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Date: Friday, Aug. 23, 1996
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Jim O'Hara, (301) 443-1130
KEY ELEMENTS OF THE PRESIDENT'S PLAN TO REDUCE CHILDREN'S USE OF TOBACCO
President Clinton today established the nation's first-ever
comprehensive program to protect children from the dangers of
tobacco and a lifetime of nicotine addiction with the publication
of the Food and Drug Administration's final rule on tobacco and
children, and with FDA's initiation of a process to require tobacco
companies to educate children and adolescents -- using a national
multi-media campaign -- about the dangers of cigarettes and
smokeless tobacco.
This comprehensive and coordinated plan is intended to reduce
tobacco use by children and adolescents by 50 percent in seven
years. It builds on previous actions taken by Congress and others
such as the ban on television advertising and state laws to
prohibit the sale or use of tobacco by children. It follows
recommendations by the American Medical Association and the
National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine. Experts have
consistently recommended that the keys to achieving the goal are
reducing access and limiting the appeal to children. This
ambitious initiative accomplishes that objective while preserving
the availability of tobacco products for adults.
Reducing Easy Access by Children
Children and adolescents continue to have easy access to
tobacco products. In 13 studies reviewed by the Surgeon General,
minors were successfully able to buy cigarettes 67 percent of the
time. Of the nine studies of vending machines, illegal sales were
successful on average 88 percent of the time. The FDA rule will:
- Require age verification and face-to-face sale (except for
mail orders), and eliminate free samples, and the sale of
single cigarettes and packages with fewer than 20 cigarettes.
- Ban vending machines and self-service displays except in
facilities where only adults are permitted, such as certain
nightclubs totally inaccessible to persons under 18.
Reducing Appeal to Children
Tobacco products are among the most heavily advertised and
promoted products in the United States, with the tobacco industry
spending more than $6 billion annually. Children and adolescents
are widely exposed to and influenced by this advertising and
promotion. One study found that 30 percent of 3-year-olds and 91
percent of 6-year-olds could identify "Joe Camel" as a symbol of
smoking. Another study found that 86 percent of underage smokers
who buy their own cigarettes purchase one of the three most heavily
advertised brands. The FDA rule will:
- Ban outdoor advertising within 1,000 feet of schools and
publicly-owned playgrounds. Permit black-and-white text-
only advertising for all other outdoor advertising,
including billboards, signs inside and outside of buses,
and all point-of-sale advertising. Advertising inside
"adult only" facilities like nightclubs can use color and
imagery.
- Permit black-and-white text-only advertising in publications
with significant youth readership (under 18). Significant
readership means more than 15 percent or more than 2 million.
There are no restrictions on print advertising below these
thresholds.
- Prohibit sale or giveaway of products like caps or gym bags
that carry cigarette or smokeless tobacco product brand names
or logos.
- Prohibit brand-name sponsorship of sporting (including teams
and entries) or entertainment events, but permit it in the
corporate name.
Educating Children About Real Dangers of Smoking
In addition to the rule and its provisions aimed at reducing
access and appeal, the FDA will propose to require each of the six
tobacco companies with significant sales to children to educate
young people about the real health dangers associated with the use
of tobacco products. This national multi-media campaign, including
television spots, would be monitored for its effectiveness.
The FDA will initiate the process under Section 518 of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, which allows the FDA to
require companies to notify consumers about the unreasonable health
risks of their products.
Focusing on Children
In reviewing the more than 95,000 individual comments received
from the public during the comment period, the FDA made a number of
changes aimed at more narrowly targeting the rule to its goal:
reducing the use of tobacco products among children and adolescents
under 18. Changes include:
- Vending machines and self-service displays will be
allowed in facilities where only adults are permitted.
By removing vending machines and self-service displays
from sites accessible to children, the rule's goal will
still be achieved, and the Agency will closely monitor
the effectiveness of this provision for two years to
determine if additional restrictions are necessary.
- Mail-order sales will be permitted. This provision will allow
adults in rural or isolated areas to have access to these
products. There was little evidence presented that children
use mail order at the present time, but the Agency will
monitor future trends.
- Advertising using color and imagery will be permitted in
"adult only" facilities totally inaccessible to persons
under 18, provided that the advertising is not visible
from the outside and is not removable.
Some state and local laws that are different from, or in
addition to, this rule will be preempted under this rule. However,
the Agency is establishing an expedited process for state and local
government to apply for waivers for more stringent laws or
regulations. The FDA believes the requirements it is establishing
set an appropriate floor but as a matter of policy, the Agency
should leave open the possibility for state or local governments to
adopt more restrictive requirements. State laws not related to the
rule -- such as local bans on smoking in restaurants -- will not be
affected.
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