Organizers from Columbia University, Tulane University, and the University of Virginia have contacted attorneys general, arguing that their universities’ investments in fossil fuels violate the law.
According to sources familiar with the matter, the students filed legal complaints on Monday, urging scrutiny of their institutions’ investment practices.
They allege that Columbia, Tulane, and UVA have contravened the Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act, a statute adopted by 49 states.
This law mandates non-profit entities prioritize their charitable objectives when investing while exercising prudence and loyalty.
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On Earth Day, the complaints were filed, coinciding with increased scrutiny faced by officials at Columbia University. They faced significant backlash for instructing the New York City police to disperse students protesting Israel’s actions in Gaza.
These students had demanded Columbia to divest its financial ties from corporations associated with Israel.
“Universities occupy a unique position as a bastion of values and morals the best of society should strive for,” said Nicole Xiao, 19, a second-year Columbia student studying climate systems science.
“When Columbia refuses to commit to divestment, it hinders those very same principles and continues a blatant disregard of the important climate work its own faculty, students and affiliates do,” Xiao added.