moved:
Motion No. 1
That Bill C-42, in Clause 2, be amended by replacing lines 27 and 28 on page 1 with the following:
“peared on the facility on June 3, 1998.”
Mr. Speaker, I very pleased to have the opportunity to address Bill C-42 at report stage and to discuss the amendment to the amended bill before us.
It is important for the record to say that the speed with which the bill is being put through the various stages of the legislative process is remarkable. The opportunities for public participation have been limited and the significance with which amendments have been treated is of deep concern to all of us.
Bill C-42 waters down, weakens or dilutes many of the provisions under Bill C-71 passed by the House in April 1997. Its tobacco sponsorship restrictions would have come into effect on October 1 of this year but for the amendments to Bill C-42 before us today.
We have been concerned throughout the process and will continue to register concerns about the dilution of the tobacco sponsorship restrictions which creates more opportunities for young people to be influenced by tobacco advertising, by lifestyle advertising, as opposed to the kind of leadership we expect the government to offer in terms of being as proactive as possible in ensuring that young people are not influenced in any way to take up smoking.
My amendment deals with a very significant issue in the package before members this morning. It should be noted that during committee stage members of the government on the health committee included a weakening amendment that they did not explain at all. The original bill grandparented sponsored permanent facilities, for example a theatre having tobacco signs, as of the date of first reading of the bill. The amendment has the grandparenting effective as of the date the bill receives royal assent.
It is very clear from this change that the government is prepared to allow newly sponsored permanent facilities which engage in tobacco advertising between June 3, 1998, when the bill was first introduced to the House, and the time when the bill gets royal assent—there is no specific date for the royal assent; no one can be assured of just how fast it will happen—to sponsor advertising and the display of tobacco promotions for five years.
It is a significant development. It slipped through committee. There was no justification. There was no explanation. It is our firm belief that as a minimum the government should be changing the bill back to the original intention so that the date of June 3, 1998 comes into effect. This would at least be a minimal step toward restricting the amount of tobacco sponsorship advertising that is taking place. It would also be a tiny step toward limiting the exposure of young people to lifestyle advertising.
We have tried through every way possible to convince the government to accept some amendments that would take us back to the original intentions of Bill C-21, which is about protecting the health of Canadians. We have reacted strongly and consistently to the amendments before us today which put the whole thing off and allows for a greater period of unfettered advertising by tobacco companies at events attended very heavily by young people who are influenced greatly by the advertising that takes place.
In conjunction with the amendment we put forward it is important to remind all members of the House that we are dealing with a very grave and growing public health problem. Although I do not need to remind members, I will remind them that we are dealing with at least 40,000 deaths per year, if not more, as a result of tobacco related illnesses. We know that every year 250,000 young people get hooked on smoking. We also know that 85% of adults today who smoke are addicted because they started before the age of 18. We know that there is a high rate of smoking among young people between the ages of 15 and 19.
We know we have a serious problem which will lead to enormous health costs down the road. Yet on every occasion the government has taken the most feeble, cautionary approach possible. It is an approach which flies in the face of everything we know about the seriousness of the issue. It also flies in the face of what other jurisdictions are doing.
It is shameful that the government is so unwilling to act and show political courage to deal head on with the tobacco industry at a time when jurisdictions like British Columbia are prepared to take serious steps toward making the tobacco industry accountable for the damage it has caused among young people.
It is time for the government to show leadership. Whether we are talking about Bill C-42 and the attempts by the government to dilute and weaken the Tobacco Act; whether we are talking about resistance to Bill S-13, the Tobacco Industry Responsibility Act; or whether we are talking about the government's refusal to expend money it promised in the last election for tobacco prevention and education among young people, we must keep in mind that the government promised $100 million over five years. It has spent about 2% of that and has shown no sign of moving rapidly and quickly to put in place the kinds of programs which actually deter young people from getting started and becoming hooked on cigarettes.
Our concern is for the government to show leadership and not to run away and hide from the serious issues before us. We would urge the government and all members to support our amendment so that Bill C-42 is not diluted any further and the true intentions of Bill C-71, the Tobacco Act, are adhered to and held up as a starting point for Canadians.
We implore the government to continue working with parliament and the many health organizations that want stronger tobacco laws for the sake of our health and for the sake of our kids.