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Recent News on the Keywords, fda regulation + house panel + tobacco , Related to the Article Below:

House panel endorses FDA regulation of tobacco products
Louisville Courier-Journal, KY - Apr 3, 2008
User fees imposed on tobacco companies would pay for the FDA's regulation of the industry. The legislation specifically bars the FDA from regulating tobacco ...
House panel backs FDA tobacco regulation
Louisville Courier-Journal, KY - Apr 2, 2008
Opponents said that the FDA already is having trouble regulating food and drug safety and that adding tobacco will create new burdens on the agency. ...
House panel backs FDA tobacco regulation
United Press International - Apr 3, 2008
The project would set up a tobacco oversight office at the FDA and would be funded by industry user fees. The bill has 220 backers in the House and 55 ...

eFluxMedia
House Panel Overwhelmingly Votes in Favor of Tobacco Regulation
eFluxMedia - Apr 3, 2008
McCain was one of the first to back FDA regulation of Tobacco in 1997, a year after the FDA asserted that it had authority over tobacco products. ...
Bill to Require FDA Regulation of Tobacco Wins Panel?s Approval
CQPolitics.com, DC - Apr 2, 2008
The National Association of Convenience Stores, a longtime opponent of FDA tobacco regulation, dropped its opposition this week after panel Chairman John D. ...
House panel approves tobacco regulation bill
JURIST - Apr 2, 2008
Shortly before that, former FDA Commissioner Dr. Mark McClellan said that the FDA lacked the resources [JURIST report] to handle tobacco regulation. ...
House committee approves FDA regulation of tobacco
NTV, NE - Apr 2, 2008
A House panel voted by a better-than 3 to 1 margin for legislation that would let the FDA reduce nicotine levels and require larger and more informative ...
House Panel Backs Tobacco Regulation
RedOrbit, TX - Apr 5, 2008
By NEIL H SIMON A House committee voted yesterday to give the Food and Drug Administration the authority to regulate tobacco. Proposals to give the FDA ...
FDA Tobacco Regulation Heads to Full House
Media General Washington Bureau, DC - Apr 2, 2008
By NEIL H. SIMON, Media General News Service By Mark Young WASHINGTON--A key House panel on Wednesday voted to give the Food and Drug Administration the ...
Bill to Force FDA Tobacco Regulation Moves Through Energy and Commerce
CQPolitics.com, DC - Apr 2, 2008
A House leadership aide said timing for floor debate is uncertain. Written by Henry A. Waxman , D-Calif., the measure would give the FDA authority to ...
Source: Google News
   
   

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress on Wednesday moved a step closer to handing the Food and Drug Administration broad new authority to regulate tobacco products, despite concerns voiced by many lawmakers that the agency cannot handle its current workload.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee voted 38-12 for legislation that would allow the FDA to reduce nicotine levels and require larger and more informative health warnings on cigarette packs. A Senate committee has already approved similar legislation.

Energy and Commerce Committee Republicans were divided on the legislation, with 11 voting for it. Those who opposed it said the agency has had enough trouble ensuring the safety of the nation's food supply and medicine.

"This legislation, if it becomes law, would require the FDA to take on a task that is enormous, complex and completely outside its regulatory experience," said Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, the ranking Republican on the committee. "It will almost necessitate a diversion from its core functions."

Barton said the Federal Trade Commission was better suited for the job.

But Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said the "unfortunate state of affairs" at the FDA did not mean the agency should ignore the harms of tobacco.

"It simply means that when we give the agency this additional responsibility, we also must give it the resources necessary to handle the job and to handle it well," Waxman said.

To address concerns about resources, the legislation calls for the assessment of user fees on tobacco companies. The assessments could initially generate $90 million this year. By 2018, that amount would increase to $755 million. Aides said the fees would be assessed based on market share.

Health groups have been highly supportive of the legislation.

"This bill will put a stop to decades of Big Tobacco marketing, aimed at addicting each new generation of young people to their deadly products," said Daniel Smith, president of the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network.

More than 400,000 people die from smoking-related illnesses each year. Rep. Jane Harman, D-Calif., noted that both of her parents died from lung cancer, and she asked lawmakers to consider the financial toll that additional smokers generate when they come down with smoking-related illnesses.

Proponents say various aspects of the legislation would deter people from taking up cigarettes or from using cigarettes that they may view as less dangerous because of their labeling.

The legislation would ban candy-flavored cigarettes, which attract younger smokers. It would also prohibit terms such as "light" or "mild" which many consumers mistakenly believe means the products are safer.

The Bush administration has voiced qualms about giving the agency responsibility for tobacco regulation because some people could get a false sense of security about the safety of tobacco products.

For decades, the FDA said it lacked authority to regulate tobacco so long as cigarette makers did not claim that smoking provided health benefits. In 1996, it reversed course and cited new evidence that the industry intended its products to feed the nicotine habits of the roughly 45 million Americans who smoke.

Tobacco companies sued, and the case eventually landed in the Supreme Court. In 2000, the court ruled 5-4 that Congress did not authorize the FDA to regulate tobacco.

Some smaller tobacco manufacturers endorsed the legislation after it was amended so that they would have more time to meet new testing and reporting requirements.

The National Association of Convenience Stores also said it would no longer oppose the bill, though the trade group stopped short of endorsing it. Lawmakers amended the legislation so that retailers getting orders to stop selling tobacco because they illegally sold tobacco to minors could have the orders modified or terminated if it's determined they took effective steps to prevent such sales.

Also, some lawmakers representing districts with a strong tobacco farming presence voted for the bill after it was amended so that products containing foreign-grown tobacco would have to meet the same standards applied to domestically grown tobacco.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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