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PCUSA - Social justice committee looks at wide range of topics
From
Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date
Tue, 06 Jul 2010 13:08:27 -0700
Social justice committee looks at wide range of topics
Passes measure to support U.N. Commission?s report calling for equal treatment
of women
July 6, 2010
GA219 Communication Center
by Kim Coulter
MINNEAPOLIS
A measure to ?protest the blatant disregard for the sanctity of our Lord?s name
in motion pictures and public broadcast by the entertainment industry? was
approved Monday by the 219th General Assembly Committee on Social Justice
Issues: Promotion of Social Righteousness.
The committee recommended the slightly modified overture after three hours of
debate by a vote of 41-9 with two abstentions.
The committee also approved, with modifications,
?Living Through Economic Crisis: The Church?s Witness in Troubled Times: A Social Involvement Report.?
The Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy
(ACSWP) report deals with supporting the unemployed and underemployed. The
committee recommendation calls for no more than $40,040 to be spent developing
the study between now and the 2012 Assembly. The final vote was 30-16 with
three abstentions.
Another ACSWP report on the denomination?s compensation policy, ?Neither
Poverty Nor Riches: Compensation, Equity, and the Unity of the Church,?
attracted the attention of several top General Assembly Mission Council leaders
to the committee?s discussion of salary ratios in the church.
The committee stripped from the report a recommendation that the GAMC establish
a 5-1 ratio between its highest- and lowest-paid employees ? in line with the
ratio currently in place in the Office of the General Assembly.
The report also encourages a churchwide study to look at the theology of staff
compensation at all levels of the church and recommends against excessive
compensation. The revised report was approved 45-4 with two abstentions.
The committee adopted a resolution from the Advocacy Committee for Women?s
Concerns (ACWC), which recommends that ?the Assembly direct the Stated Clerk to
send a letter to the president and Congress calling on the U.S. government to
ratify, without reservations, the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women?s
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
(CEDAW).?
The 30th anniversary of the adoption of CEDAW was celebrated in December. To
date, 186 countries have ratified the convention, committing themselves to the
standards laid out by the document calling for equal treatment of women in all
spheres of life, including education, employment, health care, and legal rights
in confronting violence.
Only eight member countries in the UN have not ratified CEDAW, including Iran,
Somalia, Sudan, and the U.S. The measure passed, 41-5 with five abstentions.
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