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More Barriers for Smoking Harm Reduction

Friday, December 16th, 2011

best quality marengo cigarettesWe were disappointed to learn that the Institute of Medicine (IOM) has taken an unfavorable stance toward modified risk tobacco products (MRTPs), advising the FDA to set high hurdles for the manufacturers of such products before they can market them as less harmful alternatives to cheap Marengo cigarettes.

The IOM report released yesterday concluded that MRTPs, which include a variety of smokeless tobacco products and clean nicotine delivery systems (such as e-cigarettes), should not be marketed as less harmful until researchers manage to accumulate a wide range of favorable evidence regarding their composition, efficacy, addictive potential, effects on health of both smokers and the public in general, and perceptions of their risks and benefits. Furthermore, tobacco companies would not be allowed to conduct the research themselves; independent third parties would be required to undertake such studies.

Yet as ACSH friend and Executive Director of Smokefree Pennsylvania Bill Godshall points out, the IOM report ignored decades of studies by credible third parties showing smokeless products to be safer than cigarettes. As we at ACSH are well aware, the relatively high rate of smokeless tobacco use (snus) among men in Sweden has been matched with the lowest rate of cigarette smoking and smoking-related disease and death of all European countries. (Snus, unfortunately, is illegal in every EU country, excepting Sweden). Snus is neither chewed nor spit — it comes as finely milled tobacco contained in small sachets and inserted between the lip and the gum.

“The new IOM report is terrible for public health,” says Godshall. “It effectively urges the FDA to protect deadly cigarettes from market competition by far less hazardous smoke-free alternatives. Smokers need to know about these alternatives. But this IOM committee obviously disagrees.”

ACSH’s Dr. Gilbert Ross points out that, while the obstacles the IOM has suggested would appear to punish the tobacco industry, it is smokers who will actually suffer if these recommendations are heeded. “They won’t have access to the simple truth,” says Dr. Ross. “Smokeless products have about one-hundredth the risk that cigarettes do.”

As the FDA prepares to make a decision, ACSH’s Dr. Elizabeth Whelan implores the agency not to ignore the data on snus from Sweden, and to contrast that success story with the spectacular failure of currently approved cessation aids. “The FDA should be creative and flexible, out of consideration for the 45 million smokers and the 400,000+ among them who die from smoking each year,” she urged.

Fewer Cigarette Smokers in the United States

Monday, December 5th, 2011

buy esse cigarette onlineThere may be fewer cigarette smokers in the United States, and new tobacco product entries into the marketplace, but that doesn’t mean Lorillard Inc. is shifting its cigarette-only strategy.

The Wall Street Journal wrote last week that although both Altria and Reynolds American have responded to less cigarette smokers with new product entries, such as smokeless, Lorillard is “betting it can buck the trend.”

That strategy, notes the Journal, is so far paying off: “Cigarette shipments at the No. 3 U.S. tobacco company are up for the second year in a row, and revenue rose 9.1% to $4.85 billion in the 2011 nine months. Volume, meanwhile, rose 7.4% in the period, while it sank roughly 5% at both Altria and Reynolds. Lorillard’s overall share of the U.S. cigarette market is up to 14% from 11% in 2008. …The performance has shown up in Lorillard’s stock price, which is up 37% this year.”

One of Murray Kessler’s first decisions as the new CEO of Lorillard (he took over in September 2010) was to drop plans for a smokeless product at the company. The newspaper notes that he said it could be decades before smokeless products surpass cigarettes.

However, one of Lorillard’s biggest challenges may not be coming from new product innovations — the FDA is considering whether to ban menthol cigarettes as part of its new authority of the manufacturing and retail marketing of tobacco products. About 90% of Lorillard’s sales are generated from menthol cigarettes, notably the Newport brand. The menthol category accounts for 30% of U.S. cigarette sales, writes the Journal.

The Journal notes that in coming weeks, FDA is expected to publish results of a scientific peer review on the health effects of menthol cigarettes.

According to Kessler, banning the $25-billion menthol cigarette industry would eliminate billions of dollars in U.S. tax receipts, jeopardize thousands of jobs and create a dangerous black market. “You would create havoc the likes of which this country hasn’t seen since Prohibition,” he told the newspaper.

Meanwhile, David Adelman, a tobacco analyst at Morgan Stanley, told the Journal that Newport smokers are more urban and less likely to switch to a smokeless product. “It’s pretty unacceptable to spit walking down Fifth Avenue,” he observed.

Jessamine High Schools Target Underage Smokers

Monday, November 7th, 2011

best quality cigarettes onlineStudents younger than 18 who bring tobacco to East or West Jessamine high schools in Nicholasville can find themselves paying a steep price.

School resource officers at the two Jessamine County high schools now issue citations to underage students if they are caught with cigarettes or tobacco products on school property. The tickets are referred to Jessamine County Juvenile Court, where students can face fines of as much as $150 for violations, Jessamine Superintendent Lu Young said.

Citations are issued to enforce Kentucky state law that prohibits possession of tobacco products by anyone younger than 18. Fines are paid to the court and don’t go to the school system, Young said.

Students 18 and older can’t be ticketed for tobacco violations, but they can receive administrative punishment from the school system, Young said.

East Jessamine High began issuing tickets to tobacco violators at the start of the previous school year, and West Jessamine High started last month. District officials said both schools have seen a sharp drop in cases of students bringing tobacco on campus.

Before the policy went into effect, East Jessamine had 120 incidents of students smoking in 2008-09 and 148 in 2009-10, Principal Janet Granada said.

“Last year, we only had 39,” Granada said. “Once the word spreads that there’s a fine involved, it seems to lessen smoking greatly.”

Young says the intent is to reduce student smoking, not punish students. “We’re not about fining kids or busting kids and that sort of thing,” she said. “But these deterrents are there for a reason.

“And if it can become the ticket that moves a kid toward smoking cessation, then that’s a win for us.”

Brad Hughes, a spokesman for the Kentucky School Boards Association, said other Kentucky school districts might be taking such steps to combat smoking, but he hasn’t heard of any. State Education Department spokeswoman Lisa Gross also said this is the first she has heard of school officers ticketing underage students for having tobacco on school property.

Federal law generally prohibits tobacco in any building used for educational purposes but doesn’t cover outdoor smoking on school property.

Many of Kentucky’s 174 public school districts, including Jessamine County, have adopted tobacco-free policies on their campuses. Fayette County Public Schools prohibit cigarettes and tobacco products in buildings, on grounds, in school-owned vehicles and on field trips.

Presumably, however, any public school district could adopt a court-based approach like the one at East and West Jessamine.

The Jessamine County effort is the brainchild of Billy King, a school resource officer at East Jessamine High. School resource officers in the Jessamine County system are official members of the Nicholasville police.

“We recognized we had a problem with minors using tobacco,” King said. “We talked with faculty members and also with the court system, and we decided that I would make it a rule that if students were caught in possession of tobacco on campus, they would receive citations.

“I felt that it would prevent them from bringing tobacco to school if they knew they could get a fine. But I also knew that they probably didn’t think it would happen. Police generally don’t cite juveniles for tobacco possession, even though the law has been on the books forever.”

King said he first posted signs around the school warning that citations would be issued to any minors who were caught with tobacco. After waiting a few weeks for students to get the picture, he started issuing tickets.

“The word got around pretty quickly that the court system was putting some pretty big penalties on the violators,” he said.

Young said she didn’t know exactly how many students have been fined, but that the number is relatively small.

“They only had to fine a couple of students at East High before the kids were saying, ‘Forget it,’” she said. “Now, they’re applying the same thing at West High too, and apparently it’s gotten some quick reaction there as well.”

Asked whether parents end up paying the fines, Young said that many students now have part-time jobs and could pay the fines themselves. Individual families would decide how they want to handle it, she said.

King said he understands that the court has required students, not parents, to pay the fines. He said, however, that fines are not imposed in every case.

Young said the school district is trying to support the effort with smoking-cessation classes for students who want help.

“The kids who don’t smoke say they’re really annoyed when they have to use bathrooms that smell like smoke,” she said. “This is another weapon to try and cut out smoking in the high schools. I’m hoping it’s going to be successful.”

Cigarette Maker Hits Department of Finance

Friday, September 16th, 2011

cheapest davidoff cigaretteA cigarette manufacturer criticized the Department of Finance for pushing for a uniform excise tax system on alcohol and Davidoff cigarette products.

Associated Anglo-American Tobacco Corp. Vice-president Blake Clinton Dy explained that a uniform excise tax rate will push prices of its tobacco products to record highs, resulting in markedly lower sales and even lower revenue collections for the government.

For instance, he said that the current P2.72 excise tax on low priced brands will increase to P30 – a hike in excise tax rate by more than 1,000 percent.

“Such a significant excise tax increase can push up retail prices of our cigarettes by more than 200%. This will drive away our consumers and it will no longer be economically viable for us small manufacturers,” Dy said. “As one of the smallest manufacturers, it will be very difficult for us to compete with importers and multinational companies in the industry which will be the only ones left standing under the DoF proposal.”

If this happens, he said “we may contemplate shutting down our business, resulting in the layoff of roughly four hundred of our employees.”

Tobacco Taxes to Inflation, Tañada

Monday, July 11th, 2011

best classic cigarettes onlineDeputy House Speaker Lorenzo ‘Erin’ R. Tañada III cautioned against the passage of an “incomplete measure” on tobacco and Classic cigarettes tax reform that would only lift price classification freeze because such taxes also need to be indexed to inflation.

Indexing to inflation tobacco taxes simply means that when prices of common commodities, such as food, go up, then so will taxes on tobacco products increase.

Tañada explained that without indexation, sin taxes will eventually be eroded by inflation while tobacco products would be made affordable, thereby defeating the very purpose of taxing cigarettes to discourage smoking.

“The need to reform the current sin tax law and to simplify the administration of tobacco taxes is urgent, but we also need to ensure that the reforms are comprehensive,” Tañada said.

“The removal of the price classification freeze is definitely a big step toward correcting the flaws in the sin tax law — and this has cost the government billions worth of revenues in the past years. But tobacco taxes should also be indexed to inflation so that collections can keep pace with the rise of cigarette prices,” he pointed out.

He explained that lifting the price classification freeze only corrects a flaw in the current sin tax law, which assigned 2011 as the last year for raising tobacco taxes and classifying cigarettes for tax purposes based on their 1996 prices.

Albany County Proposes Ban of Cigarettes in Pharmacies

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

cheap chesterfield cigarettesIt’s a push in Albany County to keep tobacco products and Chesterfield cigarettes out of pharmacies and out of any retailer with a pharmacy inside, including grocery stores. A public hearing was held Tuesday night over the proposed law, with those in support saying tobacco should not be in a pharmacy, a place that is usually associated with good health.

“It’s a sin to sell tobacco in pharmacies,” says Debbie Keefe.

Keefe was a smoker for 27 years. By the time she decided to quit, she was smoking two and a half packs of cigarettes a day.

She now helps others try and kick the habit, but is troubled by the fact that cigarettes are still sold in pharmacies, where nicotine patches and gum are also sold.

“I’m sending them right back into the places where they buy their cigarettes,” says Keefe.

That’s the main arguing point for people in support of banning them from pharmacies in Albany county.

Some have already made the plunge, Marra’s Pharmacy in Cohoes hasn’t sold tobacco in more than 20 years.

“Although tobacco products are legal, they do carry some health risks,” says owner John McDonald III. “And those are some things we took into consideration when we banned them.”

But there were two sides to the story during a public hearing in Albany, those who are questioning the proposed law say while they do not support tobacco use, it is a legal product and cannot be banned everywhere, including grocery stores with pharmacies inside.

“They’re trying to be responsible retailers,” says Michael Rosen of the Food Industry Alliance. “They’ve made it clear that the pharmacists don’t handle tobacco and tobacco is not sold anywhere near the pharmacy. We think it’s a matter of choice for adult consumers.”

“Where do you draw the line where government doesn’t step and regulates everything in the county?” adds Albany County legislator Christine Benedict. “There’s a fine line.”

However, the sponsor of the bill, Wanda Willingham, says the bottomline is simple.

“What is so different with tobacco?” she questions. “What makes tobacco so holy and so alright for people to be able to buy in a pharmacy?”

Willingham says this is going to continue to be an open conversation., with room for some of the wording in the proposal to change. So far, no deadline has been set.

Dallas Deputies Seek Funding for Tobacco Legislation

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

cheap marlboro cigarettesDallas County sheriff’s deputies say too many stores sell tobacco and Marlboro to underage teenagers. Last year, 20 percent of retailers failed inspections by deputies, and 3 percent of them kept selling to minors, even after they were warned.

Deputies said they hope more state funding will help keep tobacco out of the hands of minors. The department will apply for another $90,000 state grant for another year of tobacco enforcement starting in September.

The grant money would cover the salary and overtime for one deputy, as well as costs of supplies and money to buy tobacco products during undercover operations. The Commissioners Court approved the grant application.

“It’s a huge problem with the youth in Dallas County,” Capt. Danny Shields said. “A lot of it is intentional. A whole lot of it is unintentional.”

Two deputies from the Tobacco Task Force educate, inspect and conduct undercover sting operations in stores that sell cigarettes and tobacco products.

Detective Dan Andrews told a Fuel City manager to complete the rest of the paperwork, but otherwise, the Dallas convenience store got a passing grade for posting the proper signage that warns of a potential $500 fine if the store sells tobacco to someone younger than 18.

“We don’t want to pay a fine,” store owner John Benda said. “I don’t mind the enforcement, and I encourage the rules that they have to enforce because it encourages my employees to be more attentive.”

Deputies have given out 30 tickets so far this year to other store owners and clerks for violating the tobacco laws.

Teenagers who try cigarettes and other tobacco products are more likely to turn to illegal drugs, deputies said.