Pubdate: Thu, 19 Nov 1998 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Page: A6 Copyright: 1998, The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Author: Tim Harper, Toronto Star Ottawa Bureau B.C. HEALTH MINISTER READY TO FIGHT FOR CHILDREN'S FUTURE Leading Charge Against Tobacco Companies To Recoup Health Costs OTTAWA - She stands ``almost'' 5-foot-2 and she'd need the help of the Toronto phone book to look you in the eye. But Penny Priddy may be big tobacco's worst nightmare. The British Columbia health minister is a politician whose combative views have been shaped by life experiences atypical of many in public life. She's the daughter of adoptive parents, who grew up in a life of self-described privilege on the Kingsway in Toronto, but she's still searching for her birth parents. She's a female health minister who has survived breast cancer, and a former health care worker who held the hand of a woman at Toronto General as she bled to death after using a knitting needle in a self-induced abortion. She walks and talks like she's double-parked, able to flash a quick wit but always with an underlying message that seems to be saying to visitors: ``Cut to the chase, I'm busy.'' She likes to see results, she says, but this time she's picked a fight that's going to take a lot of stamina. One week ago, Priddy's NDP government sought unspecified damages - likely in the billions - seeking to recoup some of the estimated $400 million the province spends a year on health care directly linked to smoking-related illnesses. Yesterday, Priddy won an endorsement of her lawsuit from federal Health Minister Allan Rock. She says Manitoba has shown interest in jumping on board and she not-so-subtly chides Ontario Health Minister Elizabeth Witmer for not making time to meet with her while she tries to drum up support today in Toronto. Should the tobacco giants be worried about this 54-year-old mother of two, grandmother of one? ``I'm an only, adopted child,'' she says with a laugh. ``I think everybody should be a little worried when they encounter me.'' And should Rob Parker, who works for the industry through the Canadian Tobacco Manufacturers' Council, be worried about her? ``Well, he should at least,'' she says with a well-placed breath, ``pause for thought.'' Priddy also lent her support to Toronto Liberal MP Carolyn Bennett (St. Paul's), who sought to introduce a bill in the House of Commons yesterday that would impose a 50-cent levy on each carton of cigarettes to fund anti-smoking measures for Canadian youth. But the Liberal government moved quickly to thwart Bennett's bill. No sooner had the backbencher introduced the measure in the Commons than House leader Don Boudria rose to object to it on procedural and constitutional grounds. He maintained the legislation amounts to a tax bill. A final decision on the admissibility of Bennett's bill will be up to Commons Speaker Gilbert Parent. Although she's now gaining a national profile, Priddy is in her fifth portfolio since jumping from suburban Surrey school board to provincial politics in 1991. ``Everyone has been marked by her abiding concern for children,'' said anti-smoking activist Cynthia Callard, who has worked with her. Priddy also gained notoriety when she was involved in a prank in the Victoria legislature when a dancing, wind-up penis ended up on the desk of a Liberal MLA. Parker dismisses the lawsuit as a continual ``headline hunt'' by successive B.C. health ministers because the province has been unable to come up with any evidence to buttress its claim that the cigarette makers target kids. ``I think it's a matter of them trying to come up with some imagined enemy of British Columbia and then be seen to be beating up on them,'' he said. No one has served the industry with any legal papers, he said. Instead, he said, B.C. is moving by ``endless press conference.'' Priddy is unlikely to be bowed by the industry she's chosen to fight. She showed early she could deal with the schoolyard taunts over being adopted. `` `Ha, ha, your parents had to take you home even though you were ugly,' I'd tell them. `I was chosen from a cast of thousands.' '' Growing up in the well-ordered, comfort of the Kingsway of the 1950s did nothing to prepare her for life, she now says. ``Your parents worried about whether you got membership to the golf and country club. Everybody went south in the winter. Everybody had a cottage in Muskoka,'' she said. ``It was a very narrow, very limited exposure to what the real world looked like. ``There were no Jewish people there, no colour in the neighbourhood. It was the Kingsway.'' She is seeking her birth parents because she feels she's finally mature enough to deal with the thought of someone abandoning her at birth. But three other events conspired to force her to deal with the issue eventually dealt with by every adopted child. Her father died and she learned her birth name was Frances Morrison. She became a grandmother and then was stricken with breast cancer. She felt the need to learn some family history and heritage for grandson Liam and she needed to know whether there was a history of breast cancer in her family. Even that bout with breast cancer has been recounted with a theatrical flair: ``I know that this is a horror movie, but I am the star.'' Enduring cancer, she said, meant it was she who got the presents, flowers, and cards, she once told an interviewer. She got to cry in any room in her house. Her experience as a nurse helped shape her views on abortion, her experience with breast cancer (she's been free of the disease for more than two years) taught her how women in that situation need information and how terrible it was to be seen as a victim. ``It taught me how important it was to ensure patients have as much power as we can give them,'' she said. ``Particularly around issues as terrifying as that.'' The tobacco war? That is shaped from her experience as a mother and now, a grandmother, she said. `I'm just passionate about children,'' she says. ``I want them to be really healthy, really smart and really good at what they do. ``They're going to make decisions about our pension plan, where we're going to live when we're aged, what type of environment we will be living in.'' In the U.S., where 39 states have launched lawsuits against the industry, tobacco companies have settled with 12 states, agreeing to pay out almost $400 billion (U.S.). They have also accepted some advertising restrictions. Despite the recent success in the U.S., the task is daunting. The day Priddy brought her crusade to Ottawa, statistics from Washington showed a 28 per cent increase in the number of U.S. college students who smoke, at least occasionally. Youth smoking in Canada is also on the rise. Tobacco companies have launched their own court challenge of Priddy's Tobacco Damages and Health Care Costs Recovery Act, which, it argues, gives politicians the power to tell judges what to do. People think of British Columbians as those people who live ``way out there'' beyond the mountains, she said. All the better to sneak up on the enemy, she suggests. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry