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<b>Wrong Turn in Ohio</b>
<br><b>A wake up call for other states</b><b></b>
<p>With attention of citizen activists in Ohio focused this past fall on
<br>day-to-day battles against corporate harms or the World Trade Organization
<br>(WTO) meeting in Seattle, legislation to further reduce citizen authority
<br>over corporations was passed by state lawmakers with virtually no public
<br>awareness.
<p>The Ohio General Assembly approved in October House Bill 78, titled
<br>“Modernization of the Ohio General Corporation Law.” The bill allows
the
<br>withholding of listing a corporation’s purpose and names of corporate
<br>directors at the time of incorporation, permits important corporate
meetings
<br>to be held outside Ohio, and reduces the legal liability of corporate
<br>officials for corporate debts, obligations and liabilities.
<p>This stealth legislation should be a wake up call to citizen groups
in other
<br>states struggling to strengthen democratic values and processes. The
price of
<br>liberty is eternal vigilance, to paraphrase one of our founding fathers.
<p>Promoted by the Corporations Committee of the Ohio State Bar Association,
<br>composed of corporate attorneys from across the state, H.B. 78 is the
first
<br>major revision of Ohio's corporate code since 1955. At the very least,
such a
<br>bill should have been voted on only after significant public debate
from
<br>diverse groups and individuals across the state concerned about
<br>environmental, health, farm, labor, consumer, and citizen democracy
issues.
<br>Better still would have been these same groups and individuals writing
the
<br>bill in the first place.
<p>Many of the H.B 78’s provisions came from the State of Delaware. Like
<br>desperadoes of old who used to run south of the border to escape prosecution,
<br>Delaware has been for decades the safe refuge for corporations seeking
the
<br>absolute lowest level of accountability to citizens and public officials.
<p>For several generations leading up to the 1930’s, US judges, laws and
<br>regulatory agencies had granted expansive rights and powers to corporations.
<br>But a big problem remained for corporate agents. Many state corporation
laws,
<br>constitutional amendments and legal precedents which citizens over
decades
<br>had used to define corporations were still on the books. State laws
and state
<br>constitutions like those in Ohio still extended to citizens and their
elected
<br>officials legal rights to set criteria for corporate existence, to
grant and
<br>revoke charters, to hold managers, directors and stockholders liable
and
<br>accountable for their corporations’ abuses, to safeguard minority
<br>stockholders and to govern the internal structure of corporations.
<p>“It’s a trend,” says Richard Grossman of the Program on Corporations,
Law and
<br>Democracy. “The American Bar Association’s corporate attorneys
target state
<br>legislatures. They call it ‘modernizing,’ but they’re writing significant
<br>changes in the law, and they keep doing this in state after state.
It just
<br>happened to be Ohio’s turn.”
<p>By the time a few environmental, labor and consumer organizations around
the
<br>state learned about this stealth legislation, it had passed the Ohio
House of
<br>Representatives 94-1 and had three hearings before the Senate Judiciary
<br>Committee. The bill was labeled by corporate attorneys and other promoters
as
<br>simple “housekeeping” and “updating antiquated laws.” The bill’s chief
<br>proponent in the House called the legislation, “a straightforward but
dull
<br>piece of legislation... not likely to generate widespread interest
in the
<br>corridors of the House and Senate but is offered for the benefit of
Ohio’s
<br>strong corporate community.”
<p>Many legislators in the Ohio House and Senate admitted they didn’t know
the
<br>bill’s contents but voted for it anyway. So much for representative
<br>government.
<p>When inquiring about testifying on the bill at the fourth and final
public
<br>hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, I was asked if I was
a
<br>corporate attorney. Greg Finnerty, legislative counsel for the Ohio
State Bar
<br>Association said publicly, “It’s not the most interesting topic
in the
<br>world...
<p>It’s only of interest to those engaging in corporate interests. I can’t
<br>believe anyone cares.” Apparently only corporate attorneys, not ordinary
<br>people or citizen organizations, should be interested in whether corporations
<br>should be even granted greater powers to define themselves.
<p>With one minor change, the Judiciary Committee voted the bill out of
<br>Committee unanimously. The following week, the bill passed the full
State
<br>Senate 28-5.
<p>The corporate media did not serve the public well on this issue -- or
maybe
<br>it did its job all too well. No major newspaper or electronic media
outlet in
<br>the state even bothered to report the bill’s basic contents. Alas,
only a few
<br>community newspapers were interested.
<p>The Ohio Committee on Corporations, Law and Democracy, an American
Friends
<br>Service Committee-sponsored group of citizens statewide concerned about
the
<br>illegitimate authority of corporations to govern, and the dangers this
poses
<br>to democracy, mobilized against the bill at the last minute.
The Ohio Sierra
<br>Club and the United Steelworkers of America in Ohio came out against
the
<br>bill. In addition, the Ohio AFL-CIO sent a letter to every State Senator
<br>calling for further investigation into the bill before a vote.
<p>At a time when seemingly everything is being “privatized” or “corporatized”
<br>in our society -- from health care, to prisons, education, social services,
<br>ideas, cultural values, agriculture, media, and elections -- giving
up
<br>citizen authority over corporations deserves timely public information
and
<br>debate. Unfortunately, neither our elected representatives nor the
mainstream
<br>press felt that this bill was important enough to seriously examine
and
<br>question. And unfortunately, a critical mass of Ohio’s people were
not
<br>organized well enough to know this bill was in the pipeline, able to
resist
<br>it once introduced, or force our elected representatives to amend it
in ways
<br>that would have strengthened citizen authority over corporations.
<p>HB 78 was a “Wrong Turn in Ohio” (WTO) for those striving to achieve
<br>democratic control over corporations. It represents a victory this
year for
<br>the ABA corporate road show and for strengthening corporate power in
the U.S.
<p>While important follow-up work to the Seattle World Trade Organization
<br>meetings and actions must be done, the same goes for our own “WTO.”
Ohioans
<br>and, in fact, citizens in every state face a daunting, yet exciting,
<br>challenge ahead to understand and reverse the constitutional doctrines
and
<br>laws in our states and at the federal level passed or constructed to
insulate
<br>corporations from meaningful democratic control.
<p>Activists must begin solid ground work now in preparation for the ABA
<br>corporate road show visiting their state and for other potential wrong
turns
<br>off the path to true citizen authority over corporations and their
assaults
<br>on democracy.</html>