Order Code RL32619
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
FDA Regulation of Tobacco Products:
A Policy and Legal Analysis
Updated December 3, 2004
C. Stephen Redhead
Specialist in Life Sciences
Domestic Social Policy Division
Jody Feder
Legislative Attorney
American Law Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress
FDA Regulation of Tobacco Products:
A Policy and Legal Analysis
Summary
On October 6, 2004, congressional conferees for the American Jobs Creation
Act of 2004 (H.R. 4520, P.L. 108-357) rejected a Senate amendment that would have
given the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) broad new authority to regulate
cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products. The amendment incorporated the text of
FDA tobacco legislation (S. 2461) introduced by Senators DeWine (R-OH) and
Kennedy (D-MA). Identical legislation (H.R. 4433) had been introduced in the
House by Representatives Tom Davis (R-VA) and Henry Waxman (D-CA). On
October 10, 2004, following its rejection by the conference committee, the Senate
passed the DeWine-Kennedy FDA tobacco bill by voice vote.
S. 2461/H.R. 4433 was the product of months of negotiations in which
lawmakers sought to balance the competing interests of public health groups and
Philip Morris, the nation’s leading cigarette company. Both sides supported the
legislation, which would create a new Chapter IX in the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) solely for the regulation of tobacco products. Among its
many provisions, S. 2461/H.R. 4433 would authorize FDA to: restrict tobacco
advertising and promotions, especially to children; develop standards that require
changes in tobacco product composition and design, such as the reduction or
elimination of toxic chemicals; and require manufacturers to obtain agency approval
in order to make reduced-risk and reduced-exposure claims for their products.
In the mid-1990s, FDA claimed authority under the FFDCA to regulate
cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products as delivery devices for nicotine, an
addictive drug. The agency’s 1996 tobacco regulation was invalidated by the U.S.
Supreme Court in March 2000. The Court concluded that Congress had clearly
intended to preclude FDA from regulating tobacco products. It found that because
the FFDCA prohibits the marketing of products that have not been found to be safe
and effective, the statute would have required FDA to ban such manifestly harmful
products as cigarettes and smokeless tobacco if the agency had jurisdiction over
them. Such a ban, argued the Court, would plainly contradict congressional intent.
The Supreme Court’s decision made it clear the Congress would have to enact
legislation giving FDA statutory authority over tobacco products in order for the
agency to assert jurisdiction. Lawmakers first drafted such language in the 105th
Congress as part of legislation to implement the 1997 proposed national tobacco
settlement. Several FDA tobacco bills were introduced in the 107th Congress
following the Supreme Court’s decision, though none saw any legislative action.
Under S. 2461/H.R. 4433, FDA would be authorized to regulate tobacco product
marketing and impose mandatory design changes on tobacco products if it
determined that such actions were appropriate for the protection of public health,
based on a consideration of the risks and benefits to individual consumers and to the
population as a whole. But the legislation would also place certain restrictions on
that authority, permitting most existing products to remain on the market (at least in
the near term) and reserving for Congress the power to ban tobacco products.
Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
FDA’s 1996 Tobacco Regulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
FDA’s Assertion of Jurisdiction over Tobacco Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Court Challenge of the FDA Tobacco Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
U.S. District Court (Coyne Beahm, Inc. v. FDA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Federal Court of Appeals (Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. FDA) . . 7
U.S. Supreme Court (FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.) . . . . . . 8
1997 Proposed National Tobacco Settlement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
McCain Tobacco Bill (105th Congress) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
FDA Tobacco Bills in the 107th & 108th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Competing Views on FDA Regulatory Authority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Philip Morris USA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
107th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
108th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Restrictions on Advertising and Promotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Product Design and Composition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Reduced Risk Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Preemption of State and Local Regulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
FDA’s 1996 Tobacco Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Health Warnings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
List of Tables
Table 1. Summary of McCain Tobacco Bill (105th Congress) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Table 2. Summary of Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco
Control Act (S. 2461, H.R. 4433) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
FDA Regulation of Tobacco Products:
A Policy and Legal Analysis
Introduction
On October 6, 2004, congressional conferees for the American Jobs Creation
Act of 2004 (H.R. 4520, P.L. 108-357) rejected a Senate amendment that would have
given the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) broad new authority to regulate
cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products. The amendment, offered by Senators
DeWine (R-OH) and Kennedy (D-MA), incorporated the text of the Family Smoking
Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (S. 2461), which the two Senators introduced
on May 20, 2004. A companion House bill (H.R. 4433) was introduced on the same
date by Representatives Tom Davis (R-VA) and Henry Waxman (R-CA). On
October 10, 2004, following its rejection by the conference committee, the Senate
passed the DeWine-Kennedy FDA tobacco bill by voice vote.
S. 2461/H.R. 4433 would create a new Chapter IX in the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA)1 giving the FDA broad authority to regulate the
manufacture, distribution, advertising, promotion, sale, and use of cigarettes and
smokeless tobacco (i.e., snuff and chewing tobacco). The legislation would:
! require all tobacco product manufacturers to register annually with
the FDA and provide the agency with a detailed product list;
! mandate biennial inspection of all registered establishments;
! require premarket approval of new tobacco products unless they
were determined to be substantially equivalent to other tobacco
products already on the market;
! require manufacturers to obtain FDA approval in order to make
reduced-risk and reduced-exposure claims for their products,
including the use of descriptors such as “light,” “mild,” and “low”;
! authorize FDA to regulate the advertising and promotion of tobacco
products in order to protect public health;
! give FDA the authority to modify the composition of tobacco
products in order to protect public health (though it would reserve
for Congress the authority to reduce nicotine yields to zero or ban
tobacco products);
! require FDA to develop new regulations for the testing, reporting,
and public disclosure of tobacco product ingredients and smoke
constituents;
1 21 U.S.C. §§ 301 et seq.
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! preserve the authority of states and localities to take additional
measures to restrict the distribution, advertising, promotion, sale,
access to, and use of tobacco products;
! instruct FDA to issue new recordkeeping requirements to help
counter the illicit trade of tobacco products; and
! assess user fees on manufacturers to pay for the cost of FDA tobacco
regulation.
In addition, S. 2461 would require FDA to reissue most of its 1996 tobacco
regulation as an interim final rule, subject to public comment and possible
amendment. The agency had claimed jurisdiction over tobacco products under the
FFDCA, based on its conclusion that cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products are
delivery devices for nicotine, an addictive drug.
On March 21, 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated the FDA tobacco
regulation. In a 5-4 decision, the Court ruled that FDA does not have the authority
under the FFDCA to regulate cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products as drug-
delivery devices. The Court based its ruling on the finding that Congress has
precluded the FDA from asserting jurisdiction over tobacco products. According to
the Court, such authority would be inconsistent with the congressional intent clearly
expressed in the FFDCA’s overall regulatory scheme and in other tobacco-related
legislation. For example, the Court concluded that if the FDA asserted jurisdiction
under the FFDCA, it would have no choice but to prohibit the marketing of such
harmful products. A ban on tobacco products, argued the Court, would plainly
contradict congressional policy, which permits tobacco companies to market their
products with limited oversight by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). In
addition, the Court noted that Congress had, in enacting other tobacco-specific
legislation, repeatedly rejected proposals to grant the FDA authority over tobacco,
thereby demonstrating the intent to deny the agency such jurisdiction.
The Supreme Court’s decision ended a four-year legal challenge by the tobacco
industry to overturn the FDA regulation. The ruling made it clear that Congress
would have to enact legislation giving FDA explicit statutory authority over tobacco
products in order for the agency to assert jurisdiction. Lawmakers first drafted such
language in the 105th Congress and included it in legislation that would have
implemented the1997 proposed national tobacco settlement. That legislation was
debated and rejected by the Senate in 1998. Following the Supreme Court’s ruling,
several lawmakers introduced FDA tobacco legislation in the 107th Congress without
subsequent legislative action.2
The recent introduction of S. 2461 and the companion House bill (H.R. 4433),
sponsored by Representatives Tom Davis (R-VA) and Henry Waxman (D-CA),
followed months of negotiations in which lawmakers sought to balance the
competing interests of public health groups and the tobacco industry. Both sides
support giving FDA the authority to regulate cigarettes and smokeless tobacco
2 H.R. 1044 (Waxman); H.R. 1097 (Ganske); H.R. 2180 (Davis); S. 190 (Frist); S. 247
(Harkin); and S. 2626 (Kennedy).
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products, but they disagree on the central question of how much regulatory control
the agency should be given.
Public health advocates want FDA to have broad authority to take whatever
actions the agency considers necessary to protect public health. They argue that
giving FDA limited authority would invite tobacco companies to mount a legal
challenge to every proposed regulatory action. A weak FDA tobacco bill would, in
their view, be worse than no bill at all. The tobacco companies, on the other hand,
want to see certain restrictions placed on FDA’s authority. They oppose giving FDA
the authority to alter the composition of their products to the point that adult smokers
reject them. The companies want to reserve for Congress — not the FDA — the
authority to remove nicotine from tobacco products or take any other action that
might lead to the elimination of tobacco products.
S. 2461/H.R. 4433 represents a compromise between those two competing
positions. Leading public health groups and Philip Morris, the nation’s largest
cigarette manufacturer with 50% of the U.S. market, strongly support the bill’s
regulatory framework. The other major cigarette companies, however, have broken
ranks with Philip Morris and are opposed to the legislation. While they continue in
principle to support FDA regulation of their products, they fear that the sweeping
new regulatory authority outlined in S. 2461/H.R. 4433, including tight restrictions
on marketing, will help further consolidate Philip Morris’s dominance over the U.S.
market.
This report examines the legislative debate over giving FDA the authority to
regulate tobacco products and provides some analysis of S. 2461/H.R. 4433. It
begins with an overview of the FDA’s1996 tobacco rule that includes a summary of
the agency’s arguments for asserting jurisdiction over tobacco products. That is
followed by an analysis of the U.S. Supreme Court decision in FDA v. Brown &
Williamson, which overturned the FDA tobacco rule. The report then reviews the
1997 proposed national tobacco settlement, which would have codified the FDA rule
and given the agency explicit authority to regulate tobacco products as medical
devices. It includes a discussion of the FDA provisions in the McCain tobacco bill
(see Table 1), which was introduced and debated in the 105th Congress in an attempt
to implement the proposed settlement. The final section of the report summarizes the
provisions in S. 2461/H.R. 4433 (see Table 2) and discusses some of the key issues,
including preemption and the regulation of reduced-risk products.
FDA’s 1996 Tobacco Regulation
On August 28, 1996, the FDA issued a final rule aimed at reducing underage
smoking and use of smokeless tobacco products.3 The FDA rule included three sets
of provisions: restrictions on the sale and distribution of tobacco products to minors;
limits on tobacco-product marketing and advertising; and new labeling requirements
for packaging and advertising (see box on next page). The agency said that the
purpose of the rule was to reduce the easy access to tobacco products by minors. It
3 61 Federal Register 44396-45318; 21 C.F.R. Parts 801, 803, 804, 807, 820, and 897.
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also hoped to reduce the amount of positive advertising imagery used by
manufacturers to make their products appealing to minors. While the rule did not
directly address adult tobacco use, data from the National Survey on Drug Use and
Health (NSDUH) suggest that over time it would help reduce adult tobacco
consumption. NSDUH data indicate that most smokers take up the habit as
teenagers. Thus, reducing the number of new teenage smokers, who are needed to
replace adult smokers that quit or die, is expected to lower overall tobacco
consumption in the future.
Summary of FDA’s Tobacco Rule
Youth Access Restrictions
--Prohibited the sale of cigarettes or smokeless tobacco to persons under age 18.
--Required retailers to check photo ID to verify age of purchasers under age 27.
--Required that retail sales be conducted in a direct, face-to-face exchange.
--Prohibited the sale or distribution of individual cigarettes.
--Required the sale and distribution of cigarettes in packs of at least 20.
--Prohibited tobacco-product vending machines except in adult-only facilities.
--Prohibited self-service displays of tobacco products except in adult-only facilities.
--Prohibited free samples of cigarettes and smokeless tobacco.
Labeling Requirements
--Required cigarette and smokeless tobacco packaging to include the statement: “Nicotine-
Delivery Device for Persons 18 and Older.”
--Required cigarette and smokeless tobacco advertising to include the statement: “Nicotine-
Delivery Device for Persons 18 and Older.”
Advertising and Promotion Restrictions
--Prohibited outdoor advertising (e.g., billboards, posters, placards) within 1,000 feet of a
school or playground.
--Limited advertising in publications with significant youth readership to a black-on-white, text-
only format.a
--Limited advertising in audio format to words with no music or sound effects.
--Limited advertising in video format to static, black-on-white text.
-Prohibited the use of a non-tobacco trade or brand name as a tobacco product brand name,
unless that tobacco product brand name existed on January 1, 1995.
--Prohibited the marketing, licensing, distribution, or sale of all non-tobacco items and services
identified with a cigarette or smokeless tobacco brand name (e.g., promotional tee shirts and
caps).
--Prohibited gifts, credits, and coupons linked to the purchase of tobacco products.
--Prohibited brand-name sponsorship of sporting and other cultural events.
a The FDA rule defined significant youth readership as having 2 million or more readers under age 18,
or having readers under age 18 constitute more than 15% of the total readership.
FDA’s Assertion of Jurisdiction over Tobacco Products
Under the FFDCA, drug and device manufacturers must demonstrate that their
products are both safe and effective in order to gain FDA marketing approval. The
safety and effectiveness standard poses a difficult challenge for regulating tobacco
products, which are manifestly unsafe when used as intended. Critics of FDA’s rule
argued that in asserting regulatory authority over tobacco products, the agency would
have no choice but to ban them because of their harmful and addictive effects. In its
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rulemaking, the FDA conceded that tobacco products are “unsafe” as that term is
generally understood, but concluded that banning tobacco products was not a realistic
option because the health care system would be overwhelmed by more than 40
million nicotine addicts seeking assistance for withdrawal symptoms. Moreover, the
agency argued, banning cigarettes would create an enormous black market, which
might lead to the use of unregulated and potentially even more dangerous products.
The FDA asserted jurisdiction over cigarettes and smokeless tobacco by
concluding that nicotine is a drug and that cigarettes and smokeless tobacco are drug-
delivery devices under the FFDCA’s definitions. The statute defines a drug, in
relevant part, as “ ... articles (other than food) intended to affect the structure or any
function of the body.”4 In its rulemaking, the FDA drew on the extensive scientific
literature documenting nicotine’s pharmacologic effects on the body, including
satisfaction of addiction, stimulation, and sedation. The agency also concluded that
cigarettes and smokeless tobacco are devices that deliver nicotine into the body. As
with drugs, the FFDCA’s definition of medical devices includes articles that are
intended by the manufacturer to affect the structure and function of the body.5 Unlike
a drug, however, a device is defined, in part, as an article “which does not achieve
its primary intended purpose through chemical action.”6
In the absence of direct claims by the manufacturers about the intended use of
tobacco products, the FDA relied on other lines of evidence in order to meet this key
definitional criterion for drugs and devices. For example, the agency considered
evidence of foreseeability (i.e., a reasonable manufacturer would foresee that
consumers will use the product to satisfy nicotine addiction) and actual consumer use
(i.e., consumers use the product because they are addicted). FDA officials combed
through thousands of pages of internal tobacco company documents before
concluding that the manufacturers intended their products to be addictive.
Having made the determination that tobacco products fall under the statutory
definitions of drugs and devices, the FDA further concluded that these products are
combination products since they have components that are both a drug and a device.
Under the FFDCA, the FDA is authorized to regulate products that “constitute a
combination of a drug, device, or biologic product.”7 The agency has interpreted this
provision as giving it the discretion to regulate combination products as drugs, as
devices, or as biologic products.8 In its final rule, the FDA chose to regulate tobacco
products under the device provisions of the FFDCA because they offer the agency
greater regulatory flexibility than do the drug provisions of the Act.9
4 21 U.S.C. § 321(g)(1)(C); FFDCA Section 201(g)(1)(C). Emphasis added.
5 21 U.S.C. § 321(h)(3); FFDCA Section 201(h)(3).
6 21 U.S.C. § 321(h); FFDCA Section 201(h).
7 21 U.S.C. § 353; FFDCA Section 503(g).
8 61 Federal Register 44396, 44400 (1996).
9 Id. at 44403.
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The device authorities of the Act present a range of regulatory controls that
apply to all devices. The FDA stated in its rule that these mandatory controls would
apply to cigarettes and smokeless tobacco products. They include, among others,
adulteration and misbranding provisions, labeling requirements, establishment
registration, device listing and premarket notification, recordkeeping and reporting
requirements, and good manufacturing practices. The Act also requires the agency
to classify each device based upon the degree of risk it poses to the user as well as
other regulatory concerns and unique qualities of the device. The FDA indicated in
the final rule that it would classify cigarettes and smokeless tobacco as either Class
I, II, or III devices at some point in the future. The agency further stated that when
classification was determined, it would impose any additional requirements that were
appropriate.10
In addition to mandatory controls, the FFDCA contains various discretionary
provisions that apply to devices under certain circumstances. The FDA predicated
its authority to regulate tobacco products on one such provision regarding restricted
devices. The Act’s restricted device provision states, in relevant part, that “[t]he
Secretary may by regulation require that a device be restricted to sale, distribution,
or use ... upon such other conditions as the Secretary may prescribe in such
regulation, if, because of its potentiality for harmful effect or the collateral measures
necessary for its use, the Secretary determines that there cannot otherwise be
reasonable assurance of its safety and effectiveness.”11
In the final tobacco rule, the FDA relied on the FFDCA’s restricted device
provision when it concluded that, because of the harmful effects of cigarettes and
smokeless tobacco and in the absence of a reasonable assurance of the safety and
effectiveness of such products, it needed to implement additional restrictions on
tobacco access and advertising in order to prevent new users from becoming
addicted.12 As a result, the FDA used its restricted device authority to limit youth
access to tobacco products. Agency officials also concluded that the authority under
the FFDCA’s restricted device provision was broad enough to permit the FDA to
restrict tobacco-product marketing and advertising. It reasoned that without
advertising restrictions, the access restrictions would be substantially diminished if
10 Class I devices (e.g., elastic bandages, manual surgical instruments) present minimal harm
to the user and are only subject to general controls, such as manufacturer registration, and
labeling. Class II devices (e.g., cardiac pressure monitors, powered surgical instruments)
are those for which general controls alone are insufficient to assure safety and effectiveness.
In addition to complying with general controls, Class II devices are also subject to special
controls, such as additional labeling requirements, mandatory performance standards, and
postmarket surveillance. Class III devices (e.g., replacement heart valves, breast implants)
present the greatest potential for risk of illness or injury and are subject to the most stringent
regulatory control. They require premarket approval by FDA—a process that involves a
comprehensive agency review of their safety and effectiveness—unless they are
substantially equivalent to a device already on the market.
11 21 U.S.C. § 360j(e); FFDCA Section 520(e). Emphasis added.
12 61 Federal Register 44396, 44405.
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manufacturers were “free to entice children and adolescents to circumvent the access
restrictions.”13
Court Challenge of the FDA Tobacco Rule
The tobacco companies filed a lawsuit against the FDA and sought summary
judgment on the grounds that the FDA lacked the authority to regulate tobacco
products when such products are marketed and sold without explicit claims of
therapeutic benefit. The lawsuit further charged that the FDA exceeded its statutory
authority because the FFDCA does not authorize the FDA to regulate tobacco
products as drugs or devices.14 Finally, the companies argued that the rule’s
advertising restrictions, which limited advertisements to which children are exposed
to a black-on-white, text-only format, violated the First Amendment protection of
commercial speech.
U.S. District Court (Coyne Beahm, Inc. v. FDA)
On April 25, 1997, a North Carolina federal district court ruled in favor of the
FDA, holding that the agency had acted appropriately under the FFDCA when it
classified nicotine as a drug and tobacco products as drug-delivery devices.15
However, while the court upheld the rule’s access restrictions and labeling
requirements, it ruled that the FDA did not have the authority to restrict tobacco
advertising and promotion. The court permitted the two youth access provisions that
had taken effect prior to its ruling to remain in effect, but delayed implementation of
the rule’s other provisions, pending further action by the court.16 Both sides appealed
the district court’s ruling.
Federal Court of Appeals (Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. FDA)
On August 14, 1998, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit overturned the lower court’s decision and ruled that the FDA lacked
the statutory authority to regulate tobacco products.17 The court held that the decision
to regulate cigarettes as a restricted device rather than as a drug, in order to avoid
having to ban them, was “ ... obvious sophistry, [which] reinforces the conclusion
that regulation of tobacco products under the Act was not intended by Congress.”18
The court’s decision was stayed pending further appeal.
13 61 Federal Register 44406-07.
14 Coyne Beahm, Inc. v. FDA, 966 F. Supp. 1374 (M.D.N.C. 1997).
15 Id.
16 The two youth access provisions were: (i) no sales to individuals under age 18; and (ii)
photo ID required as a condition of sale for all individuals under age 27.
17 Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. FDA, 153 F. 3d. 155 (4th Cir. 1998).
18 Id. at 165.
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On November 10, 1998, in a 6-3 decision, the full appellate court rejected the
Administration’s request to reconsider the ruling.19 The Justice Department filed a
Petition for a Writ of Certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court on January 19, 1999,
requesting that the court review the Fourth Circuit ruling and find that the FDA has
full statutory authority both to regulate tobacco products and to issue all the
provisions of the 1996 tobacco rule. The Supreme Court accepted the case and
ultimately upheld the Fourth Circuit’s decision.
U.S. Supreme Court (FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.)
On March 21, 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5-4 decision written by
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, affirmed the ruling of the appeals court that the FDA
does not have the authority to regulate tobacco products as drug-delivery devices.20
Although the majority opinion acknowledged the public health threat posed by
tobacco use, the Court concluded that “Congress has clearly precluded the FDA from
asserting jurisdiction to regulate tobacco products. Such authority is inconsistent
with the intent that Congress has expressed in the [FFDCA’s] overall regulatory
scheme and in the tobacco-specific legislation that it has enacted subsequent to the
[FFDCA].”21
In reaching its decision, the Court examined the FDA tobacco rule in light of the
precedents that govern cases involving an agency’s construction of a statute that it
administers. As part of such a review, the Court must determine whether an agency’s
interpretation of its statute is entitled to deference and presents a reasonable or
permissible construction of the law. Chevron U.S.A. v. NRDC is the leading case on
judicial review of agency interpretations of statutes.22 This case involved EPA’s
rules regulating emissions under the Clean Air Act. In Chevron, the Court
enunciated a two-part test for judicial review of an agency’s interpretation of its
statute: (1) has Congress spoken directly to the precise question at issue? and; (2) if
Congress has not done so and the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to the
specific issue, is the agency’s answer based on a permissible construction of the
statute?23
Under the first part of the Chevron test, if Congress has spoken directly to the
question at issue, then the Court “must give effect to the unambiguously expressed
intent of Congress.”24 However:
If Congress has explicitly left a gap for the agency to fill, there is an express
delegation of authority to the agency to elucidate a specific provision of the
statute by regulation.... Sometimes the legislative delegation to an agency on a
19 Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. FDA, 161 F.3d 764 (4th Cir. 1998).
20 FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120 (2000).
21 Id. at 126.
22 467 U.S. 837 (1984).
23 Id. at 842-843.
24 Id. at 843.
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particular question is implicit rather than explicit. In such a case, a court may not
substitute its own construction of a statutory provision for a reasonable
interpretation made by the administrator of an agency.25
The second part of the Chevron test analyzes the reasonableness of an agency’s
interpretation.26 If an agency’s interpretation is reasonable, then a court may not
substitute its own construction of the statutory provision. However, deference is not
owed to an agency’s decision if it construes a statute in a way that is contrary to
congressional intent or frustrates congressional policy.27 With regard to challenges
based on statutory construction, the Court stated clearly in Chevron:
The judiciary is the final authority on issues of statutory construction and must
reject administrative constructions which are contrary to clear congressional
intent ... If a court, employing traditional tools of statutory construction,
ascertains that Congress had an intention on the precise question at issue, that
intention is the law and must be given effect.28
In FDA v. Brown & Williamson, the Court restated its view that when Congress
has spoken to the precise question at issue, Chevron deference is not due. In this case,
the Court examined both the FFDCA and other tobacco-related statutes, ultimately
concluding that Congress had clearly intended to preclude the FDA from regulating
tobacco. In reaching its decision, the Court relied on a number of factors. First, the
Court found that, because tobacco is a dangerous product and because the FFDCA
prohibits the marketing of products that have not been found to be safe and effective,
the statute would require the FDA to ban tobacco products if the agency did indeed
have jurisdiction over such products. Such a ban, argued the Court, would plainly
contradict the congressional intent reflected in the enactment of several pieces of
legislation that clearly contemplate the continued marketing of tobacco products.29
25 Id. at 843-844.
26 CHW West Bay v. Tommy G. Thompson, 246 F.3d 1218, 1222 (9th Cir. 2001)(construction
of statute not owed deference under Chevron because agency’s actions contravened
congressional intent and was unsupported by the substantial evidence from the regulations).
27 CHW West Bay, 246 F.3d at 1223. See also Anaheim Mem’l Hospital v. Shalala, 130 F.3d
845, 849 (1997)(reiterating rule that deference is not owed to an agency construction of a
statute that is contrary to congressional intent or frustrates congressional purpose).
28 467 U.S. at 843, cited in INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 480 U.S. 421, 447-448 (1987)(question
concerning validity of an INS interpretation of the Immigration and Nationality Act relating
to asylum was not due Chevron deference because it posed a question of statutory
construction for the Court to decide).
29 FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 134-43 (2000). Examples of
such tobacco-related legislation include the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act
(P.L. 89-92, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1331 et seq.); the Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act of 1969
(P.L. 91-222, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1331 et seq.); the Comprehensive Smoking Education Act (P.L.
98-474, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1331 et seq.); the Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health
Education Act of 1986 (P.L. 99-252, 15 U.S.C. §§ 4401 et seq.); and the Alcohol, Drug
Abuse, and Mental Health Administration Reorganization Act (P.L. 102-321 Section 202,
42 U.S.C. § 300x-26).
CRS-10
Thus, the Court held that Congress had clearly “intended to exclude tobacco products
from the FDA’s jurisdiction.”30
In addition, the Court found that the FDA had repeatedly denied that it had
jurisdiction over tobacco and that Congress had repeatedly rejected bills that would
have granted the agency such authority.31 Instead, Congress had demonstrated its
intent to create a distinct regulatory scheme for tobacco by enacting other tobacco-
related regulatory statutes, such as the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising
Act and the Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act.32 The Court
cited these tobacco-related statutes as additional evidence in support of its conclusion
that Congress had intended to preclude the FDA from regulating tobacco.33
Writing in dissent, Justice Stephen Breyer argued that cigarettes and other
tobacco products clearly fall within the plain meaning of the statutory definition of
drugs and devices because such products are intended to affect the structure and
function of the body. In addition, the dissent argued that the purpose of the FFDCA
—to protect the public health—also supported the conclusion that the FDA was
authorized to regulate tobacco products. For these reasons, the dissent would have
upheld the FDA’s jurisdiction over such products.34
The Supreme Court’s decision clarifies that the FDA cannot assert jurisdiction
over cigarettes and other tobacco products unless Congress enacts legislation to give
the agency unambiguous statutory authority over such products. Lawmakers first
drafted such language during the 105th Congress and included it in the comprehensive
tobacco legislation that was introduced in an effort to implement the 1997 proposed
national tobacco settlement.
1997 Proposed National Tobacco Settlement
On June 20, 1997, a group of state attorneys general announced that they had
reached an agreement with the tobacco companies to settle the state tobacco
lawsuits.35 Forty-one states and Puerto Rico had sued the tobacco industry seeking
to recover the costs, primarily Medicaid expenditures, of treating smoking-related
diseases. Under the proposed national settlement, the industry agreed to pay $368.5
30 FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 143 (2000).
31 According to the tobacco companies, beginning in 1906 and as recently as 1993, Congress
rejected any legislation designed to give the FDA jurisdiction over tobacco. First Amended
Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief at 6-11, Coyne Beahm, Inc. v. FDA, 966 F.
Supp. 1374 (M.D.N.C. 1997) (No. 2:95CV00591).
32 These statutes, both of which are administered by the FTC, require health warnings on
cigarette and smokeless tobacco packages and advertising, respectively.
33 FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, at 143-156.
34 Id. at 161-164.
35 The full text of the June 1997 proposed national tobacco settlement is available online at
[http://www.stic.neu.edu/settlement/6-20-settle.htm].
CRS-11
billion over the first 25 years, and $15 billion a year thereafter, to reimburse states
for their tobacco-related medical costs and pay for tobacco-control programs to
reduce tobacco use among teenagers. In addition to settling the state lawsuits, the
proposed settlement would have terminated all pending class-action lawsuits and
nicotine addiction claims, and provided the companies with immunity from such
lawsuits in the future.
The proposed settlement incorporated all the provisions of the FDA tobacco rule
and included additional restrictions on marketing and advertising, as well as new
warning labels. It also proposed amending the FFDCA to classify tobacco products
as Class II devices and give FDA the authority to reduce or eliminate harmful
compounds added to tobacco products or found in smoke. A summary of the key
provisions in the proposed national settlement is provided in the box on the next
page.
Public health officials criticized the restrictions the proposed settlement would
have placed on FDA’s ability to regulate nicotine. For example, any proposal by the
agency to reduce nicotine yields or eliminate other harmful ingredients in cigarettes
would have required formal rulemaking with judicial review, instead of the informal,
notice-and-comment rulemaking that is typically used by federal agencies to
promulgate regulations. Formal rulemaking, which is seldom used today, involves
trial-type hearings before an administrative judge, at which parties present evidence
and conduct cross-examinations. It is a rigorous and lengthy process that places a
considerable burden of proof on the agency.36 The FDA also would have been
required to show that the proposed modification significantly reduced health risks
and did not create a black market for unmodified products. Finally, the FDA would
have to wait 12 years before proposing to eliminate nicotine from tobacco products.
The tobacco companies defended those restrictions on FDA’s authority by claiming
that they represented reasonable constraints on an agency that was seeking to
eliminate its products.
36 Most federal regulations are issued under the notice-and-comment procedure established
by the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. §§ 551 et seq.). The agency publishes a
notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register, solicits public comment, and
incorporates in the final rule a concise statement about the rule’s basis and purpose. Courts
review such rules under the “arbitrary, capricious, and abuse of discretion” standard,
generally upholding an agency’s action if it is found to be rational, based on a consideration
of the relevant factors, and within the scope of the authority designated to the agency by
Congress. Formal rulemaking, by contrast, is a more rigorous and time-consuming process
that tends to place a greater burden of proof on the agency promulgating the rule. Under the
proposed national settlement, the FDA would have had to show “substantial evidence” in
support of its cigarette performance standards, which is a more stringent standard than the
arbitrary, capricious, and abuse of discretion standard.
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Summary of Proposed National Tobacco Settlement (June 20, 1997)
FDA Regulation. Incorporated the following provisions of FDA’s 1996 tobacco rule (21 CFR
897): prohibited sale of tobacco products to persons under age 18; required photo ID to verify age;
limited advertising to which children are exposed to black-on-white, text- only format; prohibited
the sale or distribution of promotional non-tobacco items such as hats and tee shirts; prohibited
brand-name sponsorship of sporting and other events; required explicit warning labels. Extended
the FDA’s regulation by banning all vending machines and outdoor advertising, and prohibiting the
use of human and cartoon images in advertising and packaging. Established strict regulatory
requirements for reducing or eliminating nicotine from tobacco products, including formal rule
making with judicial review and demonstrating that the modified product reduces health risks and
does not create a black market for unmodified products.
Retailer Licensing. Set federal standards for licensing retailers who sell tobacco products.
Retailers caught selling to minors would be fined or risk license revocation.
Industry Documents. Established a public depository of industry documents and created a three-
judge arbitration panel to settle disputes over documents that are determined by the industry to be
privileged against disclosure.
Non-Tobacco Ingredients. Required companies to disclose annually to FDA the amounts of all
non-tobacco ingredients added to each brand, and to demonstrate that each ingredient is not harmful
under the intended conditions of use.
Reduction of Youth Tobacco Use. Set targets for reducing the number of underage smokers:
30% reduction in five years; 60% in 10 years. Fined industry up to $2 billion a year if targets are
not met.
State Youth Access Laws. Required states to enforce their minimum-age-of-sale laws for tobacco
products or risk losing settlement funds. The provisions expanded on those of the Synar
Amendment.a
Environmental Tobacco Smoke. Restricted smoking in public buildings entered by 10 or more
individuals at least once a week to separately ventilated smoking rooms. Exempted restaurants
(except fast food), bars, private clubs, and prisons.
Industry Annual Payments. Required industry to pay $10 billion up front and annual payments
beginning at $8.5 billion in the first year, increasing to $15 billion in the fifth year, and remaining
at $15 billion a year thereafter. Payments would be adjusted for inflation and volume of sales, and
would be tax deductible. Total estimated payments over first 25 years = $368.5 billion.
Tobacco Control Programs and Research. Allocated funds to states to reimburse Medicaid
programs and provide health insurance to uninsured children. Provided funds for tobacco cessation
programs, counter advertising, biomedical research, FDA regulation, and federal, state, and local
tobacco control programs.
Civil Liability. Terminated all pending state Medicaid and class-action lawsuits and prohibits such
lawsuits in the future. Preserved the right of individuals to bring personal injury claims, but
prohibited punitive damages in claims arising from past industry conduct. Limited the total
damages paid by the industry in any one year to 33% of the annual payment.
a The Synar Amendment (42 U.S.C. § 300x-26) requires states to enforce their laws prohibiting the
sale of tobacco products to minors or risk losing 40% of their federal substance abuse block
grant funding. States conduct annual random, unannounced inspections of retail outlets to
ensure compliance with the laws. The Synar Amendment is administered by the Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, part of the Department of Health and Human
Services.
McCain Tobacco Bill (105th Congress)
The proposed national settlement was presented to Congress as a blueprint for
a comprehensive tobacco-control policy. Because the proposal included changes to
CRS-13
the FFDCA and other federal statutes, it would have required congressional
legislative action in order to take effect. Attempts by the 105th Congress to pass
legislation to implement the settlement ended when the McCain bill (S. 1415) was
defeated on a pair of procedural votes on June 17, 1998, after an extended floor
debate. Following the demise of S. 1415, the major cigarette companies resumed
negotiations with the states and, in November 1998, signed a contractual agreement
— the Master Settlement Agreement, or MSA — to settle the state lawsuits.37 The
MSA did not address FDA’s authority over tobacco products (see box below).
Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (MSA)
On November 23, 1998, 46 states, the District of Columbia, and five U.S. territories signed
a comprehensive agreement with the four major cigarette companies (Philip Morris Inc., R.J.
Reynolds Tobacco Company, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., and Lorillard Tobacco
Company). The companies agreed to make annual payments to the states in perpetuity as
reimbursement for past tobacco-related costs. The MSA required the companies to pay
approximately $206 billion over the first 25 years. The four states that were not party to the MSA
had reached earlier, individual settlements with the industry that called for payments totaling $40
billion over 25 years (MS, 7/3/1997; FL, 8/25/1997; TX, 1/16/1998; MN, 5/8/1998). Although it
bore a superficial resemblance to the 1997 proposed national settlement, the MSA was considerably
narrower in scope and did not require congressional action for its implementation. It settled only
the state and local government lawsuits. Unlike the proposed national settlement, the MSA did not
provide the industry with any legal protection from class-action lawsuits and claims brought by
individuals, labor unions, and private health care insurers. While the companies agreed to some
restrictions on cigarette advertising and marketing (similar to provisions in the FDA tobacco rule),
the MSA lacked the broader tobacco-control initiatives that were included in the proposed national
settlement and the McCain bill (e.g., retailer licensing, ingredient disclosure, youth tobacco use
targets and penalties, and indoor smoking restrictions).
Table 1, beginning on page 29, provides a summary of the major provisions of
the McCain tobacco bill. Although the measure was intended to implement the
proposed national settlement, it was tougher on the industry in several key respects.
S. 1415 would have cost the companies $516 billion over the first 25 years, an
amount significantly higher than the figure agreed to in the proposed settlement (i.e.,
$368.5 billion). It included stiffer financial penalties if the decline in underage
tobacco use did not meet the reduction targets, and it also provided the industry with
fewer legal protections than those negotiated in the June 1997 agreement.
The McCain bill also added a new Chapter IX to the FFDCA solely for the
regulation of tobacco products. That language, which was provided by Senator Frist,
drew extensively on the Act’s existing drug and device provisions in Chapter V, but
with modifications.38 By establishing new legal authority within the FFDCA for
37 The full text of the MSA is available on the website of the National Association of
Attorneys General (NAAG), at [http://www.naag.org/issues/issue-tobacco.php]. NAAG is
responsible for implementing and enforcing the MSA.
38 The Frist language incorporated, with modifications, the following FFDCA drug and
device provisions: adulterated drugs and devices (Section 501); misbranded drugs and
devices (Section 502); device manufacturer registration (Section 510); performance
standards (Section 514); premarket approval (Section 515); judicial review (Section 517);
notification and recall (Section 518); records and reports (Section 519); general provisions
(continued...)
CRS-14
regulating tobacco products, the bill’s sponsors sought to address the unique
challenges tobacco products present and avoid the safety and effectiveness standard
that applies to the regulation of drugs and devices. Under the new language, FDA
would be required to demonstrate that any proposed tobacco regulation was
appropriate for the protection of public health. Such a determination would involve
a consideration of the risks and benefits to the population as a whole.
The tobacco companies opposed S. 1415 and launched a $40 million advertising
campaign that helped defeat it. They portrayed the legislation as nothing more than
a massive tax increase to pay for new government spending. During the Senate floor
debate, which stretched over four weeks (May 18-June 17, 1998), lawmakers focused
on where the bill’s revenues should go, how to compensate tobacco growers, and
whether to limit the fees of private attorneys who were retained by the states.
Amendments were added to the bill to eliminate the so-called marriage income tax
penalty, boost funding for anti-drug programs, and cap attorneys’ fees. There was no
debate on the bill’s FDA provisions.
Public health officials supported many of the McCain bill’s tobacco-control
provisions, but were critical of the measure’s FDA provisions. They feared that the
agency’s attempts to implement the new law would be blocked at every turn by
lengthy legal challenges from the industry. Instead, they sided with the FDA’s
arguments for asserting jurisdiction under existing law (i.e., FFDCA’s Chapter V
device provisions). In its rulemaking the agency concluded that the device
provisions, which have been interpreted in case law, regulation, and agency practice
for over two decades, have established a comprehensive regulatory scheme that is
appropriate for regulating tobacco products.
Several other comprehensive tobacco bills were introduced in the 105th
Congress, though none of them saw any legislative activity.39 The bills, which were
supported by the public health community and opposed by the industry, would have
given FDA explicit authority to regulate tobacco products under the FFDCA’s
Chapter V drug and device provisions. In each case, the legislation amended the
Act’s definitions of drugs and devices to include nicotine and tobacco products,
respectively, and authorized the agency to regulate tobacco products using a standard
of protecting the public health. By avoiding having to regulate tobacco products
based on safety and effectiveness, the agency would have been able to keep such
unhealthful products on the market. For more details, see CRS Report 98-6, Tobacco
Legislation in the 105th Congress.
FDA Tobacco Bills in the 107th & 108th Congress
This section of the report includes a brief description of the tobacco legislation
introduced in the 107th Congress (2001-2002) in the wake of the Supreme Court
38 (...continued)
respecting control of devices intended for human use (Section 520); preemption of state and
local requirements (Section 521); and postmarket surveillance (Section 522).
39 S. 1492 (Kennedy); S. 1530 (Hatch); S. 1638 (Conrad); S. 1889 (Harkin); H.R. 3028
(DeLauro); H.R. 3474 (Fazio); H.R. 3868 (Hansen).
CRS-15
decision, followed by a summary and some analysis of S. 2461/H.R. 4433. Because
some of the legislation introduced during these sessions was drafted, at least in part,
in response to Philip Morris’s new position on FDA tobacco regulation, the section
begins by comparing Philip Morris’s position on FDA tobacco regulation with that
of the leading anti-tobacco organizations.
Competing Views on FDA Regulatory Authority
Philip Morris USA. In March 2001, Philip Morris, the nation’s leading
cigarette company with about 50% of the U.S. market, issued a white paper in
support of legislation giving FDA authority to regulate cigarettes.40 The company
explained that its support for such legislation did not signal a reversal of its earlier
opposition to the FDA’s attempt to regulate cigarettes as restricted medical devices.
Philip Morris opposed the FDA rule on the grounds that it would have left the agency
with no choice but to ban the sale of cigarettes. The company argued that cigarettes
simply cannot be found to be safe and effective as required under the FFDCA’s
existing drug and device provisions, a position with which the Supreme Court agreed
in FDA v. Brown & Williamson.
In the white paper, Philip Morris announced its support for legislation giving
FDA new legal authority to regulate cigarettes, not as drugs or medical devices but
in a manner that reflects the “unique challenges that cigarettes present.” Such
regulation, said the company, “would provide greater consistency in tobacco policy,
more predictability for the tobacco industry, and an effective way to address issues
that are of concern.... These issues include: youth smoking; ingredient and [smoke]
constituent testing and disclosure; content of health warning on cigarette packages
and in advertisements; use of brand descriptors such as “light” and “ultra light”; good
manufacturing practices for cigarettes; and standards for defining, and for the
responsible marketing of any reduced risk or reduced exposure cigarettes.”
Philip Morris set out in the white paper some fundamental principles for FDA
tobacco legislation:
! Tobacco regulation should reflect the unique health, social and
economic issues associated with such products. Cigarettes should
be regulated as cigarettes, not as a medical device.
! Regulation should not equal prohibition. Adults should be able to
make their own decision whether to smoke. The government should
continue to inform the public about the dangers of tobacco products
and discourage their consumption, but should not restrict an adult’s
ability to make a decision about smoking.
! Regulation should build on the framework of the MSA in working
to prevent youth smoking.
! FDA should require that ingredients added by the manufacturers do
not increase the inherent risks or addictiveness of smoking. The
agency should have the authority to impose mandatory design
40 The Philip Morris white paper on FDA tobacco regulation is available online at
[http://www.pmusa.com/policies_practices/legislation_regulation/fda_tobacco.asp].
CRS-16
changes to cigarettes to help reduce harm, provided the changes do
not significantly diminish adult smokers’ enjoyment of the product.
! Regulation should define reduced exposure and reduced risk
products and establish guidelines for communications about such
products in a way that is consistent and accurate and does not
encourage smoking or discourage quitting.
! FDA should continue to address the broad issues of disclosure (e.g.,
the content of warning labels, information about ingredients and
smoke constituents) so that adults smokers remain informed about
health risks.
The overarching concern for Philip Morris is that any new legislation must
recognize cigarettes as legal products and respect the decision of adults to smoke.
The company has indicated that it opposes any proposals that would give FDA the
authority to ban cigarettes outright or to achieve a de facto prohibition by imposing
ever-lower tar and nicotine yields that would render the product unpalatable to adult
smokers. Such product changes, argues the company, would drive smokers towards
illicit, unregulated products, where there are no standards for ingredients or tar and
nicotine levels. Interestingly, FDA used a similar line of reasoning in developing the
tobacco rule when it concluded that banning tobacco products under the FFDCA’s
drug and device provisions was not a realistic option. The agency reasoned that a ban
on cigarettes would encourage cigarette smuggling and the development of a black
market supplying smokers with unregulated and potentially more dangerous products.
While Philip Morris has been actively lobbying for FDA tobacco legislation, the
other three major cigarette companies—R. J. Reynolds, Brown & Williamson, and
Lorillard—have criticized the various legislative proposals. Like Philip Morris, R.
J. Reynolds and Lorillard both support “reasonable” FDA regulation of cigarettes,
provided they are regulated as cigarettes under new legal authority, and not as drugs
and devices under existing law. The companies believe that any new regulation must
preserve the rights of adults to choose and purchase a wide range of cigarettes brands.
But they also stress the importance of maintaining a level playing field upon which
manufacturers can compete for the business of adult smokers. This final point
appears to lie at the heart of their opposition to the proposed legislation. All three
companies, which together account for about 43% of the U.S. cigarette market, fear
that sweeping new regulation of their products, including tight restrictions on
marketing, will be to Philip Morris’s advantage, allowing the nation’s number one
cigarette manufacturer to lock in its leading market share. They worry that new
restrictions on advertising would force consumers to rely on brand recognition and
product placement, which would give industry-leader Philip Morris an advantage.41
Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. Working in partnership with the
nation’s leading anti-tobacco organizations, including the American Lung
Association and the American Cancer Society, the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
41 For a discussion of company positions on FDA regulation, go to each company’s website:
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company [http://www.rjrt.com/TI/TIregulation_Position.asp];
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation [http://www.bw.com/Index_sub2.cfm?ID=4];
Lorillard Tobacco Company [http://www.lorillard.com].
CRS-17
has developed its own set of core elements that it believes must be incorporated in
legislation giving FDA authority to regulate tobacco products.42 While the Campaign
and Philip Morris appear to be in general agreement on several areas over which
FDA should be granted authority (e.g., youth access and marketing, ingredient testing
and disclosure, good manufacturing practice, and reduced risk products), they
fundamentally disagree on whether any limitations should be placed on that authority.
Speaking for the anti-tobacco community at large, the Campaign argues that FDA
should be granted broad and unrestricted regulatory authority to take those actions
it deems necessary to protect the public health. In contrast to Philip Morris’s position
on FDA regulatory authority, the Campaign insists on the following:
! New FDA authority to regulate tobacco products should, as much as
possible, be comparable to the agency’s existing authority over
other consumer products.
! Tobacco products should be regulated based on a “protection of
public health standard” that aims to reduce tobacco-related health
risks to the population as a whole. This standard would require a
determination of the impact of a product change or new rule on
overall tobacco use, including whether it encourages tobacco use or
discourages quitting.
! FDA should have the authority to evaluate scientifically and, through
a notice-and-comment rulemaking process, decide whether to reduce
or eliminate harmful and addictive components of all tobacco
products in order to protect the public health.
107th Congress
Philip Morris released its white paper early in the 107th Congress. Several FDA
tobacco bills were introduced in that Congress, none of which saw any legislative
action. Four bills (i.e., S. 190 (Frist), S. 2626 (Kennedy), S. 2764 (Miller), and H.R.
2180 (Tom Davis)) adopted the same approach as the McCain legislation. They
would have created a new FFDCA Chapter IX solely for the regulation of tobacco
products. Senator Kennedy’s bill (S. 2626) was almost identical to the FDA
provisions in the McCain bill. The three other bills included many of the same
provisions. However, they contained a few small but significant changes that were
intended to address industry concerns over the extent of FDA’s regulatory control.
For example, all three measures specified that FDA could not compel the industry to
change the composition of its products in ways that would render them “unacceptable
for adult consumption.” They also required the agency to show that any proposal to
restrict the sale, distribution, advertising, and promotion of tobacco products was
based on a determination that such regulation “would be appropriate for the
prevention or, or decrease in, the use of tobacco products by children ....” Finally,
all three measures reserved for Congress—not FDA—the authority to eliminate
nicotine or ban tobacco products.
42 The Campaign’s list of key elements of any legislation giving FDA authority to regulate
tobacco products is available online at [http://tobaccofreekids.org/research/factsheets/
pdf/0181.pdf].
CRS-18
In addition to giving FDA new regulatory authority over tobacco products, H.R.
2180 also contained restrictions on youth access, advertising, and marketing that
were broadly similar to those included in the McCain bill. The provisions in H.R.
2180 were subsequently incorporated into Representative McIntyre’s bill (H.R. 3940)
to eliminate tobacco quotas and the price support loan program and compensate
quota owners and active growers. S. 2764 also contained substantially similar buyout
provisions.
The three remaining FDA tobacco bills introduced in the 107th Congress (i.e.,
S. 247 (Harkin), H.R. 1044 (Waxman), and H.R. 1097 (Ganske)), rather than creating
new legal authority for regulating tobacco products, would have given FDA the
authority to regulate tobacco products as drug-delivery devices under Chapter V of
the FFDCA. This approach was favored by some public health advocates, but
strongly opposed by the industry. As with the earlier versions introduced during the
105th Congress, each of these bills merely amended the definitions of drugs and
devices to include nicotine and tobacco products, respectively, and specified that
tobacco regulation would be based on a general standard of protecting the public
health. Additionally, the three measures would have made effective all the
provisions of the 1996 FDA tobacco rule.
108th Congress
At the beginning of the 108th Congress, Representatives McIntyre and Tom
Davis reintroduced their tobacco legislation (H.R. 140). The measure combined a
buyout for quota owners and active growers with FDA regulatory authority. H.R.
140 was supported by Philip Morris but opposed by the public health community.
In the Senate, negotiations among members of the Committee on Health, Education,
Labor, and Pension (HELP) to draft a compromise bill that had the support of both
sides came to a standstill in October 2003. Anti-smoking advocates and their
congressional supporters criticized the draft legislation for failing to give FDA
sufficient authority to protect public health.
Negotiations resumed in early 2004 and on May 20 Senators DeWine (R-OH)
and Kennedy (D-MA) and Representatives Tom Davis (R-VA) and Henry Waxman
(D-CA) announced the introduction of bipartisan, bicameral FDA tobacco legislation
(S. 2461, H.R. 4433). Both Philip Morris and the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
announced their “enthusiastic” support for the legislation. Table 2, beginning on
page 32, summarizes the key provisions in S. 2461/H.R. 4433. Where applicable, the
comparable drug and device provisions in FFDCA Chapter V are noted in the table.
Issues
S. 2461/H.R. 4433 represents an attempt to balance the competing interests of
Philip Morris and leading anti-tobacco groups. The legislation would grant FDA the
authority to:
! restrict tobacco advertising and promotions, especially to children;
! stop illegal sales of tobacco products to children;
CRS-19
! develop performance standards that require changes in the
composition and design of tobacco products, such as the reduction
or elimination of harmful chemicals;
! prohibit claims about reduced-risk and reduced-exposure tobacco
products that are not scientifically substantiated or that would
discourage current tobacco users from quitting or encourage new
users to start;
! prohibit terms such as “light,” “mild,” or “low tar” that can mislead
consumers into believing that certain products are safer than others;
! require larger and more explicit health warnings on tobacco
products.
At the same time, S. 2461/H.R. 4433 explicitly states that one of its purposes
is “to continue to permit the sale of tobacco products to adults in conjunction with
measures to ensure that they are not sold or accessible to underage purchasers.” The
legislation states that FDA may not prohibit the sale of tobacco products to
individuals age 18 and over. Moreover, it provides that only Congress may impose
a new standard that would ban tobacco products or require the “reduction of nicotine
yields of a tobacco product to zero.” The following provides more discussion and
analysis of these and other provisions in the bills.
Restrictions on Advertising and Promotion. S. 2461/H.R. 4433 would
give FDA broad authority to regulate tobacco product marketing if it determined that
such regulation was appropriate to protect the public health. The agency would be
required to make that determination based on a consideration of the “risks and
benefits to the population as a whole,” including whether the agency’s actions would
discourage current users from quitting or encourage others to start using tobacco
products.
Philip Morris has in the past criticized that approach. The company prefers the
language in H.R. 140, which would permit FDA to regulate tobacco advertising and
promotion based on a determination that such regulation was “appropriate for the
prevention of, or decrease in, the use of tobacco products by [minors].” Anti-tobacco
groups believe that such a standard would make it virtually impossible for FDA to
act. They argue that because the industry denies that any of its advertising is directed
at children, it would challenge every regulatory proposal by the agency. Philip
Morris defends the language, arguing that it is simply a recognition of the fact that
the First Amendment, as currently interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court, “prevents
the FDA from prohibiting advertising directed at adults.” The company contends that
giving the agency broader authority to regulate the marketing of its products would
be inefficient because it would encourage FDA to develop regulations that would
never survive a constitutional challenge.
In order to place these arguments in context, it is helpful to review briefly the
U.S. Supreme Court’s decisions on government regulation of advertising and other
CRS-20
forms of commercial speech.43 In Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public
Service Commission (1980), the Court established a four-part test for deciding the
constitutionality of commercial speech regulation.44 First, in order to be protected
by the First Amendment, the commercial speech must concern lawful activity and not
be false or misleading. Second, the government must demonstrate that by restricting
such speech, it is seeking to further a substantial interest. Third, the restrictions must
directly advance that interest. Fourth, there has to be a reasonable fit between the
type of restrictions imposed and the government’s objectives.
Over the past 10 years the U.S. Supreme Court has issued a series of decisions
striking down government restrictions on commercial speech, including tobacco
product advertising.45 In Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly (2001), the Court found a
number of Massachusetts state regulations restricting outdoor and point-of-sale
advertising for cigars and smokeless tobacco products to be unconstitutional.46 The
Court determined that the regulations restricted speech more than was reasonable to
advance the state’s interest in reducing underage (i.e., illegal) use of tobacco products
and, thus, failed to meet the fourth part of the Central Hudson test. Banning all
outdoor tobacco advertisements within 1,000 feet of a school or playground, in
conjunction with other zoning restrictions, argued the Court, “would constitute a
nearly complete ban on the communication of truthful information about smokeless
tobacco and cigars to adult consumers.”47
Some public health law experts believe that the Supreme Court in its recent
decisions on the regulation of commercial speech has left public health authorities
with little room to craft tobacco advertising restrictions that meet both the third
(effectiveness) and fourth (extensiveness) parts of the Central Hudson test.48 On the
one hand, tobacco advertising restrictions that are narrowly tailored may not provide
clear evidence of effectiveness, thus failing the third part of Central Hudson test. On
the other hand, more sweeping (and potentially effective) restrictions may be viewed
as too extensive and not reasonably related to the government’s asserted interest, thus
failing the fourth part of the Central Hudson test.
In developing the 1996 tobacco rule, FDA created a set of advertising
restrictions aimed at reducing underage smoking and smokeless tobacco use that it
hoped would withstand a constitutional challenge. Whether the FDA rule would
have passed the Central Hudson test remains unclear. In FDA v. Brown &
43 For more information on the First Amendment and commercial speech, see CRS Report
95-815A, Freedom of Speech and Press: Exceptions to the First Amendment, by Henry
Cohen.
44 447 U.S. 557 (1980).
45 Ronald Beyer et al., “Tobacco Advertising in the United States: A Proposal for a
Constitutionally Acceptable Form of Regulation,” Journal of the American Medical
Association, vol. 287, no. 22 (Jun. 2002), pp. 2990-2995.
46 533 U.S. 525 (2001).
47 Id. at 562.
48 Ronald Beyer et al., supra n. 45.
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Williamson, the Supreme Court confined itself to a review of the agency’s
interpretation of its authority under the FFDCA. The Court did not address the
constitutionality of the rule’s marketing restrictions. It should be noted, however,
that the FDA rule included a ban on outdoor advertising within 1,000 feet of a
school or playground. In Lorillard, the Court found unconstitutional a similar
provision in the Massachusetts regulations.
Product Design and Composition. S. 2461/H.R. 4433 would not permit
cigarettes to contain any additive that is a “characterizing flavor” of the product or
the smoke, other than tobacco or menthol. The legislation would give FDA the
authority to develop product standards to reduce nicotine, reduce or eliminate other
harmful constituents, or otherwise modify the composition and testing of tobacco
products, if it determined that such regulation was appropriate to protect the public
health. Once again, FDA would be required to make that determination based on a
consideration of the risks and benefits to the population as a whole, which is the
approach favored by public health officials. Unlike some of the FDA tobacco bills
introduced in the 107th Congress, there is nothing in S. 2461/H.R. 4433 to prevent the
agency from requiring changes in the composition of tobacco products that would
render them “unacceptable for adult consumption.” Placing that restriction on FDA’s
ability to modify tobacco products had been a key requirement for the industry.
The authority to set product standards would give FDA an important tool for
modifying tobacco products already on the market so as to make them less harmful.
However, developing such standards may be a long and difficult process. More than
4,000 chemical compounds have been identified in tobacco smoke, including about
60 known carcinogens. Researchers still know relatively little about the precise
mechanisms by which individual compounds and groups of related compounds
contribute to the overall health risks of smoking. It may take years to collect the data
necessary to demonstrate that the reduction or elimination of a particular tobacco
product constituent will lead to an improvement in public health.
As part of the standard-setting process, FDA would also be required to consider
whether a proposed standard might lead to a “significant demand for contraband
products and other tobacco products that do not meet the requirements of the
[legislation].” Until more is learned about the nature of nicotine addiction, that
requirement may pose a significant challenge to any proposed reduction in nicotine
yield.
S. 2461/H.R. 4433 does not permit FDA to ban tobacco products, or to require
the reduction of nicotine yields to zero. The authority to take those specific actions
is reserved for Congress. As discussed earlier, the industry has argued strenuously
in favor of placing such restrictions on FDA’s regulatory authority. Companies are
fearful that the agency, left unchecked, could achieve a de facto ban by eliminating
nicotine and making tobacco products unacceptable to adults. The public health
community maintains that FDA should have unrestricted authority to take whatever
actions it feels are necessary to protect public health.
Reduced Risk Products. Both the tobacco industry and the public health
community are eager to establish a regulatory scheme for “reduced-risk” tobacco
products. In recent years Philip Morris and the other leading cigarette companies
CRS-22
have test marketed a variety of products that are potentially less harmful to the
individual user than traditional tobacco products. They include cigarettes made using
genetically modified tobacco, and cigarette-like products that deliver nicotine using
a combustion process that involves lower temperatures and a more controlled burn.
The companies want FDA’s approval to market these products without fear of the
agency taking regulatory action against them. FDA has in the past asserted
jurisdiction when cigarette manufacturers have expressly promoted their products as
beneficial to health.49
Public health advocates insist that FDA be given the authority not just to assess
industry claims that a reduced-risk product is less harmful to the individual user
under normal conditions of use, but also to weigh the risks and benefits to the wider
population. They are concerned about recent efforts by the smokeless tobacco
companies to market oral snuff and chewing tobacco as a safer alternative to
smoking. The companies see the growing anti-smoking sentiment in the country and
the spread of indoor (and outdoor) smoking restrictions as an opportunity to market
their products to smokers who have trouble finding somewhere to smoke and who
are considering alternative sources of nicotine. Epidemiological studies indicate that
compared to smoking cigarettes, using smokeless tobacco products exposes an
individual to less overall risk from a narrower range of diseases. But public health
experts worry that promoting smokeless tobacco as a safer alternative to smoking
will undermine efforts both to discourage youngsters from using smokeless tobacco
and to encourage adult smokers to give up tobacco products altogether. As a
consequence, there may be little if any overall improvement in the nation’s health.
Public health officials often point to the introduction of low-tar cigarettes in the
1960s and 1970s to illustrate the challenges of regulating reduced-risk products. The
companies were careful not to make any explicit health claims when they started to
market “light” and “ultralight” cigarettes, but the implicit message was that these
products provided a less harmful way of smoking and many smokers believed and
continue to believe that they are safer than regular-strength cigarettes. Light
cigarettes emit lower levels of tar and nicotine than regular-strength cigarettes, as
measured by a standardized smoking machine test developed by the Federal Trade
Commission and commonly referred to as the FTC method. However, the National
Cancer Institute (NCI) concluded that there is “no convincing evidence” that the
introduction of such low-yield products “resulted in an important decrease in the
disease burden” among smokers.50 Many smokers who switched to low-yield
cigarettes changed the way they smoked so as to maintain the desired intake of
49 The FFDCA’s definition of drug includes “articles intended for use in the diagnosis, cure,
mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease....” (Section 201(g)(1)(B)) During the 1950s,
the agency took regulatory action against cigarettes advertised as effective in preventing
respiratory and other diseases and cigarettes promoted as weight-reduction aids. Note: The
FDA regulates several nicotine replacement therapies to help tobacco users quit. These
products include nicotine gum, transdermal nicotine patches, nicotine inhalers, and nicotine
nasal spray.
50 National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Risks Associated with Smoking
Cigarettes with Low Machine-Measured Yields of Tar and Nicotine, Smoking and Tobacco
Control Monograph 13 (NIH Pub. No. 02-5074) (Oct. 2001).
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nicotine. They smoked more intensely by inhaling more deeply and more often and
by covering the ventilation holes at the base of the filter. This compensatory
smoking behavior exposed them to higher amounts of tobacco toxins.51
S. 2461/H.R. 4433 would prohibit manufacturers from marketing “modified risk
tobacco products” without FDA prior approval. The legislation defines modified risk
tobacco products as any product:
! whose labeling or advertising indicates, explicitly or implicitly, that
the product is less risky than other tobacco products or reduces
exposure to a substance in the product or its smoke;
! whose manufacturer has taken any action (other than through
labeling or advertising) that “would be reasonably expected to result
in consumers believing” that the product or its smoke reduces risk
or exposure; or
! whose labeling or advertising uses descriptors such as “light,”
“mild,” or “low” to characterize the level of a substance in the
product.
In order to gain approval to market a modified risk tobacco product, a
manufacturer would have two options. The first is to submit a reduced-risk claim.
That would require the company to demonstrate to FDA that the product, “as actually
used by consumers,” will reduce the risk of tobacco-related disease to individual
users and “benefit the health of the population as a whole.” Alternatively, the
manufacturer could assert that the product reduces exposure to a particular substance.
S. 2461/H.R. 4433 sets out detailed criteria for approving such a reduced-exposure
claim. Those criteria, based on recommendations of the Institute of Medicine,52
include determining that the exposure reduction is “substantial;” the substance to
which exposure is reduced is harmful; the reduced exposure is anticipated to lead to
a “measurable and substantial reduction” in harm among individual users; and
approval of such a product is “expected to benefit the health of the population as a
whole.” Applications for products that make exposure-reduction claims would be
approved for five years at a time. All manufacturers of approved modified risk
tobacco products, whether on the basis of a reduced-risk claim or a reduced-exposure
claim, would be required to conduct postmarket surveillance and report their findings
on an annual basis.
If enacted into law, the modified risk provisions in S. 2461/H.R.4433 would
produce immediate changes in cigarette marketing. Manufacturers would be required
to stop using terms such as “light” and “low-tar” on their low-yield brands. Those
brands would be permitted to remain on the market provided the manufacturers made
any other changes necessary to ensure that the products did not fall under the
definition of a modified risk tobacco product. For example, manufacturers have for
51 For a detailed discussion of the scientific and regulatory issues surrounding reduced risk
tobacco products, see the Institute of Medicine’s 2001 report, Clearing the Smoke:
Assessing the Science Base for Tobacco Harm Reduction, Washington, DC: National
Academy Press.
52 Id.
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years reported tar and nicotine yields (as measured by the FTC method) on cigarette
advertising and on some very low-tar cigarette packs. Because this information
implies that the product reduces risk or exposure, it too would have to be removed.
Under a separate provision in the legislation, FDA would be required to develop new
regulations for the testing, reporting, and public disclosure of tobacco product
ingredients and smoke constituents, including tar and nicotine levels (see Table 2).
Those regulations would replace the current FTC method.53
It is difficult to imagine a company gaining FDA approval to market a modified
risk tobacco product based on a reduced-risk claim, as least in the near term.
Demonstrating that the product, as actually used by consumers, will reduce risk both
to the individual user and to the population as a whole requires long-term
epidemiological studies. However, gaining approval for a new product on the basis
of a reduced-exposure claim does not require that the manufacturer meet such
stringent requirements. For example, the company would have to show that the
reduced exposure is “anticipated” to lead to a reduction in harm and that the product
is “expected” to benefit the health of the population as a whole. Approving modified
risk tobacco products under such criteria makes postmarket surveillance all the more
important as a means of monitoring the product’s actual impact on public health.
S. 2461/H.R. 4433 would also give FDA the authority to require the
manufacturer of an approved modified risk tobacco product to comply with certain
labeling and advertising requirements. Such authority could be used to place tight
restrictions on the ability of manufacturers to market their modified risk products to
individual tobacco users. Philip Morris and the other companies believe that they
should be able to provide adult consumers with information about reduced-risk and
reduced-exposure products, provided the information is accurate and not misleading,
to help them make an informed choice.
Preemption of State and Local Regulation. Another key issue in the
debate surrounding FDA tobacco legislation involves federal preemption of state law.
The Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act (FCLAA), which mandates
health warnings on cigarette packaging and advertising, includes the following
preemption provision:
(a) ADDITIONAL STATEMENTS. No statement relating to smoking and health,
other than the statement required by [the labeling provisions] of this Act, shall
be required on any cigarette package.
(b) STATE REGULATIONS. No requirement or prohibition based on smoking and
health shall be imposed under State law with respect to the advertising or
53 Over the past several decades, cigarette design changes have led to substantial reductions
in tar and nicotine yields as measured by the FTC method. However, these machine-
measured yields do not provide a reliable measure of the amount of tar and nicotine a
smoker inhales. Smokers alter their smoking behavior (e.g., increasing puff volume and
frequency, covering the ventilation holes with fingers or lips) to obtain sufficient nicotine
to satisfy their addiction. For more information, see National Cancer Institute, Risks
Associated with Smoking Cigarettes with Low Machine-Measured Yields of Tar and
Nicotine (Oct. 2001).
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promotion of any cigarettes the packages of which are labeled in conformity with
the provisions of this Act.54
The FCLAA’s introductory declaration of policy indicates that Congress did not
want “commerce and the national economy ... impeded by diverse, nonuniform, and
confusing cigarette labeling and advertising regulations....”55 To that end, the Act’s
preemption provision (1) prohibits additional health-related statements on the labels
of cigarette packages that are properly labeled in accordance with the Act, and (2)
prevents states and localities from imposing any other “requirement or prohibition
based on smoking and health” regarding the advertising and promotion of cigarettes.
The U.S. Supreme Court has issued two decisions regarding the FCLAA
preemption provision. In both cases, the Court explored the constitutional questions
that are raised when state statutes or common law causes of action impose
requirements that conflict with federal laws that may preempt such state action (see
box below).
In Cipollone v. Liggett Group Inc., the U.S. Supreme Court held that certain
types of tort actions that are brought against cigarette manufacturers under state
common law are preempted by the FCLAA.56 The case was brought on behalf of
Rose Cipollone, a lifelong smoker who developed lung cancer at age 57. She filed
a lawsuit against the Liggett Group and two other cigarette companies, accusing
them, among other things, of failing to warn her adequately of the health risk of
smoking and its addictive nature. In 1988, a jury awarded $400,000 in damages to
Cipollone’s family after finding Liggett negligent for its failure to warn smokers prior
to 1966 when the federal labeling law went into effect, and for advertising that could
be interpreted as a warranty for safety. On appeal, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Third Circuit ordered a new trial after affirming in part and reversing in part some of
the district court’s pre-trial rulings.57 The Supreme Court granted certiorari to review
whether or not the petitioner’s state law claims were preempted by the FCLAA.58
In 1992, the U.S. Supreme Court concluded that failure-to-warn claims are
preempted by the FCLAA because they require a showing that the cigarette
manufacturers’ advertising and promotions should have included additional, and
more clearly stated, warnings.59 Such a finding “constitutes a requirement ... based
on smoking and health imposed under State law with respect to advertising or
54 15 U.S.C. § 1334. The FCLAA requires the following four rotating Surgeon General’s
health warnings on all cigarette packages and advertising: (1) Smoking Causes Lung Cancer,
Heart Disease, Emphysema, and May Complicate Pregnancy; (2) Quitting Smoking Now
Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health; (3) Smoking by Pregnant Women May
Result in Fetal Injury, Premature Birth, and Low Birth Weight; and (4) Cigarette Smoke
Contains Carbon Monoxide. Id. at § 1333.
55 Id. at § 1331.
56 505 U.S. 504 (1992).
57 Cipollone v. Liggett Group Inc., 893 F.2d 541 (3rd Cir. 1990).
58 Cipollone v. Liggett Group Inc., 499 U.S. 935 (1991).
59 Cipollone v. Liggett Group Inc., 505 U.S. 504 (1992).
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promotion,” which the FCLAA prohibits.60 However, the Court found that other
types of claims that are not based on smoking and health, including fraudulent
misrepresentation and conspiracy to defraud, are not preempted even though they
might relate to advertising or promotion.
Federal Preemption of State Law
The preemption doctrine derives from the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution, which
establishes that the laws of the United States “shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges
in every state shall be bound thereby, any thing in the Constitution or laws of any State to the
contrary notwithstanding.”a In applying this constitutional mandate, courts have recognized both
express and implied forms of preemption, which are “compelled whether Congress’ command is
explicitly stated in the statute’s language, or implicitly contained in its structure and purpose.”b
Both types of preemption may apply to state legislation, regulations, and common law.
In the express preemption context, a federal statute will be deemed to supplant existing state law
to the extent that it contains an explicit provision to that effect, the scope of which is determined
by interpreting the language of the provision and analyzing the legislative history as necessary.c
Where express preemption provisions are not present, federal law may preempt state law implicitly.
There are several different ways to conceptualize the doctrine of implied preemption, but it is
often subdivided into three general categories for purposes of analysis: (1) federal occupation of
the entire field of regulation; (2) actual conflict between federal and state requirements; and (3)
state requirements that frustrate congressional purpose.d
These standards, however, are highly speculative in their application. Indeed, the U.S. Supreme
Court itself has noted that “none of these expressions provide an infallible constitutional test or an
exclusive constitutional yardstick. In the final analysis, there can be no crystal clear distinctly
marked formula.”e Thus, cases involving federal preemption of state law often hinge on the
particular factual circumstances of a given case.
a. U.S. CONST. art. VI, cl. 2.
b. Gade v. National Solid Wastes Management Association, 505 U.S. 88, 97 (1992) (quoting Jones
v. Rath Packing Co., 430 U.S. 519, 525 (1977)).
c. Jones v. Rath, 430 U.S. at 525
d. Sprietsma v. Mercury Marine, 123 S. Ct. 518, 527 (2002). See also: Hines v. Davidowitz, 312
U.S. 52, 61, 77 (1941) (regarding field and frustration of purpose preemption); and Florida
Lime and Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul, 373 U.S. 132, 142-143 (1963) (regarding conflict
preemption).
e. Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U.S. at 67.
The Supreme Court also addressed FCLAA preemption in Lorillard Tobacco
Co. v. Reilly.61 In addition to finding Massachusetts’ regulations on smokeless
tobacco and cigar advertising unconstitutional (discussed earlier), the Court in
Lorillard ruled that the state’s restrictions on cigarette advertising were preempted
by the FCLAA. Specifically, the Court concluded that the regulations did relate to
the “advertising or promotion” of cigarettes. It further concluded that the regulations,
targeted at youth exposure to cigarette advertising, were “based on smoking and
health” within the meaning of the FCLAA because “concern about youth exposure
to cigarette advertising is intertwined with the concern about ... smoking and
60 Id. at 524.
61 533 U.S. 525 (2001).
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health.”62 The fact that the regulations governed location rather than content of
advertising did not remove them from the preemption language, which covers “all
‘requirements’ and ‘prohibitions’ imposed under state law.”63 The Lorillard decision
clarified that while the FCLAA preempts the ability of states to regulate the
advertising and promotion of cigarettes, states retain the authority to regulate other
aspects of tobacco use and sales. The FCLAA, for example, does not preempt state
laws that prohibit sales to minors or restrict smoking in public places.64
The public health community strongly supports the elimination of the FCLAA
preemption language so that states could impose their own restrictions on tobacco
labeling and advertising. The tobacco companies, on the other hand, oppose any such
change, in part to preserve the uniform national standards currently in effect.
However, the industry also is anxious to preserve the FCLAA’s preemption provision
in light of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Cipollone. If Congress were to amend
that provision, such legislation, depending on the language, could either increase or
restrict the types of lawsuits that currently may be brought against cigarette
manufacturers on the basis of the warning contained on cigarette packages.
S. 2461 appears to attempt to accommodate both sides by preserving the current
language in the FCLAA preemption provision, while adding at the end the following:
(C) EXCEPTION. Notwithstanding subsection (b), a state or locality may enact
statutes and promulgate regulations, based on smoking and health ... imposing
specific bans or restrictions on the time and place, and manner, but not content,
of the advertising or promotion of any cigarettes.
Thus, states would continue to be prohibited from adding their own warning
labels to cigarette packages, but would be permitted to regulate certain aspects of
cigarette advertising and promotion, subject to any First Amendment challenge. For
the tobacco companies, the language in subsection (b) underlying Cipollone would
remain intact. In addition to amending the FCLAA preemption provision, S. 2461
includes a general preemption provision in the new FFDCA language that would
place certain restrictions on states while allowing them to regulate the sale,
advertising, and promotion of tobacco products (see Table 2).
FDA’s 1996 Tobacco Rule. S. 2461/H.R. 4433 would require FDA to
reissue the youth access and marketing—but not the labeling—provisions from its
1996 regulation as an interim final rule, subject to agency review and possible
amendment. The interim final rule would become effective after one year. Anti-
tobacco groups have criticized this provision, preferring language in other bills that
would reinstate the 1996 tobacco rule without delay. Tobacco companies, noting that
62 Id. at 548.
63 Id. Emphasis omitted.
64 The FCLAA preemption provisions apply only to cigarettes and do not cover state
regulation of smokeless tobacco and cigars. As discussed in an earlier section of the report,
Massachusetts’ outdoor advertising and point-of-sale restrictions on smokeless tobacco and
cigars were found to be in violation of the First Amendment.
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the advertising and marketing provisions of the rule have not been subjected to
constitutional review by the courts, may consider a First Amendment challenge.
Health Warnings. S. 2461/H.R. 4433 would replace the existing Surgeon
General’s health warnings on cigarette and smokeless tobacco packaging and
advertising with several new and more explicit messages (see Table 2). FDA would
be given the authority to revise those warnings, add new ones, and alter their format,
including, but not limited to, changing their size, location, and color. The legislation
would result in an immediate change in the design and appearance of tobacco product
packaging. Cigarette packaging, for example, would carry health warnings that
covered at least 30% of the front and back of the pack. As previously noted, states
would not be permitted to add additional health warnings.
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Table 1. Summary of McCain Tobacco Bill (105th Congress)
Topic
S. 1415 (McCain)a
Amendment of Federal Food,
Creates new FFDCA Chapter IX for regulating tobacco products. Defines adulterated and misbranded tobacco products. For each brand,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act
requires manufacturers to submit annually a list of the amounts of all added ingredients and a description of the content, yield, and form of
(FFDCA)
nicotine. Requires notification of modified products or release of new products. Requires annual registration of all manufacturers and biennial
inspection of facilities. Authorizes regulation of the sale, distribution, advertising, promotion, and use of tobacco products in order to protect
public health. Provides for good manufacturing practice regulation, subject to a tobacco product advisory committee’s recommendations.
Authorizes adoption (and revocation) of performance standards to reduce/eliminate nicotine or otherwise modify the composition of the product
in order to protect public health: mandates notice and comment rulemaking, including consideration of impact of performance standard on
consumption and development of a black market. Requires a one-year delay before new standards take effect. Requires two-year congressional
review of any proposal to eliminate nicotine or ban tobacco products. Authorizes the recall of products that contain out-of-the-ordinary defects
that pose serious health risks. Provides for the establishment of industry reporting requirements. Requires premarket approval of new products.
Provides for judicial review of regulatory actions to issue or revoke performance standards. Provides for postmarket surveillance. Defines
reduced risk product and permits marketing of such products. Permits state and local authorities to adopt more stringent public health controls.
[Section 101]
Marketing and advertising
Prohibits outdoor tobacco product advertising; prohibits use of human or cartoon images in advertising; prohibits Internet advertising unless
restrictions
site is inaccessible to minors; prohibits paying for placement of tobacco products in movies, TV, or video games; prohibits paying to glamorize
tobacco use in media that appeal to minors; prohibits promotional non-tobacco merchandise bearing brand names; prohibits brand-name
sponsorship of sporting and cultural events; prohibits use of recent non-tobacco trade or brand names for tobacco products. Limits size and
placement of point-of-sale advertising. Requires black-on-white format for point-of-sale advertising in facilities that are accessible to minors
and for advertising in publications with a significant youth readership.b Limits advertising in audio format to words with no music. Limits
advertising in video format to static black-on-white text. [Sections 1403-1405]
Warnings, labeling, and
Amends existing federal labeling laws to require new, explicit health warning labels in bold type.c Authorizes DHHS to revise warning labels
packaging
in order to promote a greater public awareness of the risks of tobacco use. Exempts tobacco-product exports from the new labeling
requirements. Mandates regulations for the testing, reporting, and public disclosure of ingredients and tobacco smoke constituents to protect
the public health. [Sections 301-305, 311, 1106]
Youth access restrictions
Prohibits sales to minors; requires photo ID if under age 27; requires face-to-face transactions; bans vending machines; restricts self-service
displays to adult-only facilities; allows mail-order sales subject to FDA review. [Sections 231, 1162]
Retailer licensing and registration
Requires states to license tobacco retailers. Establishes penalties for noncompliance, including license suspension and revocation. [Sections
231]
CRS-30
Topic
S. 1415 (McCain)a
State enforcement of youth
Requires states to enforce (using federal drug abuse block grant funds) laws prohibiting the sale or distribution of tobacco products to minors,
access laws
and to conduct monthly unannounced inspections. States must achieve 80% compliance by year four and 90% by year seven or risk losing
federal block grant funds. Repeals Synar Amendment.d [Sections 231-233]
Underage tobacco-use targets
Mandates an annual survey to determine the percentage of individuals under age 18 who used a tobacco product in the past 30 days, and the
percentage who used each brand in the past 30 days. Sets reduction targets for underage use of cigarettes (by 40% in five years and 67% in
10 years) and smokeless tobacco products (by 25% in five years and 45% in 10 years). [Sections 201-204]
Industry penalties
Mandates industry-wide and manufacturer-specific penalties (not tax-deductible) if reduction targets for underage use are not met. Industry-
wide penalties capped at $2 billion a year; manufacturer-specific penalties capped at $5 billion a year. [Sections 205-206]
Smoking restrictions in public
Restricts smoking in public facilities (i.e., those entered by 10 or more individuals at least one day a week), including federally owned or leased
facilities
buildings, to enclosed, separately ventilated, designated smoking areas. Specifies that employees may not be required to enter smoking areas.
Exempts restaurants (other than fast food), bars, private clubs, hotel guest rooms, casinos, bingo parlors, tobacco outlets, and prisons. States
may opt out if they have a similar or more stringent law of their own. Allows state and local governments to enact stricter laws. [Sections 501-
507]
Industry payments to National
Establishes National Tobacco Trust Fund. Mandates tax-deductible industry payments into Trust Fund. Annual payments subject to inflation
Tobacco Trust Fund
adjustment beginning in the sixth year, and subject to a volume-of-sales adjustment beginning in 2002. Total net revenue over first 25 years
= $516 billion (estimated by Congressional Budget Office). [Sections 401-406]
State reimbursement and
Allocates 40% of the amount in the Trust Fund to reimburse states for smoking-related medical costs, 22% for tobacco-control programs, 22%
allocation of trust funds
for biomedical research, and 16% to provide financial assistance to tobacco farmers. [Sections 451-455]
Consent decree
Requires manufacturers, states, and the federal government to enter into voluntary, but legally binding consent decrees to enforce many of the
provisions of the Act (e.g., FDA regulatory authority, document disclosure, advertising and point-of-sale restrictions, annual payments).
Excludes from annual liability cap (see below) any company that violates the provisions of the Act. [Sections 1402-1405]
Attorneys’ fees
Establishes a three-person arbitration panel to determine and award plaintiff attorneys’ fees and expenses. Awards to be paid by participating
manufacturers. Limits fees to $4,000/hr. [Section 1413]
Legal immunity
Allows states to settle their lawsuits in return for funding from the Trust Fund, or opt to continue with their lawsuits and forgo payments from
the Trust Fund. Settles smokers’ class-action lawsuits and prohibits addiction claims. Caps total annual liability at $8 billion. Modifies rule
of evidence to establish an evidentiary presumption that nicotine is addictive and certain diseases are caused by tobacco use. [Sections 1406-
1412]
CRS-31
Topic
S. 1415 (McCain)a
Industry documents
Establishes a public tobacco document depository. Requires manufacturers to submit to FDA all documents specified in the Act. Requires
manufacturers to make a separate submission (with accompanying detailed log) to a three-judge panel of all documents for which they assert
attorney-client privilege or trade secrecy. Requires panel to settle disputes over making such privileged documents public. [Sections 901-909,
1403]
Tobacco farmers
Incorporates two competing titles: (1) Establishes a $28.5 billion fund to provide financial assistance to tobacco farmers and their communities,
maintains burley tobacco price support program, replaces flue-cured quotas with nontransferable permits. [Title X] (2) Terminates the federal
tobacco price support program, establishes an $18 billion fund to buy out quota owners and compensate tenants. [Title XV]
Native Americans
Provides that the requirements of this Act relating to the manufacture, distribution, and sale of tobacco products apply on tribal lands. Exempts
tribal religious and traditional tobacco uses from the requirements of the Act. Requires licensing of tribal tobacco retailers. [Sections 601-603]
Preemption of state and local
Allows state and local governments to adopt and enforce any additional tobacco-product control measures. [Section 5]
actions
International tobacco control
Provides funding for international tobacco-control efforts ($350 million/yr). Prohibits use of federal funds to promote U.S. tobacco exports
or to seek removal of nondiscriminatory restrictions on tobacco by foreign countries. [Sections 1101-1107]
Smuggling
Requires all manufacturers, importers, exporters and wholesalers of tobacco products to be licensed. Mandates serial numbers and export labels
on packages. Requires manufacturers and distributors to submit a report for all tobacco-product export shipments. Strengthens and amends
Contraband Cigarette Trafficking Act to include all tobacco products. [Sections 1131-1140]
Veterans
Provides $600 million/yr for five years from the Trust Fund for tobacco-related veterans’ health care. [Section 1301]
a. Modified committee substitute bill, as amended during debate on the Senate floor: May 18 — June 17, 1998.
b. Significant youth readership is defined as having at least 2 million readers under age 18, or that readers under age 18 constitute more than 15% of the total readership.
c. (i) Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act (15 U.S.C. 1331), (ii) Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act (15 U.S.C. 4401).
d. The Synar Amendment to the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300x-26; 45 C.F.R. 96.130) requires states to enforce their laws prohibiting the sale of tobacco products to
individuals under age 18. States must conduct random, unannounced inspections of retail outlets to ensure compliance with the law. States risk losing federal substance abuse
block grant funds for failure to comply.
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Table 2. Summary of Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (S. 2461, H.R. 4433)
FDA Tobacco Regulatory Authority
(Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, Chapter IX)
FDA authority over tobacco
Creates a new FFDCA Chapter IX for regulating tobacco products, excluding any product intended for the diagnosis, treatment, or prevention of
products
disease, or a product for which a health claim has been made (unless the product is a reduced risk product — see below). Does not give FDA
regulatory authority over: (1) tobacco leaf, unless in the possession of a manufacturer; or (2) tobacco growers and warehouses.
Adulterated tobacco products
Specifies the conditions under which tobacco products are deemed adulterated, including (1) contamination by any poisonous or deleterious
substances; (2) preparation, packaging, or storage under unsanitary conditions; (3) failure to conform to good manufacturing practice requirements
(see below); or (4) the product is in violation of the requirements for modified risk products (see below). [Note: These provisions are similar, with
modifications, to the adulteration provisions in FFDCA Section 501.]
Misbranded tobacco products
Specifies the conditions under which tobacco products are deemed misbranded. For example, product labeling must not be false or misleading
and must include a statement of the percentage of domestic and foreign-grown tobacco in the product. Authorizes FDA to require by regulation
the prior approval of statements made on tobacco product labels. Prohibits FDA from requiring the prior approval of the content of tobacco product
advertising, except for reduced risk products (see below). [Note: These provisions are similar, with modifications, to the misbranding provisions
in FFDCA Section 502.]
Submission of data and
Within six months, requires each tobacco product manufacturer or importer to submit: (1) a list of the amounts of all added ingredients, by brand;
research documents
(2) a description of the content, yield, and form of nicotine in each product; (3) a list of the amounts of all potentially harmful smoke constituents,
by brand; and (4) all documents developed after the date of enactment of this Act relating to the health impact of current or future products. At
the request of the Secretary, requires each manufacturer or importer to submit any or all research documents. Requires prompt notification of
modified existing products and the release of new products. Within three years and annually thereafter, requires the Secretary to publish (in a
format understandable to a lay person) and publicly display a list of the amounts of potentially harmful constituents by brand. Requires the
Secretary to conduct periodic consumer research to ensure the list is not misleading to the public and, after five years, to report the results of such
research to Congress with recommendations for modifying or discontinuing the list.
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Annual registration
Requires annual registration of all manufacturers and provides for public access to registration information. Requires manufacturers at the time
of registration to provide a detailed product list, including copies of consumer information and product labeling. Requires registrants to file a
biannual report of any changes in their product list. Mandates biennial inspection of all registered establishments.
Requires a manufacturer within 90 days of introducing a product that was not commercially marketed as of June 1, 2003, to provide for FDA (in
a manner prescribed by regulation) its determination that such product is substantially equivalent to another tobacco product that was in interstate
commerce as of that date, and that such product is in compliance with the requirements of this Act. Manufacturers that introduced a product after
June 1, 2003, and prior to a date that is 15 months following enactment of this Act have until that date (i.e., 15 months after enactment) to submit
their report documenting substantial equivalence to a product commercially marketed as of June 1, 2003. (See Premarket Review below.) Permits
the Secretary, by regulation, to exempt from these requirements certain tobacco products that have only minor differences from preexisting
products. [Note: These provisions are similar, with modifications, to the registration provisions in FFDCA Section 510.]
General regulatory controls on
Authorizes FDA by regulation to restrict the sale, distribution, advertising, promotion, and use of tobacco products, if it determines that such
tobacco products
regulation is appropriate to protect the public health. Requires that such a determination be based on a consideration of the risks and benefits to
the population as a whole.
Prohibits limiting the sale and distribution of tobacco products to the written or oral authorization of a medical practitioner. Prohibits restrictions
on: (1) sales of tobacco products in face-to-face transactions by a specific category of retail outlets; and (2) sales of tobacco products to adults.
Authorizes FDA by regulation to establish good manufacturing practice (GMP) requirements, including testing raw tobacco for pesticide chemical
residues, subject to the recommendations of the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee (see below). Provides the authority to grant
temporary or permanent exemptions or variances to the GMPs. Protects trade secret information obtained by FDA. [Note: The GMP provisions
are comparable to FFDCA Section 520(f).]
Tobacco product standards
Subject to revision by FDA, prohibits cigarettes from containing: (1) an artificial or natural flavor, other than tobacco or menthol; or (2) an herb
or spice. Authorizes FDA to promulgate tobacco product standards to reduce nicotine, reduce or eliminate other harmful constituents, or otherwise
modify the composition and testing of tobacco products, if it determines that such regulation is appropriate to protect the public health. Requires
that such a determination be based on a consideration of the risks and benefits to the population as a whole, including the creation of a significant
demand for contraband or other products that do not meet the requirements of this Chapter. Requires the involvement of other federal agencies
and informed persons in setting product standards, and periodic evaluation of such standards. Mandates notice and comment rulemaking and
requires a one year delay before new standards take effect unless FDA determines an earlier effective date is necessary to protect public health.
In any proposed standard that determines a tobacco product constituent to be harmful, a party challenging such a determination must prove that
the proposal will not reduce or eliminate health risk. Reserves for Congress, not FDA, the authority to ban tobacco products or reduce nicotine
yields to zero. Provides for the amendment and revocation of existing standards. Permits FDA to refer a proposal to establish, amend, or revoke
a product standard to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee (see below). Requires FDA to so refer a proposal upon the request
of an interested person who demonstrates good cause. [Note: These provisions are similar, with modifications, to the performance standard
provisions in FFDCA Section 514.]
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Notification and recall
Permits FDA to notify the public about a tobacco product that presents an unreasonable risk of substantial harm to the public health. Compliance
with a notification does not relieve persons from liability under federal or state law. Authorizes FDA to order the appropriate persons to cease
distribution and, subject to an informal hearing, to recall a tobacco product that contains an out-of-the-ordinary defect that poses serious health
risks. [Note: These provisions are similar, with modifications, to subsections of FFDCA Section 518.]
Records and reports
Requires tobacco product manufacturers and importers to establish and maintain such records and provide such information as FDA may by
regulation reasonably require to assure that products are not adulterated or misbranded and to otherwise protect public health. For example, FDA
may require a report from a manufacturer that becomes aware of information that reasonably suggests that one of its products may have caused
or contributed to a serious unexpected adverse experience associated with the use of that product. Requires tobacco product manufacturers and
importers to report any product removal from the market or other corrective action taken to reduce a health risk or remedy a violation of this
Chapter. [Note: These provisions are similar, with modifications, to subsections of FFDCA Section 519.]
Premarket review
Requires premarket review of any new tobacco product (including a product in test markets) that is found not to be substantially equivalent to
products on the market as of June 1, 2003. Premarket review is not required if the new product has only minor modifications from a preexisting
product (which exempts it from a substantial equivalence determination). Defines substantial equivalence and specifies the types of information
to be included in an application for premarket approval. Requires the FDA, upon the request of an applicant, to refer the application to the Tobacco
Products Scientific Advisory Committee (see below). Establishes procedures for denying an application for premarket approval, and for
withdrawing or temporarily suspending such approval. [Note: These provisions are similar, with modifications, to the premarket approval
provisions in FFDCA Section 515.]
Modified risk tobacco
Requires manufacturers to obtain FDA approval in order to distribute and sell modified risk tobacco products. Defines a modified risk tobacco
products
product as: (1) a product whose labeling/advertising includes descriptors such as “light,” “mild,” or “low”, or that claims explicitly or implicitly
that the product reduces the risk of tobacco-related disease or reduces exposure to a substance; or (2) a product for which the manufacturer has
taken any other action directed at consumers such that they would be reasonably expected to believe that the product reduces risk or exposure.
Authorizes FDA to approve a modified risk product claim if the manufacturer demonstrates that the product, as it is actually used by consumers,
will significantly reduce harm to individual tobacco users and benefit the health of the population as a whole. In addition, FDA is authorized to
approve a product that makes an exposure-reduction claim for a five-year period (renewable), based on an application containing certain specified
types of information. Requires FDA to make modified risk product applications available for public comment and to refer them to the Tobacco
Products Scientific Advisory Committee (see below) for review. Establishes other conditions for approval, including the requirement that modified
risk product advertising and labeling enable the public to comprehend the product’s risk in the context of all tobacco-related health risks. Permits
FDA to require that manufacturers of approved modified risk products comply with other advertising and promotion requirements. Requires
manufacturers of approved modified risk products to conduct postmarket surveillance. Permits FDA to withdraw approval, after an opportunity
for an informal hearing, if it is determined that the modified risk claim is no longer valid. Requires FDA, within two years and in consultation
with the Institute of Medicine and other experts, to issue regulations or guidance on the scientific evidence required for assessing modified risk
tobacco products. [Note: Products for treating tobacco dependence, including cessation products, are not modified risk products and are subject
to the requirements of FFDCA Chapter V.]
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Judicial review
Establishes procedures for judicial review of: (1) a regulation establishing, amending, or revoking a performance standard; or (2) a denial of an
application for premarket approval. [Note: These provisions are similar, with modifications, to the judicial review provisions in FFDCA Section
517. Under Section 517, FDA must demonstrate that its actions are supported by “substantial evidence on the record taken as a whole.” However,
S. 2461 requires the agency to meet the less stringent standard of demonstrating that its actions are not “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion,
or otherwise not in accordance with law.”]
Equal treatment of retail
Requires FDA to issue regulations requiring retail outlets whose predominant business is selling tobacco products to comply with any advertising
outlets
restrictions applicable to retail outlets accessible to individuals under age 18.
Federal Trade Commission
Nothing in this Act (except where expressly provided) limits or diminishes the existing authority of the FTC to regulate the advertising, sale, or
jurisdiction
distribution of tobacco products. Requires the Secretary and the FTC Chairman to coordinate their tobacco regulatory activities.
Congressional review
Provides for congressional review of any rule promulgated under the authority discussed above, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.
Ingredient and smoke
Mandates new FDA regulations for the testing, reporting, and public disclosure of tobacco product ingredients and smoke constituents, by brand
constituent testing
and sub-brand, to protect the public health.
Preemption of state and local
Generally preserves state and local authority to regulate and tax tobacco products, but preempts all state and local requirements that relate to the
laws
following provisions in this Chapter: performance standards; premarket approval; adulteration; misbranding; registration; reporting; GMPs; and
reduced risk products. Does not preempt state and local requirements relating to the sale, use, advertising, and promotion of tobacco products.
Tobacco Products Scientific
Within one year, requires the Secretary to establish an 11-member Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee.
Advisory Committee
Nicotine replacement products
Instructs FDA to: (1) at the request of the applicant, designate nicotine replacement products as fast track products under FFDCA Section 506;
(2) consider approving the extended use of nicotine replacement products for up to six months; (3) consider the evidence for additional indications
for nicotine replacement products; and (4) consider relieving companies of premarket burdens under FFDCA Section 505 if the requirement is
redundant considering other nicotine replacement therapies already on the market.
User fees
Instructs the Secretary to assess user fees (payable quarterly) on tobacco manufacturers and importers to pay for the cost of FDA tobacco regulation
under this Chapter. Establishes the percentage of total user fees assessed each fiscal year to be paid by the manufacturers and importers of each
class of product (e.g., cigarettes, cigars, snuff). Caps the total assessment at $85 million in FY2004, $175 million in FY2005, and $300 million
in FY2006 (adjusted in each subsequent fiscal year to reflect inflation or the change in base pay for federal workers in Washington DC, whichever
is greater). Requires each manufacturer and importer of a given class of tobacco product to pay an amount in proportion to its market share.
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Illicit tobacco trade
Requires tobacco product labels, packaging, and shipping containers to bear the statement: “Sale only allowed in the United States.” Within nine
months, requires the Secretary to issue regulations regarding the establishment and maintenance of records by any person who manufactures,
processes, transports, distributes, packages, holds, exports, or imports tobacco products. Prohibits the Secretary from requiring retailers to maintain
records of individual customer purchases. Grants the Secretary access to all records if there is reason to believe that a tobacco product is part of
an illicit trade or smuggling or is a counterfeit product. Requires tobacco product manufacturers and distributors with knowledge of illegal
transactions to promptly notify the Attorney General. Requires the GAO to study and, within 18 months, report on cross-border trade of tobacco
products (including illicit trade) and tobacco advertising that is broadcast, transmitted, or distributed from the United States to another country.
FDA Final Tobacco Rule (August 28, 1996)
Requires the Secretary within 30 days to publish the 1996 FDA tobacco regulations (minus the labeling provisions in Subpart C) as an interim final
rule and provide an opportunity for public comment. The interim final rule shall become effective no later than one year after enactment of this
Act.
Tobacco Product Label and Advertising Warnings
Amends the existing federal labeling laws for cigarettes and smokeless tobacco productsa to require new, explicit health warning labels in bold
type.b Authorizes the Secretary to revise warning labels in order to promote a greater public awareness of the risks of tobacco use. Exempts
tobacco-product exports from the new labeling requirements. Retailers that are supplied with tobacco products in violation of these labeling
requirements are not liable, provided they do not sell or distribute such products. Authorizes the Secretary to determine whether cigarette
advertising and package labels should include information on tar and nicotine yield, as well as the levels of other smoke constituents. Permits states
to regulate the time, place, and manner, but not the content, of cigarette advertising and promotion.
a. (i) Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act (15 U.S.C. 1331), (ii) Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act (15 U.S.C. 4401). The Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) administers the cigarette labeling law, and administers and enforces the smokeless tobacco labeling law. The Justice Department enforces the cigarette labeling law.
b. For cigarette packaging and advertising, the new labels read: (i) WARNING: Cigarettes are addictive; (ii) WARNING: Tobacco smoke can harm your children; (iii) WARNING:
Cigarettes cause fatal lung disease: (iv) WARNING: Cigarettes cause cancer; (v) WARNING: Cigarettes cause strokes and heart disease; (vi) WARNING: Smoking during
pregnancy can harm your baby; (vii) WARNING: Smoking can kill you; (viii) WARNING: Tobacco smoke causes fatal lung disease in nonsmokers; (ix) WARNING: Quitting
smoking now greatly reduces serious risks to your health. For smokeless tobacco packaging and advertising, the new labels read: (i) WARNING: This product can cause mouth
cancer; (ii) WARNING: This product can cause gum disease and tooth loss; (iii) WARNING: This product is not a safe alternative to cigarettes; (iv) WARNING: Smokeless
tobacco is addictive.