By Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK, Feb 25 (Reuters) – AT&T has agreed to settle a lawsuit by four New York City ‌public pension funds by letting shareholders vote on whether ‌it should disclose the breakdown of its 133,000-person workforce by race, ethnicity and gender.

New ​York City Comptroller Mark Levine announced the settlement on Wednesday, eight days after the funds sued to block AT&T from soliciting shareholder proxies that would have excluded their diversity proposal from consideration at ‌its 2026 annual meeting.

AT&T, ⁠based in Dallas, did not immediately respond to a request for comment after market hours.

Hundreds of companies ⁠ask the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission each year for permission to leave shareholder proposals off ballots without fear of enforcement action, and ​have historically ​received permission about half the ​time.

The New York City Employees’ ‌Retirement System, and funds representing police, teachers and other educational employees, said AT&T’s prior opposition to their proposal followed a November policy change by the SEC letting companies claim a “reasonable basis” to exclude shareholder proposals.

“Today’s settlement is a major win for investors amid ‌ongoing attempts to undermine transparency and accountability,” ​Levine said in a statement. “AT&T shareholders ​will now have the ​responsibility to vote on our proposal that requests disclosure ‌of clear and detailed data ​to help investors ​better assess its efforts to advance equal opportunity.”

Many companies have deemphasized diversity, equity, and inclusion since U.S. President Donald Trump ​announced a crackdown on ‌such efforts one day after beginning his second White ​House term.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing ​by Chris Reese and David Gregorio)