|
By Rebecca V. Snowden
President Barack Obama says he will sign a sweeping tobacco bill that will
drastically change how tobacco is regulated and marketed in the United
States.
The legislation, known as "The Family Smoking Prevention and
Tobacco Control Act," will grant the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
power over the sale, production, and marketing of cigarettes and other
tobacco products. It also includes provisions specifically designed to
decrease youth smoking.
The Senate passed the bill Thursday by a vote of 79 to 17. The House of
Representatives, which had already approved a slightly different version of the
bill, approved the Senate's version Friday, by a vote of 307-97. That cleared the
way for the bill to go to the President.
John R. Seffrin, PhD, Chief Executive Officer of the American
Cancer Society and its advocacy affiliate, the American Cancer Society
Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN), declared Thursday "a historic day for
public health."
"Tobacco is virtually the only consumable product not
regulated in the U.S. and the tobacco industry exploits this undeserved
free pass by spending nearly $40 million every day aggressively
marketing its products, especially to children, with enticing candy-
and fruit-flavored cigarettes. The legislation would stop the marketing
of tobacco products to children, require tobacco companies to list the
poisons in their products and mandate larger and more effective warning
labels on tobacco product packaging," he said in a statement following the
Senate vote.
The bill would require cigarette makers disclose product
ingredients to the FDA and will prohibit them from using misleading
labels such as "low tar" or "light" on cigarette packages. It also
imposes bans on candy- and fruit-flavored cigarettes, which often
appeal to kids and teenagers. The bill would also hold tobacco
companies to marketing restrictions – for example, they will no longer
be allowed to advertise near schools or sponsor entertainment and
sporting events.
“Every day, 3,500 children pick up their first cigarette and
1,000 become addicted smokers. This legislation has the power to help
so many more people celebrate birthdays because they will never get
addicted to tobacco in the first place,” said Seffrin.
In comments to reporters Friday, President Obama praised Congress
for passing the bill.
"I'm proud that the House and the Senate have acted swiftly and in an
overwhelmingly bipartisan fashion to pass this legislation that will protect our
kids and improve our public health," he said.
The American Cancer Society's advocacy affiliate, ACS CAN, has
been working tirelessly in support of this bill.
“The American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN),
the advocacy affiliate of the American Cancer Society, together with
more than 1,000 public health, medical, children’s, and faith-based
organizations, supports this long overdue legislation and applauds its
passage," said ACS CAN President Daniel E. Smith.
Reviewed by:
Members of the ACS
Medical Content Staff ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
|