Pubdate: Tuesday, 19 January 1999 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Section: Page A6 Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Author: Tim Harper, Toronto Star Ottawa Bureau ROCK ROLLS OUT REFORMS AIMED AT STOPPING YOUNG SMOKERS Packs' warnings would be bigger, more detailed OTTAWA - Health Minister Allan Rock launched a number of offensives against Canada's tobacco industry yesterday, signalling a more aggressive campaign to keep adolescents from starting the deadly habit of smoking. While Rock won support from the health community and even the opposition Reform party, the nation's cigarette makers shrugged, saying nothing was unveiled that would change the smoking rate in this country. Rock said Ottawa will make smoking warnings on cigarette packages larger, up to 60 per cent of the front panel. Other anti-smoking messages will be splashed on the sides, tops and inside sleeves of the packs. They will include detailed information about the ingredients of cigarettes, facts about what happens if you smoke and reminders that underage smoking is illegal. It will even include a 1-800 smoking cessation hotline. Among the new warning messages under consideration: ``Smoking can cause a slow and painful death'' and ``45,000 Canadians will die from smoking this year.'' The rate of Canadians who smoke has been largely static over the past five years, but the rate of youth smoking has risen. In a speech to the Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada marking national Non-Smoking Week, Rock also proposed: A crackdown on in-store promotions that target youth. A national health warning on the use of ``light, extra light and mild'' cigarettes and possibly a restriction of the use of these terms by cigarette makers. Regulations to compel cigarette makers to provide detailed information on ingredients in their products, as well as their product research, and manufacturing, distribution and promotional activities. A series of tough new ``attack'' ads that go after cigarette makers in a bid to force adolescents to rebel against their marketing strategies. A caucus committee that will report to Rock with an eye to reconstituting a bill that would establish an anti-smoking fund from a tobacco surtax. It was struck down on a technicality last month. An annual January ``report card'' by the federal health minister of the day on the battle against smoking. All of Rock's initiatives are first subject to a consultation process before he takes them to federal cabinet. He said he wants them implemented by the end of the year. A tax increase of about 16 cents a pack also looms in five provinces, including Ontario. Gar Mahood of the Non-Smokers' Rights Association said Rock had ``turned a corner'' in fighting smoking. Rob Parker, spokesperson for Canada's three large tobacco companies, said the measures announced by Rock are part of ``the annual hysterical rehash of tobacco-control measures. ``There is not one chance in 1,000 that this will change the smoking rate in this country,'' said Parker, president of the Canadian Tobacco Manufacturers' Council. The industry also signalled it could fight the packaging change, claiming companies that trail in sales. Statistics show warning labels to do not deter smokers, Parker said. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady