With a number of states contemplating anti-immigration legislation and the federal government cracking down on undocumented workers, a coalition of institutional investors with more than $145 billion under management is enlisting Corporate America to help find better solutions.

Recently, more than 60 institutional investors, including many leaders in the socially responsible investing space, penned a letter to the CEOs of 150 major companies in the U.S. asking them to speak out in support of comprehensive immigration reform policy.

"The current policy is not working for anyone ... We feel we need to open the door to a sensible discussion in this country," Heidi Soumerai, director of ESG Research for Walden Asset Management and the main contact for the letter, tells FA Green.

The coalition is hopeful that elected officials will put aside partisan politics long enough to support comprehensive immigration reform that's critical to advancing the U.S. economy and keeping the country globally competitive. It would also like to see reform include a pathway to legal status for undocumented immigrants.

The investors initially selected 100 of the largest companies and then targeted additional ones in the agriculture, technology and leisure industries because of their heavy reliance on immigrant workers, says Soumerai.

Roughly 8 million unauthorized immigrants made up 5.2% of the nation's total workforce in March 2010, estimates the Pew Hispanic Center, a project of the Pew Research Center. The percentage is much higher in construction (14%), agriculture (13%), and leisure and hospitality (10%), according to data cited in the letter.

The U.S.'s ability to attract highly skilled workers also depends on comprehensive immigration policy, note the investors. They point to a Duke University study which identified at least one immigrant founder in one-quarter of all engineering and technology companies created in the U.S. in the decade ending in 2005.  

"There really is a business case for sound immigration reform," says Susan Smith Makos, director of social responsibility for Mercy Investment Services. But it's more than just business, she and the other signatories agree.

"This is the intersection of economics and human rights," says Soumerai. Comprehensive reform must value the integrity of families and prevent immigrant workers, temporary and permanent, from being subjected to second-class employment standards, the coalition told CEOs.

Makos and Tim Brennan, treasurer and chief financial officer of the Unitarian Universalist Association, tell FA Green they're very concerned about the effect of current immigration policies on families. Deportation practices are inconsistent and insensitive, notes Makos.

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