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OCR Page 1 of 3GVA - Tobacco, electric utilities are focus - 11/20/97
http://www.gateway-va.com/pages/news/tobac/1997/1120toba.hm
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Times-Dispatch
Gateway Virginia
Thursday, November 20, 1997
Tobacco, electric utilities are focus
Bliley says his first duty is to children
BY GREG EDWARDS
Times-Dispatch Staff Writer
Tobacco-
U.S. Rep. Thomas J. Bliley Jr. said yesterday that his first
Bliley
responsibility as a Virginian is to protect children as Congress
begins to examine the proposed settlement state attorneys general
and trial lawyers have reached with Philip Morris and other major
tobacco companies.
He spoke yesterday at Southern States Cooperative's annual meeting
at the Fairgrounds on Strawberry Hill in Henrico County.
Bliley is chairman of the House Commerce Committee, which
began holding hearings on the proposed $368.5 billion tobacco
settlement last week. The settlement, which must be approved by
Congress and the president, would pay for some of the medical costs
of smoking and for efforts to combat youth smoking, while giving
tobacco companies some protection from future lawsuits.
Of all the bills to formalize the settlement that he's read so far, one
introduced by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, appears to be the best,
although it's not without problems, Bliley said in response to a
reporter's question.
The Hatch bill would increase the cost of the settlement by about
$30 billion, set tougher penalties on the industry than the original
settlement if companies fail to meet targets for reducing youth
smoking and set aside $95 billion for research on smoking-related
diseases.
Because Bliley is from a major tobacco state and is chairman of the
Commerce Committee, his support could give the Hatch bill a big
advantage over other congressional proposals to finalize the tobacco
settlement.
"I am going to make sure we do what's right for America's children,"
Bliley told farmers and others attending the Southern States
meeting. But while the focus is on tobacco, the risks of alcohol and
drugs for children shouldn't be ignored, he said.
The settlement, he said, also should address the interests of tobacco
farmers and others who make their living from tobacco. He said that
a final settlement should ensure the right of adults to choose whether
they want to smoke or not.
Bliley, a longtime defender of the tobacco industry, surprised many
last week when he demanded that the tobacco companies turn over
documents sought by a Minnesota court. Supporters of the
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11/20/97 11:19:35
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