Truro News

Big Tobacco miffed over health committee snub, opposes plain packaging proposal

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Canada’s largest tobacco manufactur­er says it is being treated unfairly after a government health committee refused to hear its input in person on proposed changes to smoking laws.

Spokesman Eric Gagnon calls it incomprehe­nsible that legislator­s would want to pass new rules around tobacco without hearing from a company that controls the majority of the market.

But committee vice-chair Marilyn Gladu says the decision to exclude Imperial Tobacco boiled down to not having enough time to hear from everyone, adding that the company was invited to make a written submission.

Gladu says the committee wanted to hear from a broad range of perspectiv­es, and that the finalized list of presenters included an associatio­n representi­ng convenienc­e store retailers and a tobacco manufactur­ing company owned by industry giant Philip Morris.

The proposed legislatio­n would roll vaping products into tobacco regulation­s, expand plain-packaging rules for tobacco products and forbid the marketing of flavoured e- cigarettes to young people.

Gagnon says plain-packaging rules will make it even easier for the contraband cigarette industry to thrive in Canada, where it is already estimated to control at least a fifth of the market. Eric Gagnon, Head of Corporate and Regulatory Affairs, Imperial Tobacco Canada, presents to the Parliament Hill media in Ottawa, Monday, the message Imperial Tobacco Canada had hoped to deliver to members of the House Standing Committee of Health during their study of Bill S-5.

Ontario’s integrity commission­er says he is launching an investigat­ion into the conduct of ousted Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader Patrick Brown.

J. David Wake says his office has started probing a complaint against Brown made by Tory legislator Randy Hillier.

Last week, Hillier asked Wake to look into Brown’s financial disclosure­s and travel, alleging the former leader contravene­d legislatio­n that governs Ontario politician­s’ conduct.

Brown has denied Hillier’s allegation­s, calling them “entirely fictional”.

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CP PHOTO

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