Pubdate: Thu, 02 Apr 1998 Source: Washington Post Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Ceci Connolly and Saundra Torry Washington Post Staff Writers TOBACCO BILL CLEARS SENATE PANEL $516 Billion Measure Hikes Fees, Restricts Ads, Limits Liability The Senate Commerce Committee voted overwhelmingly yesterday to establish the nation's first comprehensive tobacco policy, a tough measure that aims to reduce youth smoking through steep cigarette price increases and harsh restrictions sales and marketing. The 19 to 1 vote represented a major step forward in the long, slow march to resolve an onslaught of lawsuits against the embattled industry and tackle the nation's leading cause of preventable death. It was the first action by Congress since the opposing factions in America's fight over tobacco signed an unprecedented agreement last June. "This is the crossing of the threshold," said David A. Kessler, the former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration who first proposed regulating cigarettes like a drug. Committee Chairman John McCain (R-Ariz.) and his colleagues have broken the hold the industry has had over the Congress." Still, the real fight has yet to begin. Although the legislation grants some of the legal protections the industry sought, company executives are threatening to fight the plan in court if it is not amended to their liking. Saying the bill "contains a number of illegal, punitive and fundamentally unsound provisions," tobacco lobbyist J. Phil Carlton predicted McCain's bill could revitalize the black market or even bankrupt some companies. Tobacco company stock prices dropped at the end of the day yesterday. Tobacco industry opponents complain the bill does not go far enough in penalizing the industry or improving public health. They hope to abolish all civil liability protections and raise the price tag of the legislation. Indeed, no one spoke well of the document, not even its primary author. "It is by no means perfect," said McCain who spent the past several weeks horse-trading with his colleagues, White House officials and anti-smoking advocates. "However, our task was to craft a bill that reflects the best possible consensus." In broad terms, the 400-page bill would impose a fee of $1.10 on every pack of cigarettes over the next five years, restrict tobacco advertising and marketing, limit the industry's civil liability to $6.5 billion a year and exact additional payments from the companies if teenage smoking does not decline by 60 percent in 10 years. The committee estimates that it will cost the industry about $516 billion over the next 25 years. Committee members acknowledged that several of the most contentious issues would probably have to be revisited, such as precisely how much legal relief to give the industry, whether the proposed advertising restrictions are constitutional and how much to pay lawyers who filed lawsuits against the industry. For instance, White House officials say they plan to fight on the Senate floor for stronger penalties against companies that fail to significantly reduce teenage smoking. In yesterday's day-long session, McCain beat back virtually every noteworthy amendment, convincing committee members it was better to send a flawed version to the full Senate than no version. Known for his independent streak, McCain showed no favoritism in his no-amendments strategy. Sen. John F. Kerry, (D-Mass.) failed to raise the price increase to $1.50 per pack, while Sen. Wendell H. Ford (D-Ky.) lost his bid to reduce the annual payments by tobacco companies. An amendment eliminating the $6.5 billion liability cap failed as did several attempts to grant similar protections to other industries, such as biomedical companies. And still to be settled is a dispute over whether to impose fees, require cigarette warning labels and take other measures to reduce youth smoking overseas. The fiercest debate in a cordial day of haggling came over the question of whether Congress needs to bargain with cigarette makers to extract advertising concessions and back penalties if teenage smoking is not brought down to acceptable levels. "I have no sympathy for the people that sell these products," said Sen. John Breaux (D-La.), who said his mother and father-in-law died of lung cancer. However, Breaux said he believes the ad restrictions are unconstitutional and can only be gotten through deal-making with the industry. "We should not push them so far we lose these very important portions of the bill." But experts on health issues such as Kessler and Matthew Myers, head of the National Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, argue the restrictions can be written narrowly enough to withstand legal challenges. Ford, a tobacco ally who filed 47 amendments, warned that even though the bill contains $28.5 billion to help ease the impact on tobacco farmers, he was not satisfied. "If my farmers are not taken care of, this carpet is going to turn red," he said. Sen. John D. Ashcroft (R-Mo.), the lone dissenter, said he objected to the legal protections the bill would grant cigarette companies. If the day did not resolve many of the thornier policy questions, it did provide a likely road map for the coming battle. Elena Kagan, the White House deputy domestic policy adviser, said the committee included a "spectrum" of opinions similar to the entire Senate. "The fight in the larger Senate may echo this." Not surprisingly, the real battles will come over money -- how much to pay lawyers, how much to charge companies and most importantly, how to divvy the tobacco dividend. McCain intentionally left open the question of how to spend the billions that could come pouring in from higher cigarette prices and company penalties. "I fear that if we get into a food fight over distribution of funds" it might derail the measure and should instead be left for President Clinton and a handful of congressional leaders to work out. But that did not stop the lawmakers from devoting much time and energy to giving speeches on what they want to do with the money. Some wanted money set aside for veterans; others worried about protecting miners afflicted with black lung disease. Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete V. Domenici has said he wants the money given to Medicare. "I guess the chairman wouldn't go for a flood control project?," joked Breaux. In the end, the committee approved a nonbinding amendment that listed its favorite recipients, including child-care programs, smoking cessation efforts and cancer research. McCain's bill now goes to the full Senate, although it is possible congressional leaders will continue to negotiate in private and offer a revised version in coming weeks. The House, meanwhile, has been unable to write tobacco legislation and may simply wait for the Senate bill. "Chances are better today than they were yesterday because of legislation coming out of the Commerce Committee," said Florida Sen. Connie Mack, a member of the GOP leadership. "Given how intricate this legislation is and how politically difficult it is, we still have a major task ahead of us."