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GU Fossil Free unites student groups for rally

April 15, 2016


Photo: Samantha Panchévre (SFS '19)

Georgetown University Fossil Free held a rally on April 13 in Red Square with members from allied student groups groups to demand transparency and social responsibility in University investments. GU Fossil Free members spoke about Georgetown’s need for a socially responsible investment policy before leading a chanting group of students to President DeGioia’s office where they delivered their list of demands to the President’s Chief of Staff, Joseph Ferrara. GU Fossil Free is an unrecognized student group campaigning for the University to divest from fossil fuels.

Photo: Samantha Panchévre (SFS ’19)

About 30 students gathered in Red Square during the Farmer’s Market, as members of GU Fossil Free explained the need for moral guidelines on University investment and read their demands. Attendees emphasized that this was an action-based, not issue-based rally. “The point of Follow the Money is not to dictate what the University should put in its investment policy. It is to say that the University should have one, period–and that students should be engaged in the process of its creation and implementation,” wrote GU Fossil free on the rally’s Facebook event page.

GU Fossil Free member Theo Montgomery (SFS ‘18) listed five ways in which Georgetown’s investment policy falls short; the lack of student involvement in financial decisions, lack of a policy for divesting from socially irresponsible companies, lack of transparency, lack of attention to social harm in investment decisions, and a failure to live up to Georgetown’s values when making investment decisions.

Georgetown’s Committee on Investments and Socially Responsibility (CISR), a committee that includes students and Fossil Free members, does not have access to information on the University’s investments. According to the website of Georgetown’s Office of Public Affairs, CISR acts as an advisory body to the Board of Directors and does not have oversight over endowment investments. “The CISR does not have authority to review, veto, or recommend specific endowment investments, or to address the day-to-day operations of the university,” the website reads.

“Georgetown does not utilize students in its decision making processes,” said Montgomery, “We demand student engagement.”

Photo: Samantha Panchévre (SFS ’19)

Other GU Fossil Free members cited Brown University’s adoption of such policies and Georgetown’s Jesuit values as additional reasons for implementing a socially driven approach to investments. GU Fossil Free and their partner student groups are demanding the creation and development of a University-wide socially responsible investment (SRI policy), a permanent and institutionalized Board of Director’s SRI Working Group, changes to the structure of CISR, and an online investments transparency page, according to the list of demands on GU Fossil Free’s website.

“Georgetown students are known for being advocates for social justice and it was really important to me to have that same advocacy from Georgetown, “ said GU Fossil Free member Samantha Panchevre (SFS ‘19). “Our investments, our endowment depict who we are as a university, and for the students, we are not injustice.”

The groups supporting GU Fossil Free in their “Follow the Money” campaign include Georgetown University Amnesty International, Georgetown Students for Justice in Palestine, Georgetown Israel Alliance, Georgetown Solidarity Committee, Georgetown Against Gun Violence, Georgetown Secular Student Alliance, Georgetown Refugee Action, and H*yas for Choice. Some of these groups are usually opposing one another in campus issues, but chose to unite with GU Fossil Free because of their interest in University investments.

Daniel Silbert (COL ‘18), President of the Georgetown Israel Alliance (GIA), said that the GIA supports Follow the Money because of their concerns about the University’s ties with Qatar. “Qatar is the global financial center for terrorism and violent extremism in the Middle East,” said Silbert, “So we just want transparency that none of our money and no Georgetown money is going to any company that directly or indirectly supports terrorism in the Middle East or extremist groups that perform acts of violence against Israel.”

Photo: Samantha Panchévre (SFS ’19)

Georgetown Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) was another co-sponsor for the event. “I think it’s a great thing that even though our clubs are so different and have very opposing viewpoints, we’re able to find one thing that we have in common and work together on, which is supporting transparency,“ Silbert said.

“SJP’s participation in the rally wasn’t necessarily a partnership with GIA nor was our participation in the rally contradictory to SJP’s values and mission,” wrote SJP member Matt Martin (COL ‘16) in an email in the Voice. He noted that he was speaking for himself, not the group as a whole.  “SJP is currently reflecting on its participation in the rally and the significance and implications of GIA’s involvement,” Martin wrote.

Joe Ferrara receives demands. Photo: Samantha Panchévre (SFS ’19)

Around 3:30pm, rally attendees marched to President DeGioia’s office and Chloe Lazarus (COL ‘16) delivered GU Fossil Free’s set of demands to the President’s Chief of Staff Joseph Ferrara. GU Fossil Free attended a previously planned meeting with Ferrara and Erik Smulson, Vice President of Public Affairs, later that afternoon. 

An error with regards to the group’s afternoon meeting has been corrected. The meeting was with Joseph Ferrara and Erik Smulson, not with President DeGioia. 

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