:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I'm pleased to be with you again this week on a different topic, Bill C-32.
I'm joined today again by Diane Labelle, from the Department of Justice, legal counsel for Health Canada; Cathy Sabiston, director general of the program; and Denis Choinière, an expert in the area.
Last week I was here discussing the Canada Consumer Product Safety Act, and there were several amendments related to tobacco products and their fit within the scope. It's my pleasure to be here today to speak to you regarding the important amendments to the Tobacco Act that will help to modernize this important piece of legislation to keep pace with the constantly evolving marketing practices of the tobacco industry.
[Translation]
Health Canada is the lead department for the Government of Canada's Federal Tobacco Control Strategy. Delivery of the Federal Strategy is coordinated across a number of departments and agencies including the Canada Revenue Agency, Canada Border Services Agency, Public Safety Canada and the RCMP.
[English]
The efforts of our federal partners are critical to the success of the strategy, particularly work related to regulating, verifying, monitoring, and assessing, and to the changes in the contraband tobacco environment. The overall objective of the strategy is to reduce death and disease in Canada caused by tobacco usage. Over 37,000 Canadians die every year from tobacco usage, and it costs the health care system over $4.4 billion a year in direct costs.
The strategy is comprehensive in nature, working in areas such as smoking cessation, preventing youth from starting to smoke, protecting Canadians from the effects of second-hand smoke, as well as product regulation. It is by nature a comprehensive strategy that works with provinces and territories, public stakeholders, and non-governmental tobacco control organizations to reduce smoking rates in Canada.
[Translation]
Health Canada also administers the Tobacco Act. The act regulates the manufacturing, sale, labelling and promotion of tobacco products. It was upheld after a ten-year legal challenge by the tobacco industry.
[English]
Canada's work under the federal tobacco control strategy and the Tobacco Act has been adopted internationally and has formed the basis for the World Health Organization's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, the world's first public health treaty.
While we are interested in helping other countries at very early stages of tobacco control, we are also very aware of what's been happening within Canada, especially over the past few years. We have noticed dramatic changes in the tobacco marketplace. We have noticed that the tobacco industry as a whole has started marketing some tobacco products with new flavours that may be especially appealing to youth. It is possible that members of the committee have not seen these products, since they are required to be out of sight at retail. When you see the products addressed in Bill C-32, you'll know that something has to be done.
I'd like to show you a couple of examples. I'll hold these up. I know some people might have sensitivities, so we won't pass them out. These are products that exist today.
This is a package of Aloha. These are chocolate-banana flavoured cigarettes. These are Dutch chocolate, available today.
These are what we refer to as the cigarillos, and they're sold in singles in these nice little containers that look like markers.
These are also examples of cigarillos, available today on the marketplace, sold in singles like this. This is a pack of cigarillos as well, again, put in a small package. I don't know what image that brings to your mind. I won't tell you what it brings to mine, but it's not cigars or cigarettes right from the outset.
There are other challenges we face, for example, in some cases how small the health warning messages are getting and the ability to see those as we move forward. And with respect, this is one of my personal surprises--vitamin-enriched cigarettes, VitaCig. These are all available today. Staff from my office were able to purchase these.
:
Yes, I understand that.
We will take some pictures and have it translated and tabled for the committee, if that's helpful as we move forward.
Because this act does deal with advertising, I'll just hold up a couple of these. This is the Canadian edition of Time magazine, and you can see inside what is available in terms of advertising that has started again.
These are the new dailies that we're starting to see. These are available and distributed free, oftentimes at bus stops and other places like that. So it's not really clear, exactly, who is able to pick that up, but pretty much anybody.
There are examples of some of the large advertisements we're starting to see.
Again, it's very targeted and very strategic in terms of some of the things we thought you might like to see, in terms of some of the specific examples we're trying to address with Bill C-32.
For the sake of time, I will return to my presentation.
Following the Supreme Court of Canada ruling in late July 2007, the tobacco industry has been increasingly advertising tobacco products. Our research shows that over 86% of these have been appearing in free weekly publications, which I just showed you, which are easily accessible to youth. Also, evidence clearly indicates that the sales of flavoured little cigars have grown from 53 million units in 2001 to 403 million units in 2007, and that 25% of youth between the ages of 15 and 17 have tried smoking a little cigar. Our understanding is that this is the fastest growing product category right now.
[Translation]
These flavoured little cigars are relatively new to the Canadian market place. They are produced in flavours such as chocolate, grape and tropical punch. The tobacco industry's own documents show that they use flavouring to make them more appealing to young people.
[English]
Given what we know in terms of the resurgence in tobacco advertising, the ability of flavoured tobacco products and their alarming growth in the Canadian market, there is a need to act now to put an end to marketing practices that could induce youth to start smoking. As I mentioned earlier, prevention is a key element to a successful tobacco control strategy. Ultimately, as I said earlier, our objective is to prevent new people from starting to smoke if we're going to be successful in driving down further the number of Canadians who smoke.
In May of this year, Bill C-32, the cracking down on tobacco marketing aimed at youth act, was introduced by the Minister of Health to address these issues.
Very quickly, five key components of the legislation are the following.
The first one is banning all advertising in publications that may be seen or read by children and youth. Tobacco advertising will no longer be allowed in publications that have an adult readership of 85% or more. By definition, these publications could have 15% youth readership. This will prevent tobacco advertisements from appearing in newspapers, magazines, and free entertainment weeklies that could be viewed by children and youth.
The second one is banning flavours and additives in little cigars in blunt wraps. Under the Tobacco Act, there are currently no restrictions on the addition and marketing of flavours and additives to tobacco products. The bill will ban the addition of flavours, except menthol, and other additives such as vitamins, sugars, sweeteners, and colouring agents, from cigarettes to little cigars and blunt wraps.
The third one is banning the use of representations or pictures on the front of packaging of these products so that it cannot be implied that the flavour is in the product. For example, a picture of cherries on a package of little cigars, blunt wraps, or cigarettes will not be permitted.
The fourth one is ensuring that little cigars and blunts are sold in packages of 20 or more, because it will increase the price point, and price is a key factor in whether youth start to smoke or not. The Tobacco Act already requires that cigarettes be sold in a package containing at least 20 units, so this would bring this in line.
And the fifth one is creating a schedule so that the government can take faster action to ban other products or additives should they be found to encourage youth to start smoking.
[Translation]
The proposed legislation does exclude menthol from the flavour ban. This legislation is focused on the new and emerging fruit and candy flavours.
[English]
Research shows that nearly 8 of 10 young people who try smoking a whole cigarette before they turn 20 go on to become smokers at some point in their lifetime. The legislation before you today for discussion sets out a direction to ensure the continued protection of youth from inducements of these new tobacco products that are clearly targeted at them.
My officials and I will now be pleased to respond to any questions you may have on Bill C-32.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chairperson.
Thanks to all of you for being here. I think this is a very exciting moment in Parliament. We have legislation that is going to make a real difference. I want to thank all of the department officials, of course the minister, and all of the people here from the different organizations who have worked so hard to push and prod all of us to get to this point.
I could certainly support the bill as it is, but without pushing my luck too much or hoping I don't ruin anything, I would like to pursue the possibility of a couple of amendments to see what you feel and get your expert advice.
Let me pick up where the Bloc left off on smokeless products. You didn't show any of those products, Mr. Glover, but there are things that look like bubble gum and peppermints that are flavoured chews. Although I know you've told us in the past that they represent only a small percentage of the problem, it seems that from talking to folks, especially the young people who have worked so hard in northwestern Ontario, there is a much higher usage in certain parts of the country. It could be as high as 25% in parts of northern Ontario or northern Canada.
Many people have written us saying the legislation is great, but asking if there is some way we could amend the legislation to include flavoured, smokeless tobacco. What would be the drawbacks of doing that? Do you think we could do that without causing huge problems for the bill?
:
There is no question that this is an aggressive strategy, Madam Chair, in terms of what the government is proposing. This would again be a world first, where Canada has been a leader.
We have stalled in terms of the number of smokers in this country and the rate that we've been able to reduce it. We've made great strides, and then we seemed to be sitting stable over the last few years. This is not to be dismissive of the tobacco industry and their comments, but in order for us to continue to reduce that rate, we need to take further steps as a society, as a country.
Someone was describing this to me earlier as a big pie: every year we have people who quit, or, for other unfortunate reasons, leave the ranks of smokers, and every year we have new people coming into that. Our objective with this is to limit that.
I fully anticipate that there will be industry push-back. At the same time--I apologize, this is a long-winded answer, and I'm eating the member's time--we do acknowledge that there are a number of technical concerns with some of the ingredients we have put forward that are important to the tobacco industry and that we need to deal with, that have an impact on the product itself as it currently exists.
Denis, would you like to elaborate further?
:
The schedule was not built with the intent of banning any product categories from the marketplace. Let me go through the additives and give you, to excuse the pun, the flavour of what was intended to be captured.
For flavourings we went very broad. We had to refer to other sources to make sure that all 5,000 or so chemicals used for flavouring are captured. Unfortunately, more than flavours are captured, so in the list, below those flavourings we have products used for preservatives, products used for burn rate control, products used as a binder, products used as humectants. We have added these, together with the three compounds—menthol, l-menthol, and l-menthone—that are for menthol purposes.
That is for the flavouring. Then we have a series of additives that we feel are being used, have been used, or will potentially be used to give some type of healthy connotation to new trends; for example, the energy drinks that have been and may still be quite popular with kids. Caffeine, taurine, and glucuronolactone have been used, so we wanted to capture these.
There are also probiotics, vitamins, and minerals. I understand that for the tobacco industry this category may be too broad. What we intended to capture was mineral nutrients, so that you don't claim vitamin C or calcium or so that you don't get your dose of potassium with your daily cigarettes, if you like. That was the intent.
We are also capturing colouring, because we have seen products that are fairly attractive. I'm showing you a cigarette that is all black, with gold covering the filter. We have seen others, in the U.S. market, that are bright pink or other colours. For us, colouring agents were important. However, we did not want to prohibit manufacturers from building the traditional cigarette look; that is, either white or with an imitation cork tip, and so on.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, for the member's question.
With all respect to industry members, who I'm sure will be writing or testifying after me, this is an interesting area in which to regulate and legislate. It's rather a game of leapfrog. We will design legislation and regulation, they will comply with it, and then, as with any other business—this is not meant to be a criticism—they will look at how they can leverage it and find opportunities within it and see what new markets it opens up for them.
What we have intended with the creation of the schedules is flexibility that would allow us over time to respond to the constant back and forth of regular business cycles that occur in this—and, quite frankly, any other—marketplace and any other industry. Rather than enshrine it in the legislation, this provides us the flexibility, as we see new product innovations, to say that they are appropriate and to allow them, or maybe to say that there are issues associated with them that need to be dealt with and add them to the schedule, for the reasons we've enunciated earlier. It provides for a significantly more flexible, nimble process to deal with the types of innovations we've seen.
Maybe it wasn't entirely clear in some of my opening remarks, but these are new product categories. These were rounding errors a few years ago, and there are now 405 million units a year.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I thank the officials for coming.
Like my colleague, I think this is important legislation. This is a product that, to quote Gro Harlem Brundtland, “statistically kills half of its users”. This is very encouraging legislation.
My first comment is around contraband tobacco.
Mr. Glover, I think you said that by its very nature we drive it underground. The current use of contraband products--and you can correct me if I'm wrong--is about 48%. If we're going to further drive this underground, I don't think we're closing the loop on it. We talked about excise tax and the Criminal Code.
A second thing I would ask about is the regional variation of tobacco use for youth. I think it's important to look at those figures.
The third issue is around menthol. Again to pick up on my colleague's comments, I think it's less frightening for youth to use menthol: it's mint. If we remove flavoured products, and I think this is really important, I'm wondering whether our youth will go to menthol products. I'm wondering whether we've looked at the projected impacts of it.
:
I would acknowledge that this is the case.
I would like to return to the issue of contraband. I don't want my remarks to leave an incorrect impression.
Do we have direct evidence or research saying one way or the other exactly what is going to happen? Not exactly. But there is evidence, generally, that as you prohibit things, it does create a black market for those things. So it's very broad. In society, we see that phenomenon repeat itself.
That being said, we continue to believe that the important thing is to have a multi-pronged approach that includes prohibiting these products--making them illegal--which would have a significant impact on their use overall, and then working with partner departments that are already fighting the issue of contraband to continue to deal with it on that front. So it must in fact be a multi-pronged approach for us to be successful. That is the strategy.
My colleague, Cathy Sabiston, perhaps has a point I haven't raised.
According to the WHO, tobacco use is a pandemic that is unequalled in history. Last century, the use of tobacco killed 100 million people. In the 21st century, it will kill 1 billion people unless we end this epidemic. It will not be an easy task. We need an ongoing series of measures to restrict tobacco use, such as those found in Bill . Taken together, these measures are proving to be very effective to reduce the use of tobacco.
We applaud this bill, and we have only one improvement to suggest to you. We suggest that the ban on the use of flavourings be expanded to include smokeless tobacco like this product here. You can find a draft amendment that would do so in your information kits.
Why are we making this suggestion? Here a few reasons provided by two dental surgeons from Northern Ontario, Dr. Pynn and Dr. Dowhos of Thunder Bay, in their letter to the committee. Here is the quote:
[English]
More than fifty percent of our patients are of Aboriginal origin with the majority of this population using tobacco products. ... Tobacco has no boundaries when it comes to its effects on the oral cavity.
Dental decay and gum disease caused by tobacco usage, including smokeless tobacco (also called chew and spit), are leading reasons why we are so busy with tooth extractions. Not only are we extracting single or multiple teeth, but we also regularly have the unfortunate task of performing full mouth clearances of all 32 teeth because of tooth rot from poor oral hygiene and decay.
Prolonged usage of products such as smokeless tobacco can also cause life-threatening oral cancers. Oral cancer can have a horrific and disfiguring consequence, as the majority of the surgical interventions for its treatment require parts of the jaw to be completely removed.
Our youth do not recognize that the instant pleasure they may receive from chewing smokeless tobacco can have devastating effects later, thus we also need to ban the use of flavourings to smokeless tobacco products before it is too late.
In a few minutes my colleague from Dryden, Ontario, Mr. Sam McKibbon, will explain just exactly how he and many of his friends in northwestern Ontario and many other places in northern and western Canada are being seduced by the lure of flavoured, smokeless tobacco.
Mr. McKibbon was one of the creators of the “Flavour...GONE!” campaign. Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada are proud to have provided more both moral and financial support to this campaign, and we are proud to have Mr. McKibbon here speaking on our behalf today.
[Translation]
Before I turn it over to him, I still have one important duty to fulfil. I would like to thank all of you. For 18 months, we have been asking parliamentarians to amend the act in order to protect our youth from the tobacco companies' tricks, in particular adding all kinds of tempting flavours to encourage our kids to start using tobacco. The fact that Parliament has introduced not one but two bills to deal with this problem bears witness to the serious attention that our elected officials have given to this issue.
[English]
We are particularly grateful to Ms. Judy Wasylycia-Leis and her staff for the introduction of private members' bills in two successive parliaments to draw attention to this issue and for the strong support shown by her and her staff to the “Flavour...GONE!” campaign. We are similarly grateful to the Hon. Leona Aglukkaq and her staff for the initiative shown to bring forward Bill C-32 as a government bill and the parliamentary craft involved in shepherding it through all stages of consideration.
We are also grateful for her initiative in seeking the support of Ms. Judy Wasylycia-Leis and to the latter for so graciously offering such support.
:
Thank you very much. I'll try to be quick.
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, distinguished members of the committee, fellow youth advocates, and committee witnesses.
My name is Sam McKibbon and I live in Dryden, Ontario. I'm here to present on behalf of the Northwestern Health Unit, former peer leader for the Youth Action Alliance, and also a member of the youth-led campaign to eliminate flavoured tobacco called Flavour...GONE! Before I begin, I'd like to acknowledge two people in the crowd right now, Catherine Kiewning and Jeffrey Satchwill, who are my counterparts in the Flavour...GONE! campaign. I thank them for their support in making this presentation today. I hope to do them proud.
Jeff, Catherine and I started the Flavour...GONE! campaign last July because we saw that many of our peers were using flavoured tobacco products and that they were clearly marketed toward youth. This stirred up the youth advocate side of us, and we felt strongly that the best way to stem the tide of these products was to advocate for the elimination of flavours in tobacco products, which are attractive to youth and easy to use.
We are thrilled that the Canadian government has tabled Bill C-32 and has taken a stand to protect children from these products. This bill will eliminate the lure of flavoured cigarillos, cigarettes, and blunts and is a big step toward discouraging youth from picking up tobacco products.
What we are not so pleased about and what we are respectfully pleading the committee to do is to include chewing tobacco in Bill C-32. We have put together a package, which unfortunately hasn't been handed out to you--it will be afterwards--that we hope will help you make this decision. In the folder you will find letters from the medical officers of health from the Northwestern Health Unit and also the Thunder Bay District Health Unit. Both refer to a 2005 student survey that put youth chewing rates at 10% among the youth in my part of Canada, which is northwestern Ontario. What might come as a surprise to the committee is that I was once part of that 10% who used chewing tobacco. My first dip of chew was Peach Skoal. Although I acknowledge that peer pressure was a factor in the situation of me picking up chew, I can honestly say that if it hadn't come in a myriad of very palatable flavours, I'm not sure I would have tried it.
Chewing tobacco was something that my team mates did after games and during road trips, to make them go by more quickly, and although the coaches knew about us using chewing tobacco, they did not care as much because we were not harming our lungs. For the rest of my grade 11 season, I used chewing tobacco, occasionally after practices and games. I quit with some difficulty at the end of my grade 11 year, then became involved with the youth action line, which is a youth advocacy program.
Reflecting now on my experience, I can honestly say that if chewing tobacco hadn't come in many flavours, I probably wouldn't have started and it probably wouldn't have been such a big issue on my team. More than half my team used chewing tobacco on my football team in Dryden, Ontario. Unfortunately, many of my friends, to whom I have already made reference, did not quit when I did. They are now addicted, and they all started on flavoured tobacco products. I was lucky enough to quit. Many of them were not.
I'm here today to also tell you that I know that chewing tobacco is an issue with youth, especially among young athletes in Ontario. There is evidence of this in my area of Canada in the form of the northwestern Ontario student Dryden youth survey, as well as personal stories told me by the many youth I know across Ontario who are involved in youth action lines. Also, when the news of Flavour...GONE! reached Alberta and British Columbia, we heard the youth tell us there that it is an issue in their communities. I understand that scientific proof might be lacking at this point, but I urge the committee to consider the fact that this is becoming a disturbing part of youth culture. There's a whole youth culture surrounding chewing tobacco in sports teams, especially hockey, football, and baseball in rural areas, that the committee may not be aware of but we are very aware of.
I want to draw your attention, and obviously you will see this later, to a website where chew users post comments and pictures about chewing tobacco. The website contains lots of articles and pictures, such as choosing a dip for beginners, dip of the week, and blend talk, where chewers discuss the best way to blend flavours of chewing tobacco to reduce the bad tobacco taste. The page also includes an article entitled “How a chew chewer recycles”. This features a table made by a person in British Columbia, and on the second page there are a number of dipper cups that are made from empty chew tins. I'll also point out that the second cup from the left is a dipper's cup made by a local hockey team in my area of Dryden. This website is one very visual example of the culture that surrounds chew in Canada.
Flavoured chewing tobacco is very easy for users to tolerate. Eliminating flavours in chewing tobacco at the same time that we get rid of them in flavoured cigarillos, cigarettes, and blunts will go a long way in keeping children and youth from experimenting with these products.
It will also remove a significant marketing tactic that the tobacco industry has been able to manipulate by selling the products in the same colours and flavours as candy. I will also make reference to another photo that you'll be able to see later, in which a candy display has been interspersed with chewing tins to show that.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair and members of the committee, for the opportunity to address you on Bill C-32.
[Translation]
I would like to thank the chair and all the committee members for giving us the opportunity to tell them our point of view about this bill, which is so important for the health of our young people.
[English]
My name is Melodie Tilson. I'm the director of policy with the Non-Smokers' Rights Association. My organization has played a major role in tobacco control in Canada for more than three decades, and I myself have been working in tobacco control for the past 19 years.
The Non-Smokers' Rights Association strongly supports the amendments in the Tobacco Act contained in Bill C-32. Bill C-32 would put an end to tobacco advertising in print publications, a practice that resumed in 2007 and that has proliferated in the past year. My colleague is going to show just a few of the samples that we've collected from the veritable mountain of tobacco ads that have appeared over the past year or so.
A key objective of the Tobacco Act, to protect young persons and others from inducements to use tobacco products, is “being undermined with the current provision allowing advertising in publications with 85% adult readership”. As research by University of Regina business professor Anne Lavack shows, significant numbers of impressionable teenagers remain exposed to tobacco promotion.
Based on 2005 readership data from the Print Measurement Bureau, Dr. Lavack found that advertising in a single issue of People magazine in Canada, for example, reaches half a million youth readers aged 12 to 17, or about 20% of the youth population of this age. Advertising in the Canadian edition of Time magazine reaches about 200,000 adolescents aged 12 to 17. Even more troubling is the extensive advertising of tobacco products in entertainment weeklies across the country. These publications clearly target teens and young adults and are available free of charge in hundreds of locations throughout major Canadian cities.
The bottom line is that limiting print advertising to publications with an 85% adult readership results in substantial promotion of tobacco products to vulnerable young Canadians. We commend the government for recognizing that this loophole must be closed.
We also commend the government for understanding the importance of dealing with flavoured cigarillos. This product is clearly being marketed to youth and young adults, and with remarkable success. You heard already from Mr. Glover that sales have increased exponentially in recent years, growing eightfold in just six years to 400 million units.
Perhaps most disturbing is that flavoured cigarillos are being consumed by youth who would otherwise not have considered smoking. If this population of youth smokers were covered by the definition of current smokers in our major national surveys, smoking rates among Canadian youth would increase by five percentage points, from 15% to 20%.
I see that we've all brought a lot of samples for show and tell, but I'm going to pass around a few cigarillos, and I invite you to just open the cap and smell them. They really do smell like candy or Kool-Aid and nothing like a tobacco product.
:
Sadly, my own experience validates this finding. My 21-year-old son, who was successfully inoculated against smoking cigarettes by his parents and of course by his schooling, did not equate cigarillo use with what he knew to be the health risks of smoking. And who can blame him or his peers when cigarillos come in candy and cocktail flavours that mask the harsh tobacco taste, when they are sold in singles and kiddie-sized packs at youth-friendly prices, and when, as in the case of singles, they have no health warning at all?
The Non-Smokers' Rights Association strongly endorses the measures in Bill C-32 that would ban flavouring in cigarillos, cigarettes, and blunts and would require these products to be sold in packs of 20. We assume that the new health warning regulations currently being drafted will remedy the situation regarding the woefully inadequate warnings currently on cigarillos.
Although my organization's top priority is to see Bill C-32 pass before the House recesses for the summer, there is one amendment that we strongly urge members to support. As you've just heard from Sam McKibbon with Flavour…GONE!, flavoured, smokeless tobacco is another product that targets kids and starts them on a dangerous path toward a lifelong addiction to tobacco. Like cigarillos, smokeless products come in a vast array of innocuous candy and fruit flavours, and in a very quick trip to a local convenience store I was able to find a number of candy products that look just like Skoal. I challenge you to tell from a distance which is which.
Like cigarillos, smokeless products come in a vast array of innocuous candy and fruit flavours and are packaged to resemble tins of candies, mints, and gum. While use of smokeless tobacco by youth Canada-wide is low, this statistic is misleading. As you have heard, there are specific demographic and geographic clusters of adolescents with very high rates of use—for example, youth in northern Ontario, in Alberta, in native communities, and youth who play sports such as hockey. Once again, many of these kids would not have considered smoking, but for many reasons, including the candy flavours, they did not associate smokeless tobacco with the dangers of tobacco use. Once again, my own 16-year-old son is included in this group. I asked him last night how many of his peers use smokeless tobacco, and he said basically all of them do. I asked if he would use this product if it didn't come in flavours, and he said no.
Members of Parliament have the opportunity to close the huge loophole that currently exists for flavoured, smokeless tobacco products and thereby ensure that the exponential increase in use of flavoured cigarillos by youth that we saw in recent years is not repeated with smokeless tobacco.
I would like to say a few words about the contraband tobacco problem, which I know is a major concern for members of Parliament, as it is for the health community. The extent of the contraband market in Canada is not a reason to refrain from implementing progressive tobacco control measures such as Bill C-32. Rather, the extent of the contraband market justifies urgent and concerted action by government. Health groups have been advocating for some time for the government to implement a comprehensive set of measures that would severely limit contraband, and in so doing would protect public health. In fact, just today my organization is sending to members of Parliament our latest publication on this issue, which outlines a very comprehensive approach that we are urging the government to adopt. You should have that any day now.
In closing, I would like to commend the government for its leadership on this issue as well as recognize the support given by members from other parties, in particular Ms. Wasylycia-Leis. The Non-Smokers' Rights Association urges members of the committee and indeed all members of Parliament to ensure that this important piece of legislation is passed before the House rises for the summer. We also urge you to support an amendment to include smokeless tobacco products in the schedule of tobacco products to which the flavouring ban would apply.
Thank you. Merci.
:
Madam Chair, committee members, thank you for giving us this opportunity to testify today. I would also like to thank the Minister of Health for bringing in this bill.
[English]
I'd like to thank the Prime Minister for his commitment last September 2008. I'd like to thank all parties for their support at second reading and the members of this committee who spoke during the debate in favour of the bill.
I think you would appreciate a special acknowledgement from us to Ms. Judy Wasylycia-Leis for her leadership with respect to this particular issue. So thank you.
We would urge that this bill be passed quickly by this committee and by Parliament. The sooner that happens the sooner it can work to advance public health and the sooner it can prevent youth addiction. At the same time, we have three amendments to propose, and I'll come to those in a moment.
First, with respect to advertising, we very much support the ban on advertising in newspapers and magazines, as found in this bill. There is a compelling body of evidence with respect to the impact of tobacco advertising. The Canadian Cancer Society has already tabled with the committee eight volumes of this evidence--it's very substantial--four of which were tabled with a Senate committee in 1998 and four of which were tabled as an update in 2005, in terms of growing evidence with a commission parlementaire de l'Assemblée nationale, in Quebec. That is available for members of the committee and committee staff for their consideration during consideration of this bill.
I also draw to the attention of the committee this recent report by the National Cancer Institute in the U.S., in 2009, which provides an update in terms of a review of the evidence: The Role of the Media in Promoting and Reducing Tobacco Use.
In our written submission to this committee, we have included a number of things. If you turn to tab 5, you'll see examples of tobacco advertisements that have appeared in Canada. The first one here is a recent advertisement from du Maurier, Imperial Tobacco Canada, in which they promote the environmental friendliness of their packaging. So here we have this highly toxic product. We have cigarette filters that are horrible for the environment because they simply do not biodegrade well, and they're doing some greenwashing. This is the endless creativity we have from tobacco companies, and we see other examples of tobacco advertisements in tabs 5 and 6.
Of concern, of course, is where they advertise. We've seen a lot of advertising in the free weekly entertainment newspapers, such as The Georgia Straight, in Vancouver, Prairie Dog, in Saskatchewan, Voir Montreal, in Montreal and other parts of Quebec, and Ottawa Xpress, here in Ottawa. These reach youth, and that's why, in part, this bill is necessary.
With respect to cigarillos, I would like to reiterate our support for this measure. The evidence is clear, in terms of how there's been a tremendous growth by youth of the flavoured cigarillos, this product category one, which simply did not exist about 10 years ago. The youth smoking survey has very shocking data in terms of the proportion of youth who are experimenting. Even if a company claims they do not intend to market to youth, the fact is that youth are attracted by these products. It is the reality in the marketplace that Parliament must respond to, and already, as noted, the Ontario and New Brunswick legislatures have adopted bills to prohibit flavoured cigarillos and to provide authority to deal with other types of flavoured tobacco products.
As one example, I have these Bravo cigarillos that are packed to look like magic markers or lip gloss. The Prime Minister held these up during his announcement. I'll pass these around to members of the committee.
There are three amendments to propose. You'll see in tab 1 a summary of our amendments and a proposed text, in English and French, for our amendments.
The first amendment is to prohibit flavoured, smokeless tobacco products, a message you've already received. And I have with me examples of these. I have vanilla and berry, I have black cherry and cherry, there's mint and spearmint, and apple and citrus. This simply should not be happening, and that's why we feel very strongly, along with others, with respect to this amendment.
We also have to recognize where these companies are placing their advertisements. It's in these free weekly entertainment newspapers for Ottawa Xpress, where we see advertisements for Skoal smokeless tobacco. It's in publications such as this one, Urban Male Magazine, a sort of Canadian version of Maxim. That has a very substantial youth readership. And to give you one example, I invite members to turn to tab 15 of our binder, of our submission, and here you have an advertisement for Skoal Peach in Playboy. Playboy is widely read by young males, teenage boys. This is the type of marketing. Who is their target audience? That's why we feel this is very important, why we need to protect youth. We know that among teenage boys there's substantial smokeless tobacco use in Canada. It is higher in some regions, such as Nunavut, northwestern Ontario, and Alberta. But for every five boys who smoke, one uses smokeless tobacco.
Our second amendment is with respect to the menthol exemption. The government's intent is to maintain an exception for menthol cigarettes, but it still would be possible to ban menthol little cigars, menthol smokeless tobacco, and menthol blunt wraps. We propose an amendment to ban menthol from those other product categories, not touching the government's intent.
Our third amendment is a technical amendment. The bill is worded in such a way.... I'll pass this around; it shows some cigarettes. You can see how the companies print their trademarks on the cigarettes with coloured ink. There's an exemption in the bill to allow that, but we would like it to be available as well for governments to print a tax paid marking on a cigarette, as Singapore has done starting in January 2009, or a health message.
In 1994, Parliament approved amendments to excise legislation to give regulatory authority to require a tax paid marking on the cigarette itself. It hasn't happened yet, but as the interdepartmental task force reviews options to deal with contraband, this might be part of the package. We should not say that should never happen.
Similarly, new international guidelines adopted under the international tobacco treaty last November include an endorsement for consideration of a health message directly on cigarettes.
So it's a small amendment just so that door is not closed for provincial governments and for the federal government.
Finally, provincial governments, in their point of sale legislation to control advertising, have sometimes used allowing a price list or information binder as a mechanism. I know there is regulatory authority existing in the act that would allow those information binders and reference catalogues to continue. I note that Ms. Sabiston from Health Canada said that a regulation may be necessary. I would urge the government to take action on that to maintain the flexibility of the provinces to have their best optimal control of advertising at point of sale.
Thank you very much.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'm not a member of this committee, but I have to say, Mr. Collishaw, that I was struck by your comment that tobacco is the pandemic. I'm sure that if it were any other product or anything else, we would be lining up to respond accordingly, but in fact you give us some interesting statistics. Yet we, as parliamentarians, are only in one business and that is good public policy. Is this good public policy?
I would suggest to you that we have failed as parliamentarians because we have not had a whole-of-government approach when it comes to tobacco. Finance, public security, justice, agriculture, etc.—we have failed miserably. We continue to respond to the edges of the issue.
For example, as a parliamentary secretary to two ministers of finance, I was in the business of dealing with excise taxes on tobacco. We have no problem taxing it. What do we do with the revenue? We put it into general revenue. We don't dedicate a dollar to health prevention or to health care. It goes into general revenue.
From the municipal days, we used to do it. As a former president of the Canadian Parks and Recreation Association, I was involved with Health Canada in a joint project to deal with banning it and educating young people, as young as eight years old, about tobacco. I couldn't believe we were dealing with eight-year-olds at the time. This was in the early 1990s.
My question really, Madam Chair, is to the assistant deputy minister about the failure of government generally in terms of responding. Yes, I support this bill. I support the three amendments, although I have nothing to do at this committee with it. But to me it seems to be, again, at the edges.
One of the comments I noticed in the binder that's put out says we're going to watch further trends. I'm not sure what that means, but if instead of getting ahead of the parade we're going to watch until people become addicted and then we're going to come back and say we need to respond accordingly....
So although this is all well and good, it doesn't address the issue. If we want to deal with the tobacco industry, do we have a long-term strategy that's going to deal with farmers who are currently producing a legal product and with manufacturers who produce it? Are we going to deal with the real issue of smuggling, particularly if other jurisdictions near us are able to continue to promote and manufacture this?
In terms of taxation, are we honestly going to get serious, and is Health Canada going to get together with Finance, and is government generally, regardless of party, going to really take this kind of action? I'd be interested in your comments on those views.
:
I'd be happy to start, Madam Chair, and I thank the member very much for his question.
Indeed, these sentiments that he's expressed are ones that I share and have often reflected on in my own career working on tobacco control, which has spanned 28 years so far. May I say at the outset that a long time ago, Parliament was, in fact, very prescient about this issue. There was a bill that passed second reading in Parliament to ban cigarettes. That bill was voted on in 1904, but it somehow or other never became law, even though it had been adopted at second reading. So Parliament has tried, and there have been other efforts by Parliament since then, in the sixties and seventies and eighties, to control tobacco, but there are many forces at work that maintain tobacco use in our society.
I think the question also suggests that we ought to have a much stronger approach to dealing with tobacco. I agree wholeheartedly, and on another day at another time I would be delighted to engage members of the committee in a serious discussion about how we may well phase out tobacco over the next 20 years. I have a lot of ideas about that, and I would be happy to discuss further ideas.
In the meantime, however, there are some very good things that we can do, as has been suggested. Members of Parliament could adopt Bill C-32, hopefully with one or more of the amendments that have been suggested here today. That is certainly a step in the right direction. But like the member, I am anxious for real action, to have a whole-of-government approach to really address this problem once and for all.
Thank you.