Hi Friend --
We are standing outside New York’s City Hall as we celebrate
an incredible victory: today, the New York City Council
adopted a powerful package of legislation which calls for the
US to join the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW)
and includes legal obligations for the city in terms of divestment,
education, and policy on nuclear weapons!
The adoption of this legislation is a major milestone,
achieved due to the advocacy of the New York Campaign to Abolish
Nuclear Weapons (NYCAN) and its allies, who have campaigned
tirelessly for its introduction and passage. Among the key components
of the legislation:
• Resolution 976 calls upon the NYC
Comptroller to instruct the $266 billion pension funds of public
employees to divest from companies involved in the production and
maintenance of nuclear weapons. This stands to impact
approximately $475 million USD of public investments.
• Introduction 1621 establishes an advisory
committee to educate the public and recommend policy on issues
relating to nuclear disarmament.
• The resolution also reaffirms
NYC as a Nuclear-Weapons-Free Zone, supporting earlier City Council
resolutions that prohibited the production, transport, storage,
placement, and deployment of nuclear weapons within NYC.
• Finally, it also joins NYC to
the ICAN Cities Appeal, calling on the United States to join
the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
New York City has a long and complicated history with nuclear
weapons – it was home to the Manhattan Project, where nuclear weapons
began, but also home to the largest disarmament rally in the US, where
nuclear weapons have been strongly resisted. New Yorkers like us are
deeply committed to saving our city’s legacy and advancing global
nuclear disarmament.
With this resolution, we are proud for New York to join other
major cities around the world calling on their
government to pursue nuclear disarmament by joining the TPNW. And we
believe that this legislation will have a meaningful financial impact
on the companies involved in producing and maintaining these weapons
of mass destruction, as well as significant educational impact on
generations of New Yorkers yet to come.
So today, we
celebrate. Will you start spreading the
news?
Thank you,
Seth Shelden United Nations Liaison, ICAN (and New York
native)
&
Kathleen Sullivan Director,
Hibakusha Stories (and long-time NYC resident)
It’s time to end nuclear
weapons.
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