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The indications were there all along. Nick Losito of the Vancouver-Richmond
Regional Health Board noticed that the number of cigarette vending machines in
pubs increased in January, even though the WCB no-smoking regulation should
have reduced the need for them.
The persistence of BCTV reporter Darlene Heidemann eventually paid off. She
discovered that the tobacco industry gives $800,000 per year to the Canadian
Hotel Association's "Courtesy of Choice" campaign. Hardly any of this money is
used to keep ashtrays out of hotel lobbies. Instead, it pays the salary of Tim
Crowhurst, who works for Vance Campbell's "Coalition of Hospitality
Organizations".
When confronted by Heidemann with this information, Campbell initially
denied that COHO got tobacco industry money, then claimed that Crowhurst was
only a "media consultant" for them.
There's more. All three of the multinational tobacco companies that do
business in Canada are "associate members" of the B.C. Liquor Licensee and
Retailers Association, the group headed by Dave Crown, another very vocal
opponent of the WCB regulations. Also, the 2000 annual report of Rothmans
describes the "Benson & Hedges Business Edge" program. This basically
consists of bribing pub owners for placement of cigarette vending
machines.
The tobacco industry has a lot at stake here. A study done in the
Whistler-Squamish area shortly before the WCB regulations were invalidated
showed that pub employees were quitting smoking in startling numbers. Every
smoker that quits costs the tobacco industry about $700 per year of revenue.
Add this to the 45,000 customers they lose to cancer, emphysema, heart
disease, etc. and we're talking about a serious dent in their profits.
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