Lorillard
Statement of Congressman Steve Neal Before the Committee on Ways and Means on Health Care Reform Financing 931118
Fields
- Author
- Neal, S.
- Type
- TRAN, TRANSCRIPT
- Area
- SPEARS,ALEXANDER/EXEC CONF ROOM STO
- Alias
- 89735036/89735037
- Site
- G65
- Recipient (Organization)
- Comm on Ways + Means
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Document File
- 89734677/89735317/Tobacco Institute 930000
- Request
- R1-004
- R1-132
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 89735005/5174
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Statement of Congressman Steve Neal
Before the Committee on Ways and Means
On Health Care Feform Financing
November 18, 1993
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee, I commend you for
holding these important hearings, and I appreciate the opportunity to
testify before you this morning. -
Throughout your tenure as Chairman of this committee, you have
taken difficult issues, applied common sense, honesty, and most
important, fairness, to produce historic legislation.
I know you will continue-to apply those standards as you deal
with the health care legislation.
Mr. Chairman, I represent thousands of small farmers who grow
tobacco. I also have two tobacco manufacturing plants that employ
approximately 12,000 people. The families of these people have been
growing tobacco and making tobacco products for literally hundreds of
years. The money from tobacco supports the schools, churches, parks,
roads and everything else that happens in these communities.
It is simply unfair to single out one product and one part of __
the country to pay the health care tab for all the uninsured and
underinsured people of this country.
The significant tax increases on tobacco products proposed by
the President have caused me and many of my colleagues to ask a very
fundamental question:
Is this tax fair? Can we go home and tell our constituents that
the standard applied to them is the same standard that is being
applied to everyone else.
Mr. Chairman, I appeal to you and the distinguished members of
your committee. -
As you listen to all the testimony concerning the devastating
impact that a 300 percent increase in the tax on tobacco will have on
the people of North Carolina and the Southeast, I ask that you and
the committee consider what I believe to be fundamental, but
extremely important questions.
Is this tax fair? Is it fair to apply this tax only to tobacco
products? Is it fair to make the economically poorest region of the
country -- the Southeast -- foot the bill for health care
improvements for the entire country.
Does this tax, as proposed by the President, meet the standards
which have become the trademark of this committee -- common sense,
honesty and fairness?
I don't believe that it does. This tax is punitive and unfair.
The people who grow and sell tobacco are hard-working and productive.
It is wrong to single them out to carry the brunt of this nation's
health care reform costs.

. Again, I appreciate this opportunity to speak on behalf of the
people of North Carolina, and I will answer any questions you or the
other members of the committee might have.
