[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 159 (Wednesday, October 28, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7580-S7583]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REGULATING TOBACCO
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, I rise today to speak about an issue that
affects the health of our children in every single State.
I ask unanimous consent that after I have completed my remarks,
Senator Blumenthal, Senator Markey, Senator Boxer, and Senator Warren
be afforded the opportunity to continue to address the same topic.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. MERKLEY. I also invite my colleagues to jump in at any point to
exchange views as well.
This issue is one that we have known about for a very long period of
time, which is that tobacco addiction destroys lives. I grew up in a
family where my mother didn't smoke and my father didn't smoke, but
they both came from large families--many brothers and sisters--and it
seemed as though every single year when I was young, one of my aunts or
one of my uncles died from smoking. They died from cancer. They died
from heart disease. They died from emphysema. This carnage was all too
apparent.
Anyone who has taken the slightest look at this issue knows that the
statistics are just unbelievable, the number of deaths and illnesses
caused, the number of years lost, the degradation of the quality of
life of individuals. For this reason, it had long been a topic here in
the Senate that nicotine--the primary acting element in tobacco--should
be considered a drug. It is a drug. It has all of these impacts. We
have a Food and Drug Administration, and the Food and Drug
Administration should be able to regulate it for the health and welfare
of our Nation.
Back in 2009, we debated just such a law here on the floor of the
Senate and across the way in the House, and that law was adopted. So we
anticipated that in short order regulations would be issued and they
would help address particularly the effort of tobacco companies to
produce new products designed to essentially produce nicotine tobacco
addicts among our children, to entice our children into smoking or
chewing and this whole new variety, this continuum of products.
Here we are years later. It is no longer 2009; it is 2015--6 years
later and we have no regulation. During that time, a great deal has
happened. Many new products have been introduced in the never-ending
quest of the tobacco companies to find what they call replacement
smokers; that is, young folks who will continue to buy their products
as their current customers die because they use their products.
So 6 years have passed and no action out of the administration. Year
after year, we have pushed, we have called as Senators, we have talked
about it on the floor, we have held meetings with the key officials,
and it has always been: We are almost there. We are working on it. We
know how important it is.
But while this process has gone along so slowly, millions more of our
children have become addicted to tobacco.
One of the main instruments the tobacco industry is using are flavors
designed to target children. We can see here on the chart particularly
flavors in the e-cigarette category. We have a whole variety. We have
coffee. We have cherry. We have apple. We have cherry bomb flavoring. I
was told today on the phone that there is a Captain Kangaroo flavor and
there is a Scooby Doo flavor. There is a gummy bear flavor. These
flavors are not designed to entice adults into becoming smokers because
the industry knows that very rarely does an individual start to use
tobacco products after the age of 21. It is the youth who experiment,
and then the nicotine, as an addictive drug, does its work and turns
them into lifetime users. That is where, of course, the money is.
I was asked in an interview today how it is that the tobacco
companies say these products are not targeted to children. I responded
very simply. It is the big lie. No one, no individual can look at the
flavors of these products and not know they are targeting our children.
So what has happened in the last few years is the e-cigarette
industry is the most successful of the products that tobacco companies
have tested. In fact, in just the last year alone, use by our high
school students has tripled. That means we now have 2 million high
school--the survey was the previous 30 days, and in the previous 30
days, 2 million of our high school students had utilized e-cigarettes.
So the tobacco campaign is working, which means they are hard at work
compromising the health and welfare of our children and leading them
down a path to suffering and death. That is unacceptable.
So we are here today--a number of us--to simply say to our own
administration, our executive branch: Get the regulations done. They
have now been forwarded from the Food and Drug Administration, from the
FDA, to the Office of Management and Budget, which does the final
review of those regulations. Get the regulations done, and make sure
they are strong regulations. Do not put in a clause that grandfathers
all the products and exempts them from regulations that have been
produced up until now. Such a grandfather clause would tear the heart
out, tear the guts out of the entire effort to regulate these killer
products. And certainly regulate the flavors. That is the key, core
strategy of addicting our children. Do not ignore that key, core
strategy.
This is something very real that this body debated and decided to do
and turn it over to the executive branch. It is way past time for the
executive branch to act. So we are asking for quick and powerful,
forceful action to stop the carnage that is ensuing from the failure of
these regulations.
Several colleagues are coming to the floor to join this conversation.
The Senator from Connecticut, Mr. Blumenthal, is planning to jump in
next, followed by Senator Markey and then Senator Warren.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, I am going to yield to Senator Markey,
if I may, and then follow him in light of the scheduling needs that he
may have, and then I will yield to Senator Warren. Thank you.
[[Page S7581]]
Mr. MARKEY. Thank you, Senator Blumenthal, and Senator Merkley, thank
you for organizing this. Thank you to Senator Warren and to everyone
who is here.
Mr. President, with Halloween just days away, I would like to share
some scary facts about nicotine. Nicotine is the main ingredient in
cigarettes and is also found in the new cigarettes, the e-cigarettes.
Four decades of scientific research have proved the following: First,
nicotine is addictive; second, nicotine affects brain development;
third, nicotine combined with tobacco is responsible for claiming
millions of lives.
These facts are true, but for years Big Tobacco willfully,
consistently, publicly, and falsely denied them. Those lies were
exposed at congressional hearings, and thanks to the tireless efforts
of anti-smoking and public health advocates, traditional cigarette
smoking has declined from 50 percent of all adults to 18 percent of all
adults in the United States. How many millions of lives have been saved
because of that?
Big Tobacco and the e-cigarette industry are like the undead.
Traditional cigarettes are being supplanted by e-cigarettes. Today e-
cigarette sales in the United States alone topped $1 billion, and e-
cigarette use is growing as fast as the students who are smoking them.
The use of e-cigarettes among middle and high school students has
skyrocketed, tripling from 2013 to 2014, accounting for upwards of 13
percent of all high school students. That is when my father began to
smoke two packs of Camels a day. My father died from smoking two packs
of Camels a day.
Nearly 2.5 million young Americans currently use e-cigarettes. Why
the explosion in youth e-cigarette smoking? It is because Big Tobacco
and the e-cigarette industry are marketing their dangerous nicotine
delivery product to children and teens.
Big Tobacco would have our young people think that e-cigarettes are a
treat, but they are a cruel trick on those children. The younger a
person is when he or she starts using products containing nicotine, the
more difficult it is to quit.
We know from years of research that flavors attract young people.
That is why Congress explicitly banned cigarettes with flavors like
cherry and bubble gum, because of their appeal to young people. So it
is very disappointing, but not surprising, that new nicotine delivery
products are available in a myriad of flavors, from cotton candy to
vanilla cupcake to Coca-Cola.
I wonder what this industry is trying to do. Flavors were outlawed
from the traditional cigarette industry. You don't have to be a
detective to figure it out because over the past decade we have made
great strides in educating children and teens about the dangers of
smoking, and now we can't allow e-cigarettes to snuff out the progress
we have made in preventing nicotine addiction and its deadly
consequences.
We need to ban the marketing of e-cigarettes to kids and teens. We
need to ban the use of fruit and candy flavoring clearly meant to
attract children. We need to ban the online sales of e-cigarettes to
keep them out of the hands of children. The dangers of e-cigarettes are
clear. Every day we wait is another day that young Americans can fall
prey to harmful products pushed by the tobacco industry.
Last year at a commerce committee hearing, when I asked several e-
cigarette company leaders to commit to ceasing the sale of these types
of flavored products, a few agreed, but the vast majority have not and
will not. Just today the e-cigarette industry trade group, the Tobacco
Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association, threatened the FDA after
posting on its Web site what the association purports is leaked draft
industry guidance under the new deeming rule, tweeting: ``The FDA needs
to know we mean business.''
The association got it partially right. The e-cigarette industry
should be put out of business.
My father smoked two packs of Camels a day. Back then it was a cool
thing to do. For decades Big Tobacco denied that there was any linkage
between smoking and cancer. My father died because of that denial of
the tobacco industry and the cooperation of the U.S. Congress.
Today electronic cigarettes are no better than the Joe Camels of the
past. Through e-cigarettes, children and teens are still getting
addicted to nicotine and putting their health and futures at grave
risk.
I urge OMB to give America's youth a real Halloween treat by
finalizing the deeming rule and stopping the sale of these candy-
flavored poisons.
Thank you, and I yield back.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, I want to thank my colleagues for
their very powerful comments, and I have a poster as well. In the
spirit of Halloween, mine uses candy. I doubt that children this
Halloween are going to receive some of these products--I hope not--when
they go door-to-door, but people looking at this poster could easily
mistake the candy for the candy-flavored cigarillos or the candy that
looks like cigarettes, appears to be tobacco products, or the spit
tobacco that is flavored with candy look-alikes.
Today the temptation is to have some fun, use some puns, but I come
here in sadness and frankly in anger--sadness that every day thousands
of people will become addicted to nicotine and suffer from diseases
that tobacco causes, whether it is cancer or smoking-related lung
problems, and also tobacco-related problems that can increase the cost
as well as the suffering in our Nation.
We are dealing here with indefensible delays in issuing a rule that
is necessary to enforce the law. Let me be clear about what is
happening. The Tobacco Control Act was passed 6 years ago. All of us
thought the provisions of that Federal law would go into effect to
protect Americans against the nicotine addiction that is peddled
relentlessly and tirelessly by the tobacco industry. We are 6 years
later in an administration that is probably the most pro-public health
and anti-tobacco abuse of any in our history, and still, 6 years later
that law is unenforced, and the reason is there are no regulations.
We are 18 months after the FDA released the rule called the deeming
rule necessary to enforce that law. Eighteen months have passed since
the FDA acted, 6 years since the law was passed in this body, and still
there is no protection for Americans.
This fight goes back years and years, and I was involved as attorney
general for the State of Connecticut in helping bring a landmark
lawsuit. I helped to lead that lawsuit as one of the States that sued
the tobacco companies for marketing to children.
Back then this poster might have been used in court, and I appeared
in court to say that the tobacco companies, despite their denials, were
marketing and pitching to children by using Joe Camel. Today the
playbook is exactly the same. The tactics have changed, but the
strategy is the same: using pitches, wrappings, and flavors to target
children--not teenagers or college kids--but younger children who are
persuaded by the model of their older siblings and friends to begin a
lifetime of addiction and disease.
They may be fooled by the candy flavors and the wrappings and the
pitches that are used, but we should not be, the FDA should not be, and
the Office of Management and Budget should not be fooled. They should
not be waiting to issue this rule. It should be issued now.
We have written to them, asking that the rule be issued. A number of
us wrote a letter to Shaun Donovan. I very simply asked the President
of the United States for no more delays. Do the rule now. There is no
excuse for delay and, by the way, time is not on our side. During every
year of delay, thousands more children become addicted, and the
President of the United States knows about that addiction because he is
a former smoker--hopefully it is former, not present--and he knows the
power of nicotine because he has worked hard to overcome it.
Let's prevent young people from becoming addicted in the first place.
Let's save money and save lives. Please, Mr. President of the United
States, issue this rule.
Thank you, Mr. President.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Massachusetts.
Ms. WARREN. Thank you, Mr. President.
I would like to thank Senator Merkley for organizing this event this
afternoon and Senators Blumenthal and Markey for their work on this.
Smoking produces corporate profits, period. There is the heart of the
problem of e-cigarettes. Long after the
[[Page S7582]]
science showed that cigarette smoking kills, long after the industry
denied and denied, long after millions of people died from smoking-
related cancers and heart disease, this country finally got serious
about cutting smoking rates.
Much of our attention has been focused on ways to keep the industry
from hooking young people, and it is a good approach: If you don't
start, you don't have to quit. For decades now public health experts
have worked to reduce smoking and to keep kids and teens from becoming
addicted to cigarettes. Congress passed the laws and implemented
regulations that restricted access for teens. We increased tobacco
taxes, and we clamped down on marketing to kids. State and local
governments along with the private sector limited smoking in public.
Those combined efforts worked. Since the late 1990s, the youth smoking
rate has been cut by more than 50 percent.
The most recent effort in Congress to address this issue was the
passage of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act of
2009. The late Senator Ted Kennedy fought for years and years to give
the FDA authority to regulate the manufacture, distribution, and
marketing of tobacco. I stand at his desk today to continue this fight
because the law was passed but our Federal agencies have still not
fully implemented it, and the tobacco industry continues to target
young people.
The industry profits from getting kids hooked early, so it finds
every way it can to undermine all the other work we have done to keep
kids from getting hooked on nicotine. Because it is harder now to get
kids hooked with cigarettes, the industry has turned to e-cigarettes.
Six years after the Tobacco Control Act was passed, the regulations
that deem e-cigarettes as tobacco products and make them subject to all
of the rules in that bill have still not been finalized. As a result,
e-cigarettes remain virtually unregulated at the Federal level--no age
limits, no marketing restrictions, nothing but a splotchy patchwork of
State and local restrictions. Even though most states ban the sale of
e-cigarettes to minors, this is not enough to combat the deliberate and
well-financed work of the tobacco industry to hook another generation
of kids on their products.
Now, an investigation last year by House and Senate leaders revealed
how the tobacco industry is marketing their products to kids. It found
that the industry is following the exact same practices of marketing to
kids and teens that addicted a generation to cigarettes decades ago.
Tobacco companies market e-cigs with cartoons and Santa Claus. They
show popular celebrities and beautiful models using e-cigs.
Tobacco companies push e-cigs in flavors designed to appeal to kids--
flavors like cherry crush and chocolate treat. Tobacco companies
provide free samples at concerts and other youth-oriented events.
Tobacco companies advertise on television shows and radio programs that
attract large audiences of teens and preteens. To bring it all into the
digital age, tobacco companies use all of these tactics online and on
social media.
The tobacco industry has done all of this before. It is having the
same result. According to the CDC, e-cigarette use by middle
schoolers--that is sixth, seventh, and eighth graders--and high school
students tripled in 2014 alone. New data released yesterday shows that
21.6 percent of young adults 18 to 24 have used an e-cigarette.
For teens, e-cig use is now greater than the use of all other tobacco
products. Look, the tobacco industry is up to its old tricks, but we
are not going to fall for them again. After more than 6 years since the
passage of the Tobacco Control Act, the Federal Government is finally
on the cusp of regulations to rein in the industry's e-cigarette
marketing efforts. Every day that goes by without this regulation, the
tobacco industry hooks more kids.
We need a strong rule today, and that is why I join my colleagues to
urge the Office of Management and Budget to act without delay and to
release this important regulation. It is time--no, it is past time to
take action, time to push back against the tobacco industry, time to
stand up for our families' health.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Lee). The Senator from Oregon.
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, I would like very much to thank my
colleagues for coming to the floor and speaking to this issue, my
colleagues from Connecticut, Senator Blumenthal; from Massachusetts,
Senator Markey; and Senator Warren, also from Massachusetts.
I must say that this topic of addiction to tobacco and tobacco
products being targeted at our children is not one that is only
relevant to one State or this State or that State, it affects children
in rural America, in urban America, and in every State and corner of
our Nation. So there is basically a universal impact. That is probably
part of the reason the Senate came together, during a period in which
there has been substantial dysfunction and substantial paralysis, and
said, no, it is time to regulate these tobacco products as the drugs
that they are, but during the 6 years since the bill was passed, we
have had no regulation. So I appreciate my colleagues coming to the
floor and trying to amplify the message that this is unacceptable,
because children will be addicted, they will develop diseases, they
will suffer, and they will die because of the inaction in putting the
regulations forward.
This is completely unacceptable. During this time, there have been a
lot of experimental products put out by the tobacco industry. They have
put out finely ground tobacco in the form of mints. They put them into
hour glass-shaped candy holders so that when students would put them in
our pockets, it would look like a cell phone.
That may not make sense in this age of smartphones, but just a few
years ago, in 2009, when this was being test-marketed in my State of
Oregon and test-marketed in Ohio, the shape of the most popular
cellphones kind of had a little bit of an hourglass shape to it. So the
idea was it would look like a cellphone and not like tobacco when you
were in school.
They came out with a product of toothpicks made out of finely ground
tobacco. They came out with a product of breath strips that you put on
your tongue. Can you imagine tobacco to freshen your breath? They were
experimenting with everything, but the payday was not toothpicks, it
was not mints, and it was not breath strips; the payday product is e-
cigarettes.
I am going to put the chart back up about the e-cigarettes. There are
two fundamental myths propagated by the tobacco industry. The first is
that they are not marketing to youth. Well, let's examine the type of
flavors in these products. We have apple--these are just the ones on
this chart. We have cotton candy. We have gummy bear. We have
watermelon. We have candy crave. We have Red Bull. We have peach.
These candy and fruit flavors are designed to appeal to children and
to mask some of the nastiness of smoking. Well, so that is big lie No.
1 from the tobacco industry, that they are not targeting our children.
It is absolutely clear they are.
Furthermore, they have to because they know that replacement
smokers--getting new smokers to replace those who are dying because of
their products requires targeting children because very few people
start smoking when they are adults or start using tobacco products when
they are adults. The mind of the teenager is the perfect moment to gain
traction and produce addiction. That is why the tobacco companies are
targeting our children.
The second myth they put forward is that e-cigarettes are simply a
wonderful health aid designed to get people to quit smoking. Maybe it
is healthier than a cigarette with a tobacco leaf ground up inside of
it or a clear liquid nicotine rather than a cigarette or a cigar. Do
not believe for a moment that tobacco companies are trying to help
individuals stop smoking. They did not do billions of dollars in
commerce by getting people to stop smoking. Everything about targeting
kids is not about getting individuals to stop smoking but to start
smoking. That is the goal, to start smoking, to lead them into a life
in which they will spend an enormous amount of money buying a product
that is destroying their body.
Eventually they will suffer. Eventually they will die. It will be a
heart attack. It will be lung cancer. It will be
[[Page S7583]]
a whole host of--emphysema. OK. Maybe not every single individual, but
a huge number of folks who become addicted in their youth will suffer
substantial health consequences. Even those who don't have cancer or
full-blown emphysema will experience other health impacts that make
them a less healthy individual and compromise their quality of life.
Again, I thank my colleagues so much for coming to the floor to
accentuate this message that we have waited far too long for the
regulations to get done to take on this industry and that we are
demanding that when the regulation is published--and hopefully that
will be very soon, as in days or weeks--that will be a regulation that
is written in a forceful, comprehensive fashion, that will not have a
grandfather clause that excludes existing products from regulation, and
it will not fail to address this powerful instrument being used to
target our children, which are fruit and candy flavors.
We ask, now that the Food and Drug Administration has forwarded this
decision to the Office of Management and Budget for final
decisionmaking, that OMB come out quickly, forcefully, and strongly to
address this tremendous blight on our society.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
____________________