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Bliley PM

Project Down Under Conference Notes

Date: 24 Jun 1987
Length: 33 pages
2021502102-2021502134
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Abstract

Presents brainstorming notes from meeting on ETS and related issues. Includes daily meeting itinerary. Offers suggestions for handling the public perception that ETS is a risk for non-smokers. Lists 116 solution ideas for the problem. Discusses ETS in the U.S. and elsewhere, studies done by Hirayama, and Repace and Lowrey, the Surgeon General's Report, ETS science, restrictions in the workplace, etc.

Fields

Notes

Focus Group

Company
Philip Morris Cos., Inc.
Type
Outline
Named Person
Albright, J.
Burson
Connoley
De Borchegrave
Dodgey
F.E.R.
Feinhandler
Field
Graham, F.
Hatch, Senator Orrin (Utah senator, involved in "Hatch agreement")
Hirayama
Iacocca
Koop, C. Everett, M.D. (Surgeon General ('81-'89))
former US Surgeon General (1981-1989)
Kuralt
Lee, Peter N. (TAC Biostatistician)
Frequently funded by the tobacco industry to criticize and discount published and epidemiological studies that linked between tobacco smoking and health damage.
Lowrey, Alfred H. (Repace's coauthor on important secondhand smoke study)
research chemist in the Laboratory for the Structure of Matter at the Naval Research Laboratory.
*Meyers, Matt, Esq. (name is Myers)
Mitchell, S.
Muskie
Nader, Ralph (Consumer Activist)
Consumer activist long renowned for a career of exposing corporate deception and wrongdoing that result in human harm.
Regan
Repace, James L., M.Sc. (Biophysicist; former EPA employee; ETS Expert)
Studies dynamics of secondhand tobacco smoke in public places
Robertson, John Graham "Gray" (PM, industry consultant)
1994 Long time ventilation consultant for industry. Proposed as a consultant to comment on Federal OSHA proposal on workplace smoking. See @healthy_buildings_intl
Rupp, John P. (TI Communication Committee, Covington & Burling lawyer)
TI Communication Committee
Schimk
Schmertz, H.
Spenser
Strauss, B.
Tower
Valenti
Waxman, Henry A. (U.S. Representative)
(D-CA) Was chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Health and the Environment in 1994.
Waylon, E.
Named Organization
American Cancer Society
CBS (Columbia Broadcasting System)
Center for Indoor Air Research (CIAR) (Industry formed/funded air research organization)
Nonprofit organization funded by the tobacco industry. CIAR was formed in March 1988 by tobacco companies "to sponsor "high-quality research on indoor air issues and to facilitate communication of research findings to the broad scientific community."
Coalition on Smoking and Health (Coalition on Smoking and Health)
An anti-smoking group representing the American Cancer Society, the American Lung Association and the American Heart Association (NYT 5/13/94).
Covington & Burling (Tobacco Industry law firm)
Tobacco industry law firm. Was involved in organizing the Whitecoat Project.
Detroit Free Press
Discover
Dow Chemical Co. (Marketed Nicoderm patch)
Dow Chemical is a 72% owner of its Marion Merrell Dow Inc. unit in 1994 (WSJ 7/29/94). Marion Merrell Dow markets Nicoderm brand nicotine patch, used to help people stop smoking (Reuters 5/9/94).
*EPA ( use United States Environmental Protection Agency)
Federal Trade Commission (Enforcement agency for laws against deceptive advertising)
Enforces laws against false and deceptive advertising, including ads for tobacco products. Ensures proper display of health warnings in ads and on tobacco products;collects and reports to Congress information concerning cigarette and smokeless tobacco advertising, sales expenditures, and the tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide content of cigarettes.
GF
Miami Herald
Monsanto
National Rifle Association (NRA) (Gun rights group admired by the tobacco industry)
The NRA is mentioned numerous times in the tobacco industry's documents as a successful lobbying group worthy of emulation. <i>Operation Downunder Conference Notes</i> (PM 1987) mention the NRA's "Make it Hurt" strategy (creating political risk for legislators where none otherwise exists). In a 1985 speech, Bill Murray of PM admires how the NRA has been able to motivate its members to action, something the tobacco industry had been unable to do.
NYT (New York Times - newspaper for New York, NY)
New York Times
Omni
Philip Morris & Co. Ltd. (Cigarette manufacturer, incorporated in U.S. in 1902)
Philip Morris & Co. Ltd.., was incorporated in New York in April of 1902; half the shares were held by the parent company in London, and the balance by its U.S. distributor and his American associate. Its overall sales in 1903, its first full year of U.S. operation, were a modest seven million cigarettes. Among the brand offered, besides Philip Morris, were Blues, Cambridge, Derby, and a ladies favorite name for the London street where the home companies factory was located - Marlborough.
PM Magazine
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. (Cigarette manufacturer (Camel, Winston, Doral))
Cigarette manufacturer (Camel, Winston, Doral)
*Tobacco Industry Research Committee--- TIRC (Renamed the Council for Tobacco Research (CTR))
Organized in 1954 as the Tobacco Industry Research Committee (TIRC), and renamed the Council for Tobacco Research-USA (CTR) in 1964.
Tobacco Institute (Industry Trade Association)
The purpose of the Institute was to defeat legislation unfavorable to the industry, put a positive spin on the tobacco industry, bolster the industry's credibility with legislators and the public, and help maintain the controversy over "the primary issue" (the health issue).
UPS
World Health Organization (Concerned with global public health)
International organization concered with public health worldwide
Region
Canada
China
Germany
Japan
Sweden
United Kingdom
United States
Keyword
Annoyance
Essen Conference
Environmental Tobacco Smoke ETS
Great American Smokeout
Lung cancer
Risk
Surgeon General's report
Passive Smoking
Smoke-Free society
Irradiated food
Thesaurus Term
accommodation
advertising activity
anti-smoking advocacy
indoor air quality
legal activity
product liability
research activity
secondhand smoke
smoking restriction
tobacco industry internal policy
workplace
public relations
cancer
Brand
Carlton (ATC)

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Page 1: 2021502102 Log in for more options!
PROJECT DOWN UNDER CONFERENCE NOTES Wednesday, June 24, 1987 8:30 A,M. Session We are here to do something radical. To look at a problem. To achieve a solution. Nothing should be withheld. Lots of things have not been done. The role of the facilitator is to get you to identify the problem and to arrive at a solution as a group. Between now and Friday, we will use the "interactive" process to focus on the issue, what has been done, how we are going to solve it. Expectations of group members. i. Some kind of discussion on passive smoking leading to PM or industry to come to public and. change perception. 2. Come up with a way to deal with the social/legal context. 3. No expectations on outcome. Will come up with a plan, but can't predict its effectiveness. 4. Come away with consensus and a big picture plan. 5. Action program, somewhat different from what's been done. MONDAY MORNING 9:00. 6. ETS not solvable with deductive reasoning. Some up with something company can get behind with $. 7. Monday morning 9:00 solution. Fits into larger context. 8. Development of policy, not just following TI. 9. More aggressive approach. 10. Entirely new, dynamic way of looking at problem. ii. Hope group will begin dialogue to understand problem, realizing it is not a problem that can be solved at 9:00 Friday. 12. Get realistic appraisal to top management. We will get temporary solutions, hope it is first step in longer way, we can win on issue. 13. (i). Define message to public. (2). Political approach. (3). How to isolate "gurus" here and in other countries.
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-2- We have to start, together, a long term process on complex problem. Problem in U.S. Industry is going down, ETS is contributing to that. -- 1972 SG first mentions ETS -- 1981 Hirayama -- 1985 Repace & Lowrey -- SG's report ETS causes cancer Research peaks in 1984, perhaps because scientific community feels issue is resolved. Increase in papers accompanied by increase in poor papers. Post-Hirayama is original research. Political, public opinion, mass media, science -- 4 areas of examination. 1984 Increase in stories on ETS. reportage. Public perceptions on ETS Scientific and political 1974-1984 83% of non-smokers and 62% of smokers now say "Yes, ETS is harmful to non-smoker." Are those 83% convinced? Smokers? Non-smokers -- yes. Hazard? Yes. Personally? No. Common perception. hurt non-smoker. Smoking hurts smoker, therefore ETS must Political 1970-87 Beginning -- elevators, now public places. perceive anti-smoking as a popular position. Legislators Overlay of graphs. steady growth. Media rockets up. Public opinion shows
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Survey -- 1985 Attitudes toward industry and smoking. Issues well defined then and exacerbated now, e.g. Repace N=5,000 figure. Perceived threat to health & safety. -- drunk driving 9+ -- hazardous wastes -- street crime -- drugs -- smoking 7.6 (not #i issue) Key subgroups: women much more likely to view ETS as harmful. Age -- older = more harmful. Same breaks on other perceived risks? Yes. Women are more concerned on all environmental issues than men. Cigarette smoke pleasant? 1% yes. Ask people to put it out? DANGER V. ANNOYANCE Far more intense feelings for annoyance than danger, especially among non-smokers. Annoyance factor is driving these numbers. (Sampling via "geodemographics" produces 40 groups that account for 90% of variance in attitudes.) Most likely to be annoyed and view ETS as harmful: -- pools & patios -- blue chip blues -- gray power -- urban gold coast -- Levittown -- single city blues -- God'~s country 80% likelihood of voting Least annoyed & least apt to view as harmful: -- rank & file -- money & brains (not ideologi- -- Hispanic mix cal) -- Norma Rae-ville -- shotguns -- old Yankees -- back country What about Black clusters? Rank & file, Black enterprise. more conservative. Southern minorities Cluster system developed via U.S. census data. Broke out groups, reanalyzed data using groups on 250,000 "block groups." (There are a number of block groups in one zip
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-4- code -- e.g., 9 clusters in one mid-Manhattan zip). Smoker & smoker friendliness -- Old Yankee rows -- Rank & file Graphs don't show much hope for us. Giving answer to survey and actinq on this belief are very different. What we did on receipt of this info: PM MAGAZINE. more than 7 million circulation. Idea was to create, maintain and educate a data base. Readership consists of 80-90 % smokers. Can identify geographically, politically, or by cluster. Base exists in our Richmond computer. Now time to survey readers to see if magazine changes attitudes. We can go to millions of people with low risk of making them enflamed. Annoyance -- people's noses haven't changed, perceived risk has. Disagree. Annoyance has changed in last 50 years. Content of tobacco has changed in last 20 years. Cigars/pipes more "annoying" than cigarettes. Question -- not that they are annoyed, but are they prepared to do something about it. Atlanta airport example -- long distance annoyance. Annoyance ---> chance to complain ---> more press coverage. Wednesday, June 24, 1987 10:07 A.M. Session John Rupp (Covington & Burling) Where we are In deep shit. Before '86, growing % of pop. said ETS harmful to non-smoker and jurisdictions considering, anti ETS legislation & Fortune 500 companies considering workplace restrictions.
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Serious credibility problem. ETS fixed on by do-gooders 1986 NAS report & SG"s report. WATERSHED SIGNIFICANCE. SG has been clever & successful on this issue. SG has tremendous credibility. Scientists not prepared to challenge. SG going toward smoke-free society. 1986 SG report central event we have to talk about. Can't stem the tide without addressing this report. Science of ETS. i. Our position: ETS not shown to be health hazard to non-smoker. 2. People should focus on whole of indoor air, if they are concerned. 3. We cannot say ETS is "safe" and if we do, this is a "dangerous" statement. Legal perspective. -- Most laws are invulnerable to challenge (NY is an exception). -- We won't be able to establish "the right to smoke." No legal basis for this "right." There are rights to privacy, union rights that do apply in limited fashion. -- No constitutional right to be free of ETS either. -- Common law (NJ Bell case) Schimp Mitchell somewhat of a danger. -- BASIC POINT: Courts not prepared to serve as arbitrators for public workplace smoking disputes. -- Covington & Burling get referrals on workplace cases. Frustrating. Not much can be done except bluff threats. -- Product liability. Only one case with workplace ETS at core (woman in California is suing a tobacco company). Statute of limitations defense. Not a threat like primary issue, but ignoring ETS product liability cases will be at our peril. Swedish cases not relevant because laws are different. If litigation was aimed at employer, would this have impact on us?
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Suit comes down to product. non-smokers. Against tobacco companies by Washington State case is against employer. We call actions against us product liability. Actions against employers still have serious implications for us. Schimk -- default judgment in NJ against NJ Bell. Product liability should be kept in box separate from suits against employers. ETS OUTSIDE U.S. Terrible trouble in Nordic countries. A. Cases & restrictions ("But sales are up!") B. Problems will spill over here. o Canada A. Spillover ("But we already have restrictions." B. Ad ban serious. C. Sales are up, but projections not goo. What is in pipeline. -- Scientists on our side pretty good, we need more. -- Gray Robertson Indoor air quality studies. -- Written material used fairly effectively. -- Center for Indoor Air Qual Research -- $1-2 mill in 2 years. -- Studies now funded. A. None a silver bullet. B. Most useful -- briefcase air sampling. -- Union support has been mobilized. No one resource is sufficient. of what we need. Together, we're still short Somebody has to say ETS is no risk. Has to cQme from somewhere. Research by Feinhandler corporate sociology (1986). I. What causes companies to establish no-smoking regulations? 2. What can we do? Top down model Management dedicated anti's (Not much can be done) Bottom up model Smoking an employee grievance -- easy to point to "displacement." Small group can cause major org. chnges simply be being vocal. "Cost" & "liability" may be issues.
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-7- Smoking policies reduce controversy (suggests accommodation strategy). Section #6 Program for "real world." In depth look at small number of companies. SG's report broke down arrangements completely. Salvaged by doing interviews off site. SG report galvanized situation. Two kinds of activities at PM to take issues to people which are now in place: -- Plug-in guns -- magazine, data base, etc. -- Issue-specific guns -- Essay contest on ad ban, etc. Management reacts periodically to news stories. Therefore, several months ago we were asked to create ads to "move needle" toward our side. Three types of ads. i. "Designer" campaign. Artistic photo & copy. "I think we can live together." "Faulty data." "I'm a responsible guy," etc. Geared to smokers & non-smokers. (noted here that copy has not been legally approved.) 2. "Rights" campaign. Subject standing outside restaurant, exclusion compared to that of minorities, prohibition. 3. "Science of ETS" campaign. Did focus groups. Groups liked #i best, liked #2 least. Quantitative research revealed #3 liked best, #2 worst. Therefore, we can't make a call yet, need more research to determine ad strategy. What constitutes "like" in above responses? Readability & acceptability = like. Can't use focus group to determine attitude shift. Use of our name carries some baggage, but replacing with long list of supporters is seen through immediately. On tests of name recognition, order was RJR > PM > ... TI. In Germany, if ad is aimed at smokers, you don't get non-smoker complaints. NYC issue testing. People accept tobacco company communicating with customers. Designer ads identified with by smokers, but confrontational approach needs to be fixed. Science ads not read, complicated jargon.
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-8- As we think through this, remember there are different ways of getting information across to different people. E.g., some people would like science jargon. Legal side. Discussion should remain open, there are legal problems, someone needs to say it. Matthew Meyers left FTC. Zealous anti-smoker. Big paper on health issues to change labels. Meyers now with Coalition on Smoking or Health. United to eliminate smoking, smart, dedicated and aggressive, has Koop's ear and those of Waxman, Hatch, etc. Knows ETS is anti's silver bullet. We are not dealing with a passive body. We are in a battle with other side which has been active for more than five years. There is a REAL ADVERSARY out there. Detroit Free Press, NY Times, Miami Herald all declared non-smoking news rooms. These are people who are spreading the news and their own attitudes have changed. PM Mag and ads are a way we can respond to this on our own ground. Business Trends -- 2% annual decline in sales in U.S. -- World production (accounted for by China} up. -- Japan down a bit. -- Internationally, price drives sales. -- Major company advertising up. -- Decline in U.S. not explained by price increase. -- Be careful of world stats. 40% is guess, e.g. China. -- In developed world, sales is a function of price. -- 24 markets = 90% of sales. Internationally, market is flat. Single great effect is big tax increase. -- If smokers get message that their smoke kills others, is this not something major? In U.S., ETS issue will have devastating effect on sales. E.G., parties, planes, etc. Smoking opportunities 24 hour pie chart. i. Sleep 1/3. 2. transportation. 3. workplace. 4. lunch. 5. work. 6. travel. 7. home. 8. dinner. 9. recreation.
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Rate of decline will accelerate if tax and ETS are linked. E.g., U.K. gov't increase. We are just at be~inninq of impact of ETS issue. U.K. a lab case. Decline largely a reaction to price. U.S. political perception of NO RISK to politicians on ETS issue. Therefore we have to hreate risk to politicians. German case -- point out (messages) to smoker who he is. Improve smoker's self image and isolate zealots. In U.S., everything becomes adversarial. Not so in Germany, Japan. U.S. hasmost extreme form of adversarial culture. Therefore, ads may not work. But we don't know that because it has never been done on scale of, say, introducing a new brand. Wednesday, June 24, 1987 2':00' P.M. Session A.M. Where things stand. P.M. What is the problem? i. Problem -- threatens number of smokers & number of cigarettes they smoke. 2. How to alter public perception that ETS is damaging. II 4. " " " 5. Is there a different problem? (Assume that #2 causes 6. Problem for smoking population -- nuisanGe/annoyance and risk accusations. And there are scientists, etc., who say it is a risk. How to do something for smokers. How to respond to scientists and risk issue. o Big, complex problem. A. Altering perception B. Changing underlying fact from "not proven." to ETS is not harmful to non-smoker. C. What are we going to do at 9:00 A.M. Monday morning? This is separate from above. Has to do with making people feel good about Philip Morris. D. How to make people (smokers and non-smokers) feel good about smokers.
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8. Problem is broader -- general decline in social acceptability of smoking (includes ETS). 9. Problem is political. Our bullets are technical. Bullets against us are lou.sy, but we don't have better bullets. Need long term science. What created perceptions is their science. Is there any fruitful science underway? Yes, in epidemiology and in monitoring, but next year to year and a half of science will be negative. 10.. Worst case scenario. How to support current smokers in face of overwhelming adverse information and publicity. ii. Short of some dramatic proof, perception problem will remain. 12. Basic problem -- There is an unbalanced perception that ETS is damaging. This leads us to operate from premise that ETS is not harmful. Questions become approach, how long, what resources to get message across. Bad public perception persists. PERCEPTION IS EVERYTHING. IT DRIVES PUBLIC POLICY. HOW TO ALTER PUBLIC PERCEPTION THAT ETS IS DAMAGING? If perception were changed, would laws be repealed? Yes, over time. Why we have problems. i. Lack of objective science. 2. Logic that if mainstream smoke is damaging, ETS must be too. ( Also Annoyance factor. Also problem in defining ETS. It is variable). 3. Anti's can state case in two sentences. We need 20 minutes. Our case: six claims, all rejected except respiratory health in kids and lung cancer. -- Kids: common sense response -- you don't hold babies over a charcoal broiler and you don't blow smoke in their faces. -- Lung Cancer: based on 16 studies, only 2 of which showed, statistically significant differences. If you remove Hirayama from group, NO STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT STUDY.

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