UPS Named One Of America’s Most JUST Companies By Forbes And JUST Capital

ROBO MOD

I'm a Robot
Staff member
UPS’s Commitment to Social Responsibility Recognized On “Just 100” Rankings for the Second Consecutive Year

UPS (NYSE: UPS) announced today it was named one of America’s Most JUST Companies by Forbes and JUST Capital, for the second consecutive year. The second annual JUST 100 ranks the largest publicly traded corporations in the United States on the issues Americans care about most, including leadership and ethics, worker well-being, job creation, supporting communities, supply chain impact, customer treatment, environmental impact, and more.

The JUST Capital rankings encompass the 1,000 largest publicly-traded companies in the U.S. The rankings are based on a comprehensive survey conducted on public attitudes toward corporate behavior, involving 10,000 American respondents in 2017 and more than 72,000 over the past three years.

“We are honored to be named one of America’s most JUST companies,” said Crystal Lassiter, UPS senior director, global sustainability & environmental affairs. “At UPS, we’re committed to building for the future – from aggressive sustainability and charitable goals to helping customers pioneer sustainable solutions and giving back to the communities we serve.”

UPS recently announced new sustainability goals to reduce its absolute greenhouse gas emissions from global ground operations, add more alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicles to its fleet, and increase its reliance on renewable energy sources. In 2016, UPS employees, friends and family logged more than 2.7 million volunteer hours toward the company’s commitment to achieve 20 million volunteer hours by the end of 2020. UPS also set a new goal that in 2020 its annual total contributions will be $127 million, including humanitarian relief and community safety programs, through The UPS Foundation.

UPS also included safety and its workforce in its new goals, including a 3 percent reduction to UPS’s already low, industry-leading statistic of auto accident frequency and a 1 percent improvement for lost-time injury frequency. Nearly 10,000 UPS drivers are a member of the UPS Circle of Honor program, a distinguished class of individuals who have not had an avoidable accident in 25 years or longer.

UPS has been honored with several other distinctions this year, including:

  • Recognized as one of the “World’s Most Ethical Companies” by Ethisphere Institute for the eleventh consecutive year.
  • Chosen by CR Magazine as one of “100 Best Corporate Citizens” for the eighth consecutive year.
  • Recognized on the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index for the fifth consecutive year.
  • Named to the Civic 50 for the fourth time.
 

Xanosuke2

Active Member
And not a single employee clapped that day...oh wait they’re all working 70 hours right about now and passing out from exhaustion and fatigue...but safety and community well being is number 1!
 

TearsInRain

IE boogeyman
Right. And pretending that UPS cares about anything else helps its bottom line. Still comes across as silly to insiders.
i'm sure there is some illuminati scam at the top involving united way and charity but everyone i've met at the upper level seems to legit care and think it helps us as a business

maybe i'm wrong but i don't buy it
 

Box Ox

Well-Known Member
i'm sure there is some illuminati scam at the top involving united way and charity but everyone i've met at the upper level seems to legit care and think it helps us as a business

maybe i'm wrong but i don't buy it

I think a willingness to dangerously run drivers 70 hours a week through the same neighborhoods they pretend to care about by contributing to UW shows where their priorities are.
 
Top