
humanitarian and human rights workers to the Darfur area through
intimidation by military and security forces, and through
bureaucratic and administrative obstruction, in an attempt to
inflict the most devastating harm on those individuals displaced
from their villages and homes without any means of sustenance or
shelter."
       (f)  On September 25, 2006, the United States Congress
reaffirmed that "the genocide unfolding in the Darfur region of
Sudan is characterized by acts of terrorism and atrocities directed
against civilians, including mass murder, rape, and sexual violence
committed by the Janjaweed and associated militias with the
complicity and support of the National Congress Party-led faction
of the Government of Sudan."
       (g)  On September 26, 2006, the United States House of
Representatives stated that "an estimated 300,000 to 400,000 people
have been killed by the Government of Sudan and its Janjaweed allies
since the Darfur crisis began in 2003, more than 2,000,000 people
have been displaced from their homes, and more than 250,000 people
from Darfur remain in refugee camps in Chad."
       (h)  The Darfur crisis represents the first time the United
States government has labeled ongoing atrocities a genocide.
       (i)  The United States government has imposed sanctions
against the Government of Sudan since 1997.  These sanctions are
monitored through the United States Treasury Department's Office of
Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).
       (j)  According to a former chair of the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission, "the fact that a foreign
company is doing material business with a country, government, or
entity on OFAC's sanctions list is, in the SEC staff's view,
substantially likely to be significant to a reasonable investor's
decision about whether to invest in that company."
       (k)  Since 1993, the United States secretary of state has
determined that Sudan is a country the government of which has
repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism,
thereby incurring restrictions of United States assistance,
defense exports and sales, and financial and other transactions
with the Government of Sudan.
       (l)  A 2006 United States House of Representatives report
states that "a company's association with sponsors of terrorism and
human rights abuses, no matter how large or small, can have a
materially adverse result on a public company's operations,
financial condition, earnings, and stock prices, all of which can
negatively affect the value of an investment."
       (m)  In response to the financial risk posed by investments
in companies doing business with a terrorist-sponsoring state, the
Securities and Exchange Commission established its Office of Global
Security Risk to provide for enhanced disclosure of material
information regarding such companies.
       (n)  The current Sudan divestment movement encompasses
nearly 100 universities, cities, states, and private pension plans.
       (o)  Companies facing such widespread divestment present
further material risk to remaining investors.
       (p)  It is a fundamental responsibility of the state to
decide where, how, and by whom financial resources in its control
should be invested, taking into account numerous pertinent factors.
       (q)  It is the prerogative and desire of the state, in
respect to investment resources in its control and to the extent
reasonable, with due consideration for, among other things,
fiduciary standards imposed by law, on behalf of itself and its
investment beneficiaries, not to participate in an ownership or
capital-providing capacity with entities that provide significant
practical support for genocide, including certain non-United
States companies presently doing business in Sudan.
       (r)  It is the judgment of the legislature that this Act
should remain in effect only insofar as it continues to be
consistent with, and does not unduly interfere with, the foreign
policy of the United States as determined by the United States
government.
       (s)  This Act is not intended to interfere with the
performance of the fiduciary duties of a manager of funds subject to
this Act.
       (t)  It is the judgment of the legislature that mandatory
divestment of public funds from certain companies is a measure that
should be employed sparingly and judiciously.  A congressional and
presidential declaration of genocide satisfies this high
threshold.
       SECTION 2.  Subtitle A, Title 8, Government Code, is amended
by adding Chapter 806 to read as follows:
CHAPTER 806.  PROHIBITION ON INVESTMENT IN SUDAN
SUBCHAPTER A.  GENERAL PROVISIONS
       Sec. 806.001.  DEFINITIONS.  In this chapter:
             (1)  "Active business operations" means all business
operations that are not inactive business operations.
             (2)  "Business operations" means engaging in commerce
in any form in Sudan, including by acquiring, developing,
maintaining, owning, selling, possessing, leasing, or operating
equipment, facilities, personnel, products, services, personal
property, real property, or any other apparatus of business or
commerce.
             (3)  "Company" means a sole proprietorship,
organization, association, corporation, partnership, joint
venture, limited partnership, limited liability partnership,
limited liability company, or other entity or business association
whose securities are publicly traded, including a wholly owned
subsidiary, majority-owned subsidiary, parent company, or
affiliate of those entities or business associations, that exists
to make a profit.
             (4)  "Complicit" means taking actions that have
directly supported or promoted the genocidal campaign in Darfur,
including:
                   (A)  preventing members of Darfur's victimized
population from communicating with each other;
                   (B)  encouraging Sudanese citizens to speak out
against an internationally approved security force for Darfur; or
                   (C)  actively working to deny, cover up, or alter
the record on human rights abuses in Darfur.
             (5)  "Direct holdings in a company" means all
securities of that company held directly by a state governmental
entity in an account or fund in which a state governmental entity
owns all shares or interests.
             (6)  "Government of Sudan" means the government in
Khartoum, Sudan, which is led by the National Congress Party,
formerly known as the National Islamic Front, or any successor
government formed on or after October 13, 2006, including the
coalition National Unity Government agreed upon in the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement for Sudan.  The term does not include
the regional government of southern Sudan.
             (7)  "Inactive business operations" means the mere
continued holding or renewal of rights to property previously
operated to generate revenue but not presently deployed to generate
revenue.
             (8)  "Indirect holdings in a company" means all
securities of that company held in an account or fund, such as a
mutual fund, managed by one or more persons not employed by a state
governmental entity, in which the state governmental entity owns
shares or interests together with other investors not subject to
this chapter.  The term does not include money invested under a plan
described by Section 401(k) or 457 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986.
             (9)  "Listed company" means a company listed by the
comptroller under Section 806.051.
             (10)  "Marginalized populations of Sudan" includes:
                   (A)  the portion of the population in the Darfur
region that has been genocidally victimized;
                   (B)  the portion of the population of southern
Sudan victimized by Sudan's North-South civil war;
                   (C)  the Beja, Rashidiya, and other similarly
underserved groups of eastern Sudan;
                   (D)  the Nubian and other similarly underserved
groups in Sudan's Abyei, Southern Blue Nile, and Nuba Mountain
regions; and
                   (E)  the Amri, Hamadab, Manasir, and other
similarly underserved groups of northern Sudan.
             (11)  "Military equipment" means weapons, arms,
military supplies, and equipment that readily may be used for
military purposes, including radar systems or military-grade
transport vehicles or supplies or services sold or provided
directly or indirectly to any force actively participating in armed
conflict in Sudan.
             (12)  "Mineral extraction activities" includes
exploring, extracting, processing, transporting, or wholesale
selling or trading of elemental minerals or associated metal alloys
or oxides (ore), including gold, copper, chromium, chromite,
diamonds, iron, iron ore, silver, tungsten, uranium, and zinc, as
well as facilitating those activities, including by providing
supplies or services in support of those activities.
             (13)  "Oil-related activities" includes:
                   (A)  owning rights to oil blocks;
                   (B)  exporting, extracting, producing, refining,
processing, exploring for, transporting, selling, or trading of
oil;
                   (C)  constructing, maintaining, or operating a
pipeline, refinery, or other oil-field infrastructure; or
                   (D)  facilitating oil-related activities,
including by providing supplies or services in support of the
activities, except that the mere retail sale of gasoline and
related consumer products is not an oil-related activity.
             (14)  "Power production activities" means any business
operation that involves a project commissioned by the National
Electricity Corporation of Sudan or another similar Government of
Sudan entity whose purpose is to facilitate power generation and
delivery, including establishing power-generating plants or
hydroelectric dams, selling or installing components for the
project, and providing service contracts related to the
installation or maintenance of the project, as well as facilitating
those activities, including by providing supplies or services in
support of those activities.
             (15)  "Scrutinized company" means a company that:
                   (A)  engages in scrutinized business operations
described by Section 806.002; or
                   (B)  has been complicit in the Darfur genocide
during any preceding 20-month period.
             (16)  "Social development company" means a company
whose primary purpose in Sudan is to provide humanitarian goods or
services, including medicine or medical equipment, agricultural
supplies or infrastructure, educational opportunities,
journalism-related activities, information or information
materials, spiritual-related activities, services of a purely
clerical or reporting nature, food, clothing, or general consumer
goods that are unrelated to oil-related activities, mineral
extraction activities, or power production activities.
             (17)  "State governmental entity" means the Employees
Retirement System of Texas or the Teacher Retirement System of
Texas.
             (18)  "Substantial action" means adopting,
publicizing, and implementing a formal plan to cease scrutinized
business operations within one year and to refrain from any such new
business operations, undertaking significant humanitarian efforts
on behalf of one or more marginalized populations of Sudan, or,
through engagement with the Government of Sudan, materially
improving conditions for the genocidally victimized population in
Darfur.
       Sec. 806.002.  SCRUTINIZED BUSINESS OPERATIONS. A company
engages in scrutinized business operations if:
             (1)  the company has business operations that involve
contracts with or providing supplies or services to the Government
of Sudan, a company in which the Government of Sudan has any direct
or indirect equity share, a Government of Sudan-commissioned
consortium or project, or a company involved in a Government of
Sudan-commissioned consortium or project, and:
                   (A)  more than 10 percent of the company's
revenues or assets linked to Sudan involve oil-related activities
or mineral extraction activities, less than 75 percent of the
company's revenue or assets linked to Sudan involve contracts with
or provision of oil-related or mineral extracting products or
services to the regional government of southern Sudan or a project
or consortium created exclusively by that regional government, and
the company has failed to take substantial action; or
                   (B)  more than 10 percent of the company's revenue
or assets linked to Sudan involve power production activities, less
than 75 percent of the company's power production activities
include projects whose intent is to provide power or electricity to
the marginalized populations of Sudan, and the company has failed
to take substantial action; or
             (2)  the company supplies military equipment in Sudan,
unless:
                   (A)  the company clearly shows that the military
equipment cannot be used to facilitate offensive military actions
in Sudan; or
                   (B)  the company implements rigorous and
verifiable safeguards to prevent use of that equipment by forces
actively participating in armed conflict, including:
                         (i)  using post-sale tracking of the
equipment by the company;
                         (ii)  obtaining certification from a
reputable and objective third party that the equipment is not being
used by a party participating in armed conflict in Sudan; or
                         (iii)  selling the equipment solely to the
regional government of southern Sudan or any internationally
recognized peacekeeping force or humanitarian organization.
       Sec. 806.003.  SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY. Notwithstanding
any other law, a social development company that is not complicit in
the Darfur genocide is not a scrutinized company.
       Sec. 806.004.  EXCEPTION. Notwithstanding any other law, a
company that the United States government affirmatively declares to
be excluded from its federal sanctions regime relating to Sudan is
not subject to divestment or investment prohibition under this
chapter.
       Sec. 806.005.  OTHER LEGAL OBLIGATIONS. With respect to
actions taken in compliance with this chapter, including all good
faith determinations regarding companies as required by this
chapter, a state governmental entity is exempt from any conflicting
statutory or common law obligations, including any obligations with
respect to making investments, divesting from any investment,
preparing or maintaining any list of companies, or choosing asset
managers, investment funds, or investments for the state
governmental entity's securities portfolios.
       Sec. 806.006.  INDEMNIFICATION OF STATE GOVERNMENTAL
ENTITIES, EMPLOYEES, AND OTHERS. In a cause of action based on an
action, inaction, decision, divestment, investment, company
communication, report, or other determination made or taken in
connection with this chapter, the state shall, without regard to
whether the person performed services for compensation, indemnify
and hold harmless for actual damages, court costs, and attorney's
fees adjudged against, and defend:
             (1)  an employee, a member of the governing body, or any
other officer of a state governmental entity;
             (2)  a contractor of a state governmental entity;
             (3)  a former employee, former member of the governing
body, or any other former officer of a state governmental entity who
was an employee or officer when the act or omission on which the
damages are based occurred; and
             (4)  a former contractor of a state governmental entity
who was a contractor when the act or omission on which the damages
are based occurred.
       Sec. 806.007.  NO PRIVATE CAUSE OF ACTION. (a)  A person,
including a member, retiree, and beneficiary of a retirement system
to which this chapter applies, an association, a research firm, a
company, or any other person may not sue or pursue a private cause
of action against the state, a state governmental entity, an
employee, a member of the governing body, or any other officer of a
state governmental entity, or a contractor of a state governmental
entity, for any claim or cause of action, including breach of
fiduciary duty, or for violation of any constitutional, statutory,
or regulatory requirement in connection with any action, inaction,
decision, divestment, investment, company communication, report,
or other determination made or taken in connection with this
chapter.
       (b)  A person who files suit against the state, a state
governmental entity, an employee, a member of the governing body,
or any other officer of a state governmental entity, or a contractor
of a state governmental entity, is liable for paying the costs and
attorney's fees of a person sued in violation of this section.
[Sections 806.008-806.050 reserved for expansion]
SUBCHAPTER B. DUTIES REGARDING INVESTMENTS
       Sec. 806.051.  LISTED COMPANIES.  (a)  The comptroller shall
prepare and maintain, and provide to each state governmental
entity, a list of all scrutinized companies.  In maintaining the
list of scrutinized companies, the comptroller may review and rely,
as appropriate in the comptroller's judgment, on publicly available
information regarding companies with business operations in Sudan,
including information provided by the state, nonprofit
organizations, research firms, international organizations, and
governmental entities.
       (b)  The comptroller shall update the list of scrutinized
companies annually or more often as the comptroller considers
necessary, but not more often than quarterly, based on information
from, among other sources, those listed in Subsection (a).
       (c)  Not later than the 30th day after the date the list of
scrutinized companies is first provided or updated, the comptroller
shall file the list of scrutinized companies with the presiding
officer of each house of the legislature and the attorney general.
       Sec. 806.052.  IDENTIFICATION OF INVESTMENT IN LISTED
COMPANIES. Not later than the 14th day after the date a state
governmental entity receives the list provided under Section
806.051(c), the state governmental entity shall notify the
comptroller of the listed companies in which the state governmental
entity owns direct or indirect holdings.
       Sec. 806.053.  NOTICE TO LISTED COMPANY ENGAGED IN INACTIVE
BUSINESS OPERATIONS. For each listed company identified under
Section 806.052 that is engaged in only inactive scrutinized
business operations, the state governmental entity shall send a
written notice informing the company of this chapter and
encouraging the company to continue to refrain from initiating
active business operations in Sudan until it is able to avoid being
considered a listed company. The state governmental entity shall
continue the correspondence as the entity considers necessary, but
is not required to initiate correspondence more often than
semiannually.
       Sec. 806.054.  ACTIONS RELATING TO LISTED COMPANY ENGAGED IN
ACTIVE BUSINESS OPERATIONS. (a)  For each listed company
identified under Section 806.052 that is engaged in scrutinized
active business operations, the state governmental entity shall
send a written notice informing the company of its listed company
status and warning the company that it may become subject to
divestment by state governmental entities.
       (b)  The notice shall offer the company the opportunity to
clarify its Sudan-related activities and shall encourage the
company, not later than the 90th day after the date the company
receives notice under this section, to either cease its scrutinized
business operations or convert such operations to inactive business
operations in order to avoid qualifying for divestment by state
governmental entities.
       (c)  If, during the time provided by Subsection (b), the
company ceases scrutinized business operations, the comptroller
shall remove the company from the list of scrutinized companies and
this chapter will no longer apply to the company unless it resumes
scrutinized business operations.
       (d)  If, during the time provided by Subsection (b), the
company converts its scrutinized active business operations to
inactive business operations, the company is subject to all
provisions of this chapter relating to inactive business
operations.
       (e)  If, after the time provided by Subsection (b) expires,
the listed company continues to have scrutinized active business
operations, the state governmental entity shall sell, redeem,
divest, or withdraw all publicly traded securities of the company,
except securities described by Section 806.057, according to the
schedule provided by Section 806.056.
       Sec. 806.055.  ACTIONS RELATING TO LISTED COMPANY COMPLICIT
IN GENOCIDE. (a)  For each company identified under Section
806.052 that has been complicit, the state governmental entity
shall send a written notice informing the company of its listed
company status and warning the company that it may become subject to
divestment by the state governmental entity.
       (b)  The notice must require the listed company to refrain
from taking any further action that would make it complicit.
       (c)  If, after receiving the notice under Subsection (a), the
listed company takes additional action that makes the company
complicit, the state governmental entity shall sell, redeem,
divest, or withdraw all publicly traded securities of the company,
except securities described by Section 806.057, according to the
schedule provided by Section 806.056.
       Sec. 806.056.  DIVESTMENT OF ASSETS. (a)  A state
governmental entity required to sell, redeem, divest, or withdraw
all publicly traded securities of a listed company shall comply
with the following schedule:
             (1)  at least 50 percent of those assets shall be
removed from the state governmental entity's assets under
management not later than the 270th day after the date the company
receives notice under Section 806.054 or 806.055 or Subsection (b);
and
             (2)  100 percent of those assets shall be removed from
the state governmental entity's assets under management not later
than the 450th day after the date the company receives notice under
Section 806.054 or 806.055 or Subsection (b).
       (b)  If a company that ceased scrutinized active business
operations after receiving notice under Section 806.054 resumes
scrutinized active business operations, the state governmental
entity shall send a written notice to the company informing it that
the state governmental entity will sell, redeem, divest, or
withdraw all publicly traded securities of the scrutinized company
according to the schedule in Subsection (a).
       (c)  A state governmental entity may delay the schedule for
divestment under Subsection (a) only to the extent that the state
governmental entity determines, in the state governmental entity's
good faith judgment, that divestment from listed companies will
likely result in a loss in value described by Section 806.058(a).
If a state governmental entity delays the schedule for divestment,
the state governmental entity shall submit a report to the
presiding officer of each house of the legislature and the attorney
general stating the reasons and justification for the state
governmental entity's delay in divestment from listed companies.
The report must include documentation supporting its determination
that the divestment would result in a loss in value described by
Section 806.058(a), including objective numerical estimates. The
state governmental entity shall update the report every six months.
       Sec. 806.057.  INVESTMENTS EXEMPTED FROM DIVESTMENT. A
state governmental entity is not required to divest from any
indirect holdings in actively managed investment funds or private
equity funds. The state governmental entity shall submit letters
to the managers of investment funds containing listed companies
requesting that they consider removing those companies from the
fund or create a similar actively managed fund with indirect
holdings devoid of listed companies. If the manager creates a
similar fund with substantially the same management fees and same
level of investment risk, the state governmental entity shall
replace all applicable investments with investments in the similar
fund in an expedited time frame consistent with prudent fiduciary
standards.
       Sec. 806.058.  AUTHORIZED INVESTMENT IN LISTED COMPANIES.
(a)  A state governmental entity may cease divesting from or may
reinvest in one or more listed companies if clear and convincing
evidence shows that the value for all assets under management by the
state governmental entity becomes equal to or less than 99.7
percent of the hypothetical value of all assets under management by
the state governmental entity had the state governmental entity not
divested from listed companies under this chapter.
       (b)  A state governmental entity may invest in a listed
company as provided by this section only to the extent necessary to
ensure that the value of the assets managed by the state
governmental entity does not fall below the value described by
Subsection (a).
       (c)  Before a state governmental entity may invest in a
listed company under this section, the state governmental entity
must provide a written report to the presiding officer of each house
of the legislature and the attorney general setting forth the
reason and justification, supported by clear and convincing
evidence, for its decisions to cease divestment, to reinvest, or to
remain invested in a listed company.
       (d)  The state governmental entity shall update the report
required by Subsection (c) semiannually, as applicable.
       (e)  This section does not apply to reinvestment in a company
that has ceased to be a listed company.
       Sec. 806.059.  PROHIBITED INVESTMENTS. Except as provided
by Sections 806.004 and 806.058, a state governmental entity may
not acquire securities of a listed company.
[Sections 806.060-806.100 reserved for expansion]
SUBCHAPTER C. EXPIRATION; REPORT; ENFORCEMENT
       Sec. 806.101.  EXPIRATION OF CHAPTER. This chapter expires
on the earliest of:
             (1)  the date on which the United States Congress or the
president of the United States declares that the Darfur genocide
has been halted for at least 12 months;
             (2)  the date on which the United States revokes its
sanctions against the Government of Sudan; or
             (3)  the date on which the United States Congress or the
president of the United States, through legislation or executive
order, declares that mandatory divestment of the type provided for
in this chapter interferes with the conduct of United States
foreign policy.
       Sec. 806.102.  REPORT. Not later than December 31 of each
year, each state governmental entity shall file a publicly
available report with the presiding officer of each house of the
legislature, the attorney general, and the United States
presidential special envoy to Sudan that:
             (1)  identifies all investments sold, redeemed,
divested, or withdrawn in compliance with Section 806.056;
             (2)  identifies all prohibited investments under
Section 806.059; and
             (3)  summarizes any changes made under Section 806.057.
       Sec. 806.103.  ENFORCEMENT. The attorney general may bring
any action necessary to enforce this chapter.
       SECTION 3.  Not later than January 1, 2008, the comptroller
of public accounts shall prepare and provide to each state
governmental entity, as defined by Section 806.001, Government
Code, as added by this Act, the list of scrutinized companies
required by Section 806.051, Government Code, as added by this Act.
       SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect January 1, 2008.