For
Immediate Release:
July 22, 2002 |
For
More Information:
Travis Plunkett, 202-387-6121
Barbara Roper, 719-543-9468
Celia Wexler, 202-736-5745
Ed Mierzwinski, 202-546-9707
Ken McEldowney, 415-777-9648
|
While
Markets Plunge, Special Interest Groups Seek To Weaken Corporate
Reform Legislation In Closed-Door Negotiations
Public
Interest Groups Call For Quick Passage Of Corporate Reform Package
Containing All Of The Senate Bill's Key Reforms
WASHINGTON, D.C. Special interest groups, with major accounting
firms in the lead, are using behind-closed-door conference committee
negotiations to renew their attack on corporate reform legislation,
public interest groups warned Monday. A list of proposed amendments
submitted to conferees by the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and other industry
groups, as well as changes suggested by Senator Phil Gramm and
Chairman Michael Oxley strike at the heart of the bill's key reforms,
warned Consumer Federation of America, Common Cause, Consumer
Action and U.S. Public Interest Research Group.
The four public interest groups wrote to all members of the conference
committee on Monday urging them to "reject these transparent
attempts to gut the legislation's key audit reform provisions"
and to instead support quick passage of legislation with the Senate
bill's investor protections intact.
"While
the markets were plunging Friday and members of the conference
committee were using their opening statements to pledge their
support for passage of the strongest possible corporate reform
legislation, the special interest vultures were already circling,"
said Barbara Roper, director of investor protection for the Consumer
Federation of America. "The Worldcom revelations may have
scuttled the accounting firms' plans to weaken the bill on the
Senate floor, but the fact that two of the highest ranking Republicans
on the conference committee are pushing their anti-reform agenda
in conference indicates their efforts to gut the bill's key protections
are alive and well."
"It's
no accident that accounting reform legislation is being negotiated
behind closed doors," said Common Cause President Scott Harshbarger.
"Since 1995, Members of the House-Senate conference committee
working on this crucial accounting reform bill received $1.3 million
in campaign contributions from the Big Five accounting firms and
their trade group, the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (AICPA). Within the past 18 months, the Big Five and
AICPA also employed an army of 90 lobbyists, including 51 who
have previously worked in a federal agency or in a senior staff
position on Capitol Hill, and spent more than $8 million lobbying
in Washington. All that money and lobbying clout buys a lot of
secrecy. "
"Consumers
were promised sunlight by the conferees and all they've gotten
is more closed doors," said Edmund Mierzwinski, Consumer
Program Director for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group.
"This once-promising conference appears to be more business
as usual."
The groups analyzed proposed amendments submitted to conferees
by various industry groups as well as lists of suggested changes
to the bill from Senator Gramm and Chairman Michael Oxley. Focusing
on audit reform issues, they urged conferees to do the following:
Don't
adopt proposed amendments to weaken auditor independence reforms
by removing the statutory prohibition on certain non-audit services,
opening up new loopholes in auditor independence rules, gutting
the requirement for audit committee pre-approval of non-audit
services, and eliminating provisions making corporate board audit
committees directly responsible for overseeing the audit;
Don't tie the hands of the new auditor oversight board
by limiting the board to enforcing standards set by the accounting
profession it is supposed to regulate, by removing its authority
to enforce securities laws, by eliminating the requirement that
auditors test companies' compliance with internal controls designed
to prevent financial fraud, or taking other steps to scale back
the board and the Securities and Exchange Commission's regulatory
authority;
Don't shield auditors from accountability to their
victims when they are guilty of fraud by removing the provision
lengthening the statute of limitations.
Only quick House passage of legislation retaining all of the Senate
bill's key investor protections would send a "clear message
to American investors that congress and the administration are
capable of acting in a bipartisan fashion to adopt a strong package
of reforms," the groups wrote.
A copy of the letter is available for download by clicking
here (PDF).
Common
Cause is a nonprofit, nonpartisan citizen's lobbying organization
promoting open, honest and accountable government. Supported by
the dues and contributions of over 200,000 members in every state
across the nation, Common Cause represents the unified voice of
the people against corruption in government and big money special
interests.
Consumer
Action (CA) is a non-profit advocacy and education organization
that has served consumers since 1971. CA has a national reputation
for multilingual consumer education and advocacy in the fields
of credit, banking, privacy, insurance, utilities and HMOs.
Consumer
Federation of America is a non-profit association of 300 pro-consumer
groups that was founded in 1968 to advance the consumer interest
through advocacy and education.
U.S.
PIRG is the national lobby office for the state Public Interest
Research Groups. State PIRGs are non-profit, non-partisan public
interest advocacy groups.