Philip Morris
Statement of Rep. William P. Curlin, Jr., Ky. - 6th Before the Senate Commerce Consumer Subcommittee 720210
Fields
- Author
- Curlin, W.P., J.R.
- Type
- TRAN, TRANSCRIPT
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT/CARLSTADT
- Site
- N28
- Named Organization
- Commission Tobacco Adjustment Assistance
- Congress
- Named Person
- Cook
- Nation, C.
- Recipient (Organization)
- Commerce Consumer Subcomm
- Senate
- Litigation
- Txag/Produced
- Master ID
- 2015045951/6246
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- Characteristic
- EXTR, EXTRA
- Date Loaded
- 24 May 1999
- UCSF Legacy ID
- xpv61f00
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Statement of 12op~. Sdi llir:m P. Curlin, Jr., Ky.-6th
before the Senate Commcrce Cunsurier Subcommittne 2--10-72
Mr. Chairman: I appear before your committee today
to speak on behalf of the thousanc3s of farm families in
the Sixth Congressional District of Kentucky who have
suffered publi c abuse time and again v:ithout the chance
to reply. These families raise tobacco and they sell
tobacco. Thcy are riot subversives trying to unc?ermine the
health of the nation. They are not criminals spreading evil
throuoh the land.
My people are law-abi dina, God-foaring, hard-working
farm families who depend on a cash crop called tobacco
to keep them going. And tlie tobacco industry ti..,hich buys
their produce is a legitimate business thatt is just as
concernedlabout the public health an&well-being as any
person here today.
But neither the farmers nor the industry is willing
to go along with a smoke-scteen of fear in the absence of
facts.
Long before the first report on smok--'ng and health
was submitted to Congress, the tobacco industry had already
begun a multi-million dbllar research campaign on its own.
The Commonwealth of Kentucky, certainly not willing
to sacrifice the health of its people in the name of economy,
wants to find the real answers to the smoking-health question.
35U

359
But the state doesn't accept propaoanda in place of research.
No, it has chosemto impose a special five cent cigarette
tax to finance additional research.
Isn't this more to the point than mai:ing ash trays
that cough, or selli.ng ,sterlino.-silver adult pacifiers,
or clipping ti7e name of a city off television because it
also happens to: be the name of a cigarette? But whi&
side gets accusec]~ of "lh~.ciatering'' and "propagancla"?
Mr. Chairman, I believe thi& is a serious business,
worthy of a higher level of concern than that shown to datee
by the tobacco prohibitionists.
You, sir, have publicly conwnended the tobacco industry
for volunteering to proceed with~ many measures to
edocate the public concprnino the alleged hazards of
smoking.
You, sir, have advocated research, such as that being
sponsored by the industry and the state of Kentucky.
But you, sir, have also introduced a bill in the
Senate to raise the federal excise tax on cibarettes to
30 cents a package. A bill which also would phase out the
entire tobacco crop sLIpport program to be replaced by
a Commission on~ Tobacco Adjustmcnt Assistance.
I cannot agree, just as my coll_eab e, Senator Cook,
could not agree vnccn tie statccd: "At a ti.me when the United
States economy needs a].l the hell) i t can get frm om all
se,;mcnts of societ:y, it is inconceivabl.e to attempt to
destroy t]4c,to',)acco se^~~-nt in an attempt to c,loi what
Carrie Nation failed to do iin tltr ]1920's."'

? 36v
Make no mistake about the economi;c import of' tobacco
among the people of Kentucky. Sv'a have 170,000 farm families
in the state, many of them~with tobacco patches. Last year
they harvested over 380 million pounds of what many
consider the world's best varictyy of this crop, accounting
for a third of the cash receipts in Kentucky's farm income.
We had over 27,000 retail outlets liandlin-1 about
$158 million in cioarette business in last year alone.
Andi since 1936, when~ the excise tax was first applied to
cigarettes, my state has received more than 246 million
dollars in revenue. That's almost aquai:ter of a billion
dollars helping under~~.rrite probrams the state could not
have otherwise affor.ded.
But, Mr. Chairmam, you know that tobacco has a
significant economic impact. Its greatest critics know
it has a significant economic impact. But its sionificance in economics
should have no bearing,on its role in health. That is a
matter to be decided impartially and:sci.entifically, an&
I submit that the jury is still out and ils far fromi a
verdict of cond'emnation.
Tar-and-nicotine regulation would.punish the farmers
of my district without waiting for factual evidence. It
would represent yielding to hysteria instead of adhering
L)
to reason.
rir. . Chtiirman, my pee,plr~, have d'one no wrong. I ask that
no tin un;;, be clone unto them. Thank you.
