Source: San Francisco Chronicle And Boston Globe Contact: and ELLEN GOODMAN Big Tobacco Isn't Done Yet Boston NOW THEN, before we go rummaging around for the devils in the details, a moment of appreciation for the deal itself. Until this summer, the cigarette manufacturers had transformed nearly every antismoking victoryfrom a ban on TV ads to warning labels into tobacco profit Year after year, a phalanx of straightfaced executives insisted that smoking didn't cause cancer, cigarettes weren't addictive and Joe Camel was a cartoon for grown~ups. Finally the balance was shifted by the sights, sounds and (law) suits of change. The sight of tobacco executives Iying to Congress, the sound of whistleblowers and FDA regulators, the suits by smokers and finally by states looking for Medicaid reimbursement of smokingrelated illnesses. As for the deal itself? It has some star items on the health community's wish list. In return for protection from potentially ruinous lawsuits, the industry admit that nicotine is an addictive health hazard, accepts a ban on the most obnoxious advertising to kids and forks over $368 billion over 25 years to compensate for damages. When all is said and done, when the president and Congress and the health community weigh in, any agreement has to be judged by whether, in the end, there will be fewer new smokers, especially among children. Right now, Wall Street is betting on the survival of smoking. When you deal with Big Tobacco, Richard Daynard of the Tobacco Products Liability Project warns, "You have to assume that every suggestion they make, however innocuous, has a fishhook in it" So we move on to the devils in the details: Devil One: The FDA Handcuffs. The agreement limits the FDA's ability to regulate nicotine levels If we really want to deal with the most lethal drug, we need to regulate how much nicotine and assorted carcinogens are in a cigarette. Devil Two: Freedom from Classaction Suits. In the future, anyone who wants to take on tobacco is on his or her own. This makes it more expensive for smokers to sue and easier for tobacco companies to survive. Devil Three: Taxpayers Foot the Bill. The money the drug dealers must pay is tax deductible. that means we all share the bill for damages. Devil Four: Nearsighted LookBack Procedures". In theory, tobacco companies now have an incentive to cut down the number of underage smokers. The deal builds in a "look back" at the numbers. Either the percentage of young smokers decreases or the companies pay a penalty. But alas, this penalty has a devilish feature: There's a cap on it. It may be more profitable to pay the fine and keep hooking the customers. Devil Five: The Devil and the Deep Blue Overseas Market. There is nothing in this global agreement that prevents American tobacco companies from making up profits by addicting women and children in Asia and Eastern Europe. For the health community, the $368 billion question is whether these tradeoffs are better than what antismoking forces could win in court. Many lifers in the antismoking movement feel torn. Greg Connolly figures that the package might reduce smoking by as much as 20 percent. That's the good news. But it will keep the companies ~ business for the long run. Bad news. The postscript to the pact is going to be long and raucous. Before this new deal is a done deal, we've got to dance with the devils. Boston Globe