On behalf of our 11,000 Canadian customers and retailers and our employees, thank you for having us here today and for allowing us this opportunity to share with you our concerns about Bill C-32 .
Distribution G.V.A. is a small business established in 1997 which employs approximately 80 Canadians in Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador. We distribute more than 1,000 different tobacco products, including high quality cigars like the Davidoff brand, as well as cigarillos and pipes and accessories to more than 10,000 retail outlets.
We are an important importer and distributor for convenience stores, tobacco shops and duty-free boutiques. Over 10,000 retail outlets in Canada are serviced by our organization and we remit in excess of $20 million a year in tobacco taxes.
Distribution GVA Inc. is a responsible corporate citizen and a major importer and distributor of cigars. It is essential that the Canadian government is aware that Distribution GVA has never, ever promoted any of its flavoured tobacco products to minors.
We are aware of the fact that tobacco products are health risks and that these products are not destined to be consumed by individuals who are not old enough to buy the products legally. The consumers of our products are adults, and we are opposed to the fact that minors are able to obtain access thereto.
TheMinister of Health has announced that her government intends to establish a prohibition regime on all flavoured tobacco products through Bill C-32. If the said bill is adopted in its present version, this will result in the layoff of the majority of our employees and may even force the closure of our company.
Bill C-32, while perhaps well-intentioned, is needlessly too wide in its scope in its present version, due to Health Canada's elemental lack of knowledge with respect to cigar products. Bill C-32 will prohibit products that have been on the market for decades.
I have brought some products to show you what kinds of products will be banned with this bill. They are clearly not kids' products. These have been on the market for about 25 years. Some of these are little cigarillos made in Europe, and they have also been on the market for the longest time. They have flavours and they're enjoyed by adults. These will all be banned if the bill is passed as is. I have more. I can show you more.
Anyway, I'll continue. I think you have pictures of these products in annex 1.
The latest statistics demonstrate clearly that flavoured cigarillos are products that are destined for adults and consumed by adults. According to the results of the latest Canadian tobacco use monitoring survey, cycle 1, which Mr. Martial was talking about earlier, conducted by Health Canada and Statistics Canada, 91% of the flavoured cigarillo consumers are adults or are of age for buying the product. Sixty per cent of those people are over 25 years old. So saying that these are kids' products is not very true.
These findings raise an important question. Before passing this legislation and imposing a prohibition on an entire legitimate category of tobacco products, it is important to discover the manner in which the remaining 8 or 9% of consumers who are not adults obtain access to these products.
For example, according to Health Canada, access to cigarettes through the contraband tobacco market is much greater than access to flavoured cigarillos. Unfortunately, we fear that because of the speed with which the Government intends to adopt the present law, this important question will remain unanswered and will unnecessarily penalize the thousands of individuals who are employed in the legal tobacco trade.
What the Statistics Canada survey demonstrates is that the flavoured category did not actually create more smokers per se, but actual smokers switched from cigarettes to flavoured cigarillos. We have also noted that a large majority of flavoured cigarillo consumers were originally cigarette smokers who have switched to our products, for multiple reasons.
From conversations with some of these consumers, we have learned that they prefer our product to the cigarettes they used to smoke. In many instances, these consumers were in the process of reducing their tobacco consumption with the use of our products. They told us they smoked less when they smoked flavoured cigarillos than they did when they smoked cigarettes. Some have also told us that they were trying to quite smoking, and that since they smoked less of these, it was a way to reduce their consumption and eventually quit smoking. I am not the one saying this; the consumers of our products are saying this.
We cannot understand, then, the urgency to adopt Bill C-32 in its present form and why the government is finding it okay to create such an emergency to proceed on something that represents one-half of 1% of the total tobacco market in Canada, while at the same time making an exception for menthol cigarettes. According to the health minister, they're marginal, and this is why they're making an exception, but they're at 2%. So one-half of 1% is not okay, but 2% is okay?
One can easily deduce that the 400 million cigarillos market will be claimed by the big tobacco manufacturers. Are the big tobacco multinationals behind this bad piece of legislation? Have the anti-tobacco lobbyists been shamelessly manipulated by big tobacco?
Health Canada has mentioned to a representative--and Mr. Martial talked about it earlier--that they have no intention of undertaking any unnecessary research. That supports the desire to introduce a complete prohibition on a whole category of tobacco products that, in some cases, have been on the market for 25 years, as I've said. At the present time, the government is essentially asking Canadians to allow it to prohibit a complete category of products without supporting such a measure with the proper research.
However, such legislation will have direct and wide-ranging consequences on the financial security of thousands of Canadians and will ensure an increase in tobacco contraband for these products. Accessibility to minors will also be increased through the tobacco contraband channel, because they are never asked for proof of age.
Furthermore, in its present format, Bill C-32 will come to unquestionably cause, not solve, problems of criminality already well documented in our society. In effect, once we put aside the emotion associated with the debate concerning minors, flavoured tobacco products, and the issue of tobacco consumption, the prohibitions proposed by the Government will not address the problems associated with minors' access to tobacco products. The illicit contraband trade in tobacco presently offers—
Let me show you what you can now find on the market, in schoolyards and just about everywhere: plastic Ziplock bags containing 200 flavoured cigarillos.