Tobacco News
A surprise bid by the City-County Council president to pass a stronger smoking cigarettes ban covering bars and bowling alleys -- in the waning days of the Republican majority -- has caught two key groups off guard.Democrats had been making plans to push for an even stronger measure after they take control of the council Jan. 1. No matter who's in charge, their votes are vital for passage of an expanded smoking cigarettes ban in any form, since many Republicans are opposed.And anti-smoking cigarettes advocates called the move by Republicans -- with backing from Mayor Greg Ballard --...
Tobacco is all farmer Daniel Johnson knows; he's been growing it for 28 years.He uses a cigarettes online harvester to launch his leaves into a hallowed out school bus.He jokes that school buses are the cheapest form of transportation known to man.But even if Johnson's named Georgia Farmer of the Year a third time, it won't be enough to save his crop from one of the driest harvest seasons in decades. "You can't compete with what the good Lord's gonna send ya," Johnson said. "I don't think we've ever had this much heat and drought at the same time. In the same season."Johnson walked me...
Smoking’s toll on the health and pocketbooks of Hoosiers and Indiana businesses was the focus of the Boone County Healthy Coalition’s monthly session, at Witham Memorial Hospital.“A study of health care providers in Boone showed that discount cigarettes use was a major concern for health in this county,” said Richard Stroup, coordinator of both the BCHC and Tobacco Free Boone County.“Indiana has had an overall great success rate in bringing the rate of smoking cigarettes down,” Stroup said.More than 21 percent of Indiana adults smoke, according to Tobacco Free Indiana, but that...
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Forty-seven years have passed since the surgeon general first reported that smoking cigarettes causes lung cancer. Since that time, cigarettes use has greatly declined in Montana and across the nation. Much of this decline is attributed to tobacco-related policy implemented by federal and state governments.Evidence-based policies that decrease the number of youth who start using cheap cigarettes and increase the number of adults who quit using tobacco include: increasing the price of all tobacco products; eliminating exposure to secondhand smoke; and funding comprehensive tobacco-use...
It’s big cheap smokes vs. little cigarettes in the effort to smoke cigarettes out new revenue for the Texas budget.
Large cheap cigarettes companies, which fork over half a billion dollars to the state every year as part of a 1998 lawsuit settlement, want small cigarette manufacturers to pay their share. They’re backing a measure on life support in the Texas House that would tax the small manufacturers to raise tens of millions of dollars per biennium — money lawmakers acknowledge would come in more than handy as they slash health care funding to meet a massive budget shortfall.
But the small cheap cigarettes companies say they’ve been down this road before, in Texas and other states, and that it’s merely an effort by big cigarettes to stub out the competition. They weren’t a part of the Texas cheap cigarettes lawsuit because they weren’t engaging in the same misleading practices big manufacturers were accused of, they say, and they shouldn’t be subject to their own personal tax.
The country’s four largest cheap cigarettes companies, accused of suppressing years of evidence about the dangers associated with smoking cigarettes, settled a lawsuit with then-Attorney General Dan Morales in 1998, agreeing to pay Texas more than $17 billion over 25 years — roughly $3 billion of it for public health and smoking cigarettes prevention funds. Smaller cigarette companies, which at that time made up just a sliver of the industry, were not included in the arrangement.
Some lawmakers suggest that they should be, and say the only way to even the score — and hold them accountable for the health problems their buy cigarettes produce — is to further tax them. State Rep. John Zerwas, R-Simonton, said the small manufacturer fee he and Rep. Mark Shelton, R-Fort Worth, have proposed would raise an estimated $50 million over the next two years, a drop in the bucket compared to the multibillion-dollar budget shortfall, but enough to fund desperately needed state services.
“Right now, we’re giving [small manufacturers] a competitive advantage,” Zerwas said. “My opinion is, we should be getting it from all of them.”
The country’s largest cigarette manufacturers agree, and are largely behind the effort. David Sutton, a spokesman for Phillip Morris USA, said that when cigarettes companies signed a settlement with the state of Texas, the small manufacturers were “almost nonexistent.” Now, he said, they make up nearly 10 percent of the market — and ought to be paying Texas accordingly.
“The primary objective of the agreement was to provide a revenue stream to Texas from cigarette manufacturers, to reimburse the state for health care costs related to smoking cigarettes,” Sutton said. “What we’re talking about here is closing a gap, a loophole, in that system.”
Representatives for small cigarettes manufacturers — which claim to make up 5 to 7 percent of the U.S. market, not big cigarettes’s suggested 10 — say there’s no loophole: Unlike big cigarettes, the attorney general’s office never went after them, and they never made a decision to settle. They argue that establishing a special tax or fee that applies specifically to small cigarettes manufacturers is unfair, and maybe even unconstitutional.
“If we’re going to talk about money, let’s jack the tax rate up for everyone,” said Ron Hinkle, who lobbies on behalf of several small cigarettes manufacturers through the Small cigarettes Coalition. “We’re for fair taxation.”
The coalition argues a new tax would put small manufacturers out of business altogether, curbing revenue to the state via the existing cigarette tax. And Hinkle said that despite what big cigarettes companies say, the settlement wasn’t about paying for health care costs — it was about paying for wrongdoing.
“We didn’t commit the same kinds of acts that big cigarettes did, lying about ingredients and advertising to children,” Hinkle said. “We’re not going to pay a settlement fee if we didn’t settle.”
Zerwas said that at the end of the day, the debate is really an internal cigarettes industry fight. But he said it’s one the state could stand to benefit from. Still, he too has heard there could be some legal issues with specifically taxing one type of manufacturer. And if his measure doesn’t pass out of committee this week, he said, it’s probably dead. By statute, new revenue bills must start in the House.
If lawmakers don’t act, Phillip Morris’ Sutton said, they’re effectively providing a state-sanctioned subsidy for a certain group of cigarette manufacturers. “Ultimately, the person you’re really harming is the Texas taxpayer,” he said.
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