Official Summary

 
Official Summary
 

Bill Number : H R 1256

Short Title : Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act
Title : To protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products, to amend title 5, United States Code, to make certain modifications in the Thrift Savings Plan, the Civil Service Retirement System, and the Federal Employees' Retirement System, and for other purposes.

SUMMARY AS OF: 
6/22/2009--Public Law.
  

Division A: Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act

Title I: Authority of the Food and Drug Administration - 

(Sec. 101)

Amends the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) to provide for the regulation of tobacco products by the Secretary of Health and Human Services through the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Defines a tobacco product as any product made or derived from tobacco that is intended for human consumption. Prohibits a tobacco product from being marketed in combination with any other article or product regulated under FFDCA. Requires the Secretary to regulate tobacco products.

Excludes from FDA authority:

  • the tobacco leaf that is not in the possession of a tobacco product manufacturer
  • the producers of the tobacco leaf, unless the producer is also a manufacturer
  • tobacco farms

Directs the Secretary to establish within FDA:

  • the Center for Tobacco Products to implement this Act
  • an identifiable office to provide technical and other nonfinancial assistance to assist small tobacco product manufacturers in complying with this Act

Deems a tobacco product to be adulterated if:

  • it contains any filthy, putrid, or decomposed substance or is contaminated by any added poisonous or deleterious substance that may render the product injurious to health
  • it has been prepared, packed, or held under unsanitary conditions
  • its package is composed of any poisonous or deleterious substance
  • the manufacturer or importer of the product fails to pay the assessed user fee
  • it fails to meet specified tobacco product standards
  • it does not have required premarket review
  • it fails to meet applicable requirements or conditions on manufacturing, packing, or storage
  • it fails to conform to requirements for modified risk tobacco products

 

Deems a tobacco product to be misbranded if:

  • its labeling, packaging, or advertising contains any false or misleading information
  • its label or advertising fails to contain all required information displayed prominently and conspicuously, including its established name, manufacturer, and contents and adequate directions and warnings
  • it was manufactured, prepared, or processed in an establishment not registered with the Secretary
  • there is any failure to submit the required information or notices to the Secretary

 

Allows the Secretary to require prior approval of all label statements on tobacco products to ensure that such statements:

  • do not violate misbranding provisions
  • comply with other provisions of this Act

Requires tobacco product manufacturers or importers to submit to the Secretary:

  • a listing of all ingredients, including ingredients added by the manufacturer to the tobacco, paper, or filter, by brand and quantity
  • a description of the content, delivery, and form of nicotine in each tobacco product
  • a listing of all constituents, including smoke constituents, identified by the Secretary as harmful or potentially harmful to health in each tobacco product
  • all documents developed that relate to the health, toxicological, behavioral, or physiologic effects of tobacco products and their constituents, ingredients, components, and additives

Allows the Secretary to request additional information from a tobacco product manufacturer or importer relating to:

  • research activities or findings on the effects of tobacco products and their constituents and on whether the health risk can be reduced if the manufacturer employs known or available technology
  • marketing research or practices used by manufacturers or distributors.

 

Sets forth notifications that manufacturers must make to the Secretary regarding any change in a tobacco product. Requires the Secretary to publicly display and annually publish a list (that is understandable and not misleading to a lay person) of harmful or potentially harmful constituents in each tobacco product by brand and quantity. Requires owners and operators of establishments in the United States engaged in the manufacture, preparation, compounding, or processing of a tobacco product to register annually with the Secretary. Allows the Secretary to prescribe a uniform system for the identification of tobacco products, which registrants must use. Requires the Secretary to make such registration information available to the public and to inspect registered establishments every two years. Requires foreign establishments to register and ensure that adequate and effective means are available to determine whether their tobacco products conform with FFDCA requirements. Prohibits the disclosure of privileged or confidential trade secrets and commercial financial information that is obtained by the Secretary.

 

Allows the Secretary to restrict:

  • the sale or distribution of tobacco products if appropriate for the protection of the public health
  • the advertising and promotion of tobacco products consistent with, and to the full extent permitted by, the First Amendment.

Prohibits restrictions that:

  • limit the sale or distribution of a tobacco product to written or oral authorization by a practitioner licensed to prescribe medicine
  • prohibit the sale of a tobacco product in face-to-face transactions by a specific category of retail outlets
  • establish a minimum age of sale of tobacco products to any person older than 18 years of age

Requires the Secretary to promulgate regulations to prevent the sale and distribution of tobacco products to minors through means other than a direct, face-to-face exchange between a retailer and a consumer. Directs the Secretary to prescribe regulations to protect the public health and assure that tobacco products are in compliance with this Act by requiring good manufacturing practices or hazard analysis and critical control point methodology.

Requires the Secretary to:

  • provide a reasonable period for manufacturers to conform to good manufacturing practices
  • not require any small tobacco product manufacturer to comply with such regulations for at least four years

Allows the Secretary to grant exemptions and variances from such regulations under certain circumstances. Allows the Secretary to enter into contracts for research, testing, and demonstrations respecting tobacco products and to obtain tobacco products for such purposes. Prohibits a cigarette or any of its components from containing as a constituent or additive any artificial or natural flavor (other than tobacco or menthol) or any herb or spice (including strawberry, grape, orange, clove, cinnamon, and vanilla) that is a characterizing flavor of the tobacco product or tobacco smoke. Prohibits a tobacco product manufacturer from using tobacco, including foreign grown tobacco, that contains a pesticide chemical residue at a level greater than any tolerance applicable to domestically grown tobacco.

Allows the Secretary to adopt additional tobacco product standards as appropriate to protect the public health, which may include standards for:

  • reducing nicotine yields
  • reducing or eliminating other constituents or harmful components
  • product testing

Allows the Secretary to amend or revoke a tobacco product standard.

 

Prohibits the Secretary from:

  • banning all cigarettes, all smokeless tobacco products, all little cigars, all cigars other than little cigars, all pipe tobacco, or all roll-your-own tobacco products
  • requiring the reduction of nicotine yields of a tobacco product to zero

 

Requires the Secretary to refer to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee for report and recommendation the issues of:

  • the impact of the use of menthol in cigarettes on the public health, including such use among children, African Americans, Hispanics, and other racial and ethnic minorities
  • and the nature and impact of the use of dissolvable tobacco products on the public health, including such use among children.

Allows the Secretary to notify the public if a tobacco product poses an unreasonable risk of substantial harm to the public health. Requires the Secretary to order a cease in distribution and a recall (after a hearing) of a tobacco product if there is a reasonable probability that it contains a defect not ordinarily contained in tobacco products that would cause serious, adverse health consequences or death.

Requires manufacturers and importers to comply with record keeping and reporting requirements established by the Secretary, such as informing the Secretary of any information that reasonably suggests that a marketed tobacco product may have caused or contributed to a serious unexpected adverse experience.

Prohibits the Secretary from:

  • imposing unduly burdensome requirements
  • or requiring that the identity of any patient or user be disclosed unless required for the medical welfare of an individual, to determine risks to the public health, or to verify information.

Requires the Secretary to have due regard for the ethics of the medical profession. Directs the Secretary to require prompt notification by manufacturers and importers of any corrective action taken or any removal from the market of a tobacco product to reduce a health risk posed by the product or to remedy a violation of this Act that may present such a risk.

Requires premarket approval of all new tobacco products (products not substantially equivalent to an existing tobacco product) commercially marketed after February 15, 2007. Defines "substantially equivalent" as having the same characteristics or having different characteristics but not raising different questions of public health. Sets forth an application process for premarket approval of a new tobacco product, including health information that must be included.

Authorizes the Secretary to:

  • allow, prohibit, or restrict distribution of such a tobacco product
  • and temporarily suspend an application if the probability that continued distribution would cause serious, adverse health consequences or death is greater than that for tobacco products on the market.

Prohibits the sale of any modified risk tobacco product unless an order is issued by the Secretary. Defines a "modified risk tobacco product" as any tobacco product that is sold or distributed for use to reduce harm or the risk of tobacco-related diseases associated with commercially marketed tobacco products, specifically products where:

  • the labeling or advertising represents that the product presents a lower risk of tobacco-related disease or is less harmful than other tobacco products, contains a reduced level of or presents a reduced exposure to a substance, or is free of a substance
  • the labeling or advertising uses descriptors such as "light," "mild," or "low"
  • or the product manufacturer has taken action reasonably expected to result in consumers believing that the product or its smoke presents a lower risk of disease, is less harmful, presents a reduced exposure, or is free of a substance.

Sets forth requirements for filing with the Secretary an application for a modified risk tobacco product.

Directs the Secretary to issue an order that a modified risk tobacco product may be commercially marketed only if the Secretary determines that an applicant has demonstrated that such product, as it is actually used by consumers, will:

  • significantly reduce harm and the risk of tobacco-related disease to individual tobacco users
  • and benefit the health of the population as a whole including users and nonusers of tobacco

Allows the Secretary to issue an order allowing the sale of a tobacco product that may not be commercially marketed as a modified risk tobacco product for five years if certain requirements are met, including that:

  • such order would be appropriate to promote the public health
  • and issuing such an order is expected to benefit the health of the population as a whole

Requires the Secretary to require that advertising and labeling concerning modified risk tobacco products enable the public to understand the information and its significance in the context of total health and in relation to all of the diseases and health-related conditions associated with the use of tobacco products. Directs the Secretary to require that the results of postmarket surveillance and studies on modified risk tobacco products be submitted annually. Sets forth procedures for the withdrawal of an order allowing commercial distribution of a modified risk tobacco product. Prohibits distributors from taking any action that would reasonably be expected to result in consumers believing that a tobacco product or its smoke may present a lower risk of disease or is less harmful than other tobacco products. Sets forth provisions regarding the judicial review of regulations and denied applications for new tobacco products.

Requires the Secretary to require retail establishments for which the predominant business is the sale of tobacco products to comply with advertising restrictions applicable to retail establishments accessible to individuals under the age of 18. Deems any violation of this Act pertaining to advertising to be an unfair or deceptive act or practice under the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Act. Requires the Chairman of FTC to coordinate with the Secretary concerning enforcement of the FTC Act for the advertisement of cigarettes or smokeless tobacco. Requires the Secretary to consult with the Chairman in revising the label statements and requirements for tobacco products under the FTC Act.

Requires the Secretary, acting through the Commissioner of FDA, to promulgate regulations under this Act within two years that require the testing and reporting of tobacco product constituents, ingredients, and additives that the Secretary determines should be tested to protect the public health. Gives the Secretary the authority to conduct or require the testing, reporting, or disclosure of tobacco product constituents. Delays the imposition of such testing regulations on small tobacco product manufacturers. Allows additional such delays under certain circumstances. Sets forth provisions governing testing by such manufacturers.

Declares that this Act does not:

  • prohibit federal agencies, states, political subdivisions, or Indian tribes from enacting additional or more stringent measures, except requirements relating to tobacco product standards, premarket review, adulteration, misbranding, labeling, registration, good manufacturing standards, or modified risk tobacco products
  • prohibit state, tribal, or local taxation of tobacco products
  • and modify or affect the liability of any person under the product liability laws of any state

Requires the Secretary to establish a Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee to provide advice, information, and recommendations to the Secretary, including on the effects of altering nicotine yields from tobacco products and whether there is a threshold level below which nicotine yields do not produce dependence on the tobacco product involved. Requires the Secretary to consider:

  • designating products for smoking cessation, including nicotine replacement products, as fast track research and approval products
  • approving the extended use of nicotine replacement products for the treatment of tobacco dependence
  • and evidence for additional indications for such products.

Directs the Secretary to report to Congress on how best to regulate, promote, and encourage the development of innovative products and treatments to better achieve, in a manner that best protects and promotes the public health:

  • total abstinence from tobacco use
  • reductions in consumption of tobacco
  • and reductions in the harm associated with continued tobacco use.

Requires the Secretary to assess a quarterly user fee on manufacturers and importers of tobacco products based on the class of tobacco product and the company market share to pay for the costs of tobacco regulation activities. Requires that FDA funds (excluding user fees) used before October 1, 2009, on such activities be reimbursed.

 

(Sec. 102)

Requires the Secretary to publish a final rule regarding cigarettes and smokeless tobacco that is identical to regulations promulgated by the Secretary on August 28, 1996, that set out restrictions under FFDCA on the sale, distribution, and use of cigarettes and smokeless tobacco that contain nicotine, except for labeling requirements. Sets forth provisions governing the distribution of free samples of cigarettes, smokeless tobacco, or other tobacco products. Limits the effect of specified advisory opinions and prohibits the Secretary and FDA from citing them as binding precedent.

 

(Sec. 103)

Adds tobacco related violations to the list of prohibited acts under FFDCA. Prohibits the charitable distribution of tobacco products. Prohibits making any statement or representation directed to consumers in a label or labeling or through the media or advertising of a tobacco product that either conveys, or misleads or would mislead consumers into believing, that: (1) the product is approved by FDA; (2) FDA deems the product to be safe for use by consumers; (3) the product is endorsed by FDA for use by consumers; or (4) the product is safe or less harmful by virtue of its regulation or inspection by FDA or its compliance with regulatory requirements set by FDA. Allows the Secretary to impose a no-tobacco-sale order at retail outlets for repeated violations of restrictions on the sale of tobacco products. Sets forth civil monetary penalties for violations of FFDCA related to tobacco products Requires the Secretary to submit a report to the relevant committees on: (1) the nature, extent, and destination of U.S. tobacco product exports that do not conform to tobacco product standards established under this Act; (2) the public health implications of such exports; and (3) recommendations or assessments of policy alternatives available to reduce any negative public health impact. Sets forth provisions providing for notice of violations to retailers.

 

(Sec. 104)

Directs the Secretary to convene an expert panel to study the public health implications of raising the minimum age to purchase tobacco products.

 

(Sec. 105)

Requires the Secretary to develop an action plan to enforce restrictions on the promotion and advertising of menthol and other cigarettes to youth.

 

(Sec. 106)

Directs the Secretary to report to specified congressional committees on FDA's progress in implementing this Act. Directs the Comptroller General to study and report to such committees on: (1) the adequacy of the authority and resources provided to the Secretary to carry out the goals and purposes of this Act; and (2) any recommendations for strengthening that authority to more effectively protect the public health with respect to the manufacture, marketing, and distribution of tobacco products.

 

Title II: Tobacco Product Warnings; Constituent and Smoke Constituent Disclosure -

(Sec. 201)

Amends the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act to prohibit any person from manufacturing, packaging, selling, offering to sell, distributing, or importing for sale or distribution within the United States any cigarettes the packages of which fail to bear specified warning labels. Specifies the location, size, type size, and color of such labeling. Prohibits tobacco product manufacturers, importers, distributors, or retailers to advertise cigarettes within the United States without specified labeling. Specifies the location, size, type size, color, and border of warning labels for different types of advertisements. Directs the Secretary to issue regulations that require color graphics depicting the negative health consequences of smoking to accompany cigarette label statements.

 

(Sec. 202)

Allows the Secretary to alter label requirements to promote greater public understanding of the risks associated with the use of tobacco products.

 

(Sec. 203)

Allows states or localities to impose specific bans or restrictions on the time, place, and manner, but not the content, of the advertising or promotion of any cigarettes.

 

(Sec. 204)

Amends the Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act of 1986 to apply the same restrictions on labeling and advertising to smokeless tobacco products.

 

(Sec. 206)

Requires the Secretary to determine whether manufacturers should be required to include on the label and advertisements the tar and nicotine yields of the product. Allows the Secretary to require disclosure of the level of constituents in a tobacco product if such disclosures would benefit the public health or increase consumer awareness of the health consequences of the use of tobacco products.

 

Title III: Prevention of Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products -

(Sec. 301)

Sets forth labeling, inspection, and record keeping requirements to prevent the illicit trade, smuggling, or counterfeiting of tobacco products. Requires a manufacturer or distributor to notify the Attorney General and the Secretary of the Treasury promptly of any knowledge that reasonably supports the conclusion that a tobacco product manufactured or distributed has left its control and may be or has been: (1) imported, exported, distributed, or sold without paying duties or taxes; or (2) diverted for possible illicit marketing.

 

(Sec. 302)

Requires the Comptroller General to conduct a study to collect data on cross-border trades and advertising in tobacco products and the health effects resulting from such trades and to make recommendations on monitoring such trades and preventing or eliminating such advertising.


Division B: Federal Retirement Reform Act - Federal Retirement Reform Act of 2009

Title I: Provisions Relating to Federal Employees Retirement -

(Sec. 101)

Thrift Savings Plan Enhancement Act of 2009 - Requires the Executive Director of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board to provide for: (1) automatic enrollment in the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) at a specified default percentage (between 2% and 5%) of basic pay of anyone appointed, transferred, or reappointed to a position in which that individual is eligible to contribute to TSP; and (2) the inclusion in TSP of a qualified Roth contribution program.

 

(Sec. 104)

Authorizes the Board to include a mutual fund window under TSP, if such window would be in the best interest of participants.

 

(Sec. 105)

Sets forth reporting requirements related to the operation of TSP.

 

(Sec. 106)

Requires any participant who elects to invest in any investment fund or option other than the G Fund to sign an acknowledgment that the participant is not protected by the government against any loss on such investments and that a return on such investment is not guaranteed by the government. Provides that a fiduciary shall not be liable and no civil action may be brought against a fiduciary for: (1) providing for the automatic enrollment of a participant; (2) enrolling a participant in a default investment fund; or (3) allowing a participant to invest through the mutual fund window or establishing restrictions applicable to a participant's ability to invest through such a window.

 

(Sec. 107)

Gives the Executive Director authority to issue subpoenas to obtain materials.

 

(Sec. 108)

Revises provisions regarding the legal proceedings to which TSP funds are subject.

 

(Sec. 109)

Sets forth terms under which a surviving spouse may maintain the portion of a TSP account to which he or she is entitled.

 

(Sec. 110)

Directs the Secretary of Defense to report to Congress on the cost, and the effect on recruitment and retention, of providing a matching payment for TSP contributions by members of the Armed Forces.


Title II: Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance for Surviving Spouses of Armed Forces Members -

(Sec. 201)

Increases the monthly special survivor indemnity allowance paid to surviving spouses of members of the uniformed services who have had their survivor benefit plan annuity reduced due to dependency and indemnity compensation payments.

Poligu Summary

 
The Political Guide Summary
 

Bill Number : H R 1256
Short Title : Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act
 
Title : To protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products, to amend title 5, United States Code, to make certain modifications in the Thrift Savings Plan, the Civil Service Retirement System, and the Federal Employees' Retirement System, and for other purposes.

 

 Background

From FDA V. BROWN & WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CORP

The Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) grants the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the authority to regulate, among other items, “drugs” and “devices”.  In 1996, the FDA asserted jurisdiction to regulate tobacco products, concluding that, under the FDCA, nicotine is a “drug” and cigarettes and smokeless tobacco are “devices” that deliver nicotine to the body. Pursuant to this authority, the FDA promulgated regulations governing tobacco products’ promotion, labeling, and accessibility to children and adolescents.  The FDA found that tobacco use is the Nation’s leading cause of premature death, resulting in more than 400,000 deaths annually, and that most adult smokers begin when they are minors.  The regulations therefore aim to reduce tobacco use by minors so as to substantially reduce the prevalence of addiction in future generations, and thus the incidence of tobacco-related death and disease.

Respondents, a group of tobacco manufacturers, retailers, and advertisers, filed this suit challenging the FDA’s regulations.  They moved for summary judgment on the ground that the FDA lacked jurisdiction to regulate tobacco products as customarily marketed, that is, without manufacturer claims of therapeutic benefit. The District Court upheld the FDA’s authority, but the Fourth Circuit reversed, holding that Congress has not granted the FDA jurisdiction to regulate tobacco products. The supreme court concluded that construing the FDCA to include tobacco products would lead to several internal inconsistencies in the Act.  It also found that evidence external to the FDCA–that the FDA consistently stated before 1995 that it lacked jurisdiction over tobacco, that Congress has enacted several tobacco-specific statutes fully cognizant of the FDA’s position, and that Congress has considered and rejected many bills that would have given the agency such authority–confirms this conclusion.

This decision prompted Congress to enact the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act

 

Votes 

This legislation passed both the House and Senate with wide margins.   The bill initially passed the House on April 2, 2009, and then passed the Senate on June 10, 2009.

 

Content of Legislation

The legislation is divide into 2 divisions, one of which addresses the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, and the other deals with the Federal Retirement Reform Act of 2009.

  • Division A: Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act
    • Title I: Authority of the Food and Drug Administration
    • Title II: Tobacco Product Warnings; Constituent and Smoke Constituent Disclosure
    • Title III: Prevention of Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products
  • Division B: Federal Retirement Reform Act of 2009
    • Title I: Provisions Relating to Federal Employees Retirement 
    •  Title II: Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance for Surviving Spouses of Armed Forces Members

 

Title I : Authority of the Food and Drug Administration

Title I of the bill amends the FDCA to give it the authority it previously lacked.  It does the following things:

  • Creates a tobacco control center within the FDA and gives the FDA authority to regulate the content, marketing and sale of tobacco products
  • Allows the Secretary of Health and Human services to restrict the sale and marketing of tobacco, but not restrict those sales to zero
  •  Allows the Secretary to set standards to reduce nicotine yields, reduce other harmful substances, and product testing
  • Allows the Secretary to investigate the impact of the use of menthol in cigarettes on the public health
  • Requires approval of the Secretary to sale forms of tobacco which claim to reduce the possible affects of tobacco use, and specifically those which uses descriptors such as "light," "mild," or "low"

 

Title II : Tobacco Product Warnings

This section of the bill requires that all tobacco products bear warnings labels, and sets the requirements for the placement, size, and type of warnings.  Allows states or localities to impose specific bans or restrictions on the time, place, and manner, but not the content, of the advertising or promotion of any cigarettes.

 

Federal Retirement Reform Act

Sets up automatic enrollment for any new or re-hired government employee into the Thrift Savings Program (TSP), and sets up a Roth IRA option within the TSP.  The act also allows for the employee to cash in sick leave.

 
 
 
 
 
 

 Text of Legislation

H.R.1256
To protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products, to amend title 5, United States Code, to make certain... (Enrolled as Agreed to or Passed by Both House and Senate)

--H.R.1256--
H.R.1256
One Hundred Eleventh Congress
of the
United States of America
AT THE FIRST SESSION
Begun and held at the City of Washington on Tuesday,
the sixth day of January, two thousand and nine
An Act
To protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products, to amend title 5, United States Code, to make certain modifications in the Thrift Savings Plan, the Civil Service Retirement System, and the Federal Employees' Retirement System, and for other purposes.
    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
DIVISION A--FAMILY SMOKING PREVENTION AND TOBACCO CONTROL ACT
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE; TABLE OF CONTENTS.
    (a) Short Title- This division may be cited as the `Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act'.
    (b) Table of Contents- The table of contents of this division is as follows:
      Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents.
      Sec. 2. Findings.
      Sec. 3. Purpose.
      Sec. 4. Scope and effect.
      Sec. 5. Severability.
      Sec. 6. Modification of deadlines for Secretarial action.
TITLE I--AUTHORITY OF THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
      Sec. 101. Amendment of Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.
      Sec. 102. Final rule.
      Sec. 103. Conforming and other amendments to general provisions.
      Sec. 104. Study on raising the minimum age to purchase tobacco products.
      Sec. 105. Enforcement action plan for advertising and promotion restrictions.
      Sec. 106. Studies of progress and effectiveness.
TITLE II--TOBACCO PRODUCT WARNINGS; CONSTITUENT AND SMOKE CONSTITUENT DISCLOSURE
      Sec. 201. Cigarette label and advertising warnings.
      Sec. 202. Authority to revise cigarette warning label statements.
      Sec. 203. State regulation of cigarette advertising and promotion.
      Sec. 204. Smokeless tobacco labels and advertising warnings.
      Sec. 205. Authority to revise smokeless tobacco product warning label statements.
      Sec. 206. Tar, nicotine, and other smoke constituent disclosure to the public.
TITLE III--PREVENTION OF ILLICIT TRADE IN TOBACCO PRODUCTS
      Sec. 301. Labeling, recordkeeping, records inspection.
      Sec. 302. Study and report.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
    The Congress finds the following:
      (1) The use of tobacco products by the Nation's children is a pediatric disease of considerable proportions that results in new generations of tobacco-dependent children and adults.
      (2) A consensus exists within the scientific and medical communities that tobacco products are inherently dangerous and cause cancer, heart disease, and other serious adverse health effects.
      (3) Nicotine is an addictive drug.
      (4) Virtually all new users of tobacco products are under the minimum legal age to purchase such products.
      (5) Tobacco advertising and marketing contribute significantly to the use of nicotine-containing tobacco products by adolescents.
      (6) Because past efforts to restrict advertising and marketing of tobacco products have failed adequately to curb tobacco use by adolescents, comprehensive restrictions on the sale, promotion, and distribution of such products are needed.
      (7) Federal and State governments have lacked the legal and regulatory authority and resources they need to address comprehensively the public health and societal problems caused by the use of tobacco products.
      (8) Federal and State public health officials, the public health community, and the public at large recognize that the tobacco industry should be subject to ongoing oversight.
      (9) Under article I, section 8 of the Constitution, the Congress is vested with the responsibility for regulating interstate commerce and commerce with Indian tribes.
      (10) The sale, distribution, marketing, advertising, and use of tobacco products are activities in and substantially affecting interstate commerce because they are sold, marketed, advertised, and distributed in interstate commerce on a nationwide basis, and have a substantial effect on the Nation's economy.
      (11) The sale, distribution, marketing, advertising, and use of such products substantially affect interstate commerce through the health care and other costs attributable to the use of tobacco products.
      (12) It is in the public interest for Congress to enact legislation that provides the Food and Drug Administration with the authority to regulate tobacco products and the advertising and promotion of such products. The benefits to the American people from enacting such legislation would be significant in human and economic terms.
      (13) Tobacco use is the foremost preventable cause of premature death in America. It causes over 400,000 deaths in the United States each year, and approximately 8,600,000 Americans have chronic illnesses related to smoking.
      (14) Reducing the use of tobacco by minors by 50 percent would prevent well over 10,000,000 of today's children from becoming regular, daily smokers, saving over 3,000,000 of them from premature death due to tobacco-induced disease. Such a reduction in youth smoking would also result in approximately $75,000,000,000 in savings attributable to reduced health care costs.
      (15) Advertising, marketing, and promotion of tobacco products have been especially directed to attract young persons to use tobacco products, and these efforts have resulted in increased use of such products by youth. Past efforts to oversee these activities have not been successful in adequately preventing such increased use.
      (16) In 2005, the cigarette manufacturers spent more than $13,000,000,000 to attract new users, retain current users, increase current consumption, and generate favorable long-term attitudes toward smoking and tobacco use.
      (17) Tobacco product advertising often misleadingly portrays the use of tobacco as socially acceptable and healthful to minors.
      (18) Tobacco product advertising is regularly seen by persons under the age of 18, and persons under the age of 18 are regularly exposed to tobacco product promotional efforts.
      (19) Through advertisements during and sponsorship of sporting events, tobacco has become strongly associated with sports and has become portrayed as an integral part of sports and the healthy lifestyle associated with rigorous sporting activity.
      (20) Children are exposed to substantial and unavoidable tobacco advertising that leads to favorable beliefs about tobacco use, plays a role in leading young people to overestimate the prevalence of tobacco use, and increases the number of young people who begin to use tobacco.
      (21) The use of tobacco products in motion pictures and other mass media glamorizes its use for young people and encourages them to use tobacco products.
      (22) Tobacco advertising expands the size of the tobacco market by increasing consumption of tobacco products including tobacco use by young people.
      (23) Children are more influenced by tobacco marketing than adults: more than 80 percent of youth smoke three heavily marketed brands, while only 54 percent of adults, 26 and older, smoke these same brands.
      (24) Tobacco company documents indicate that young people are an important and often crucial segment of the tobacco market. Children, who tend to be more price sensitive than adults, are influenced by advertising and promotion practices that result in drastically reduced cigarette prices.
      (25) Comprehensive advertising restrictions will have a positive effect on the smoking rates of young people.
      (26) Restrictions on advertising are necessary to prevent unrestricted tobacco advertising from undermining legislation prohibiting access to young people and providing for education about tobacco use.
      (27) International experience shows that advertising regulations that are stringent and comprehensive have a greater impact on overall tobacco use and young people's use than weaker or less comprehensive ones.
      (28) Text only requirements, although not as stringent as a ban, will help reduce underage use of tobacco products while preserving the informational function of advertising.
      (29) It is in the public interest for Congress to adopt legislation to address the public health crisis created by actions of the tobacco industry.
      (30) The final regulations promulgated by the Secretary of Health and Human Services in the August 28, 1996, issue of the Federal Register (61 Fed. Reg. 44615-44618) for inclusion as part 897 of title 21, Code of Federal Regulations, are consistent with the first amendment to the United States Constitution and with the standards set forth in the amendments made by this subtitle for the regulation of tobacco products by the Food and Drug Administration, and the restriction on the sale and distribution of, including access to and the advertising and promotion of, tobacco products contained in such regulations are substantially related to accomplishing the public health goals of this division.
      (31) The regulations described in paragraph (30) will directly and materially advance the Federal Government's substantial interest in reducing the number of children and adolescents who use cigarettes and smokeless tobacco and in preventing the life-threatening health consequences associated with tobacco use. An overwhelming majority of Americans who use tobacco products begin using such products while they are minors and become addicted to the nicotine in those products before reaching the age of 18. Tobacco advertising and promotion play a crucial role in the decision of these minors to begin using tobacco products. Less restrictive and less comprehensive approaches have not and will not be effective in reducing the problems addressed by such regulations. The reasonable restrictions on the advertising and promotion of tobacco products contained in such regulations will lead to a significant decrease in the number of minors using and becoming addicted to those products.
      (32) The regulations described in paragraph (30) impose no more extensive restrictions on communication by tobacco manufacturers and sellers than are necessary to reduce the number of children and adolescents who use cigarettes and smokeless tobacco and to prevent the life-threatening health consequences associated with tobacco use. Such regulations are narrowly tailored to restrict those advertising and promotional practices which are most likely to be seen or heard by youth and most likely to entice them into tobacco use, while affording tobacco manufacturers and sellers ample opportunity to convey information about their products to adult consumers.
      (33) Tobacco dependence is a chronic disease, one that typically requires repeated interventions to achieve long-term or permanent abstinence.
      (34) Because the only known safe alternative to smoking is cessation, interventions should target all smokers to help them quit completely.
      (35) Tobacco products have been used to facilitate and finance criminal activities both domestically and internationally. Illicit trade of tobacco products has been linked to organized crime and terrorist groups.
      (36) It is essential that the Food and Drug Administration review products sold or distributed for use to reduce risks or exposures associated with tobacco products and that it be empowered to review any advertising and labeling for such products. It is also essential that manufacturers, prior to marketing such products, be required to demonstrate that such products will meet a series of rigorous criteria, and will benefit the health of the population as a whole, taking into account both users of tobacco products and persons who do not currently use tobacco products.
      (37) Unless tobacco products that purport to reduce the risks to the public of tobacco use actually reduce such risks, those products can cause substantial harm to the public health to the extent that the individuals, who would otherwise not consume tobacco products or would consume such products less, use tobacco products purporting to reduce risk. Those who use products sold or distributed as modified risk products that do not in fact reduce risk, rather than quitting or reducing their use of tobacco products, have a substantially increased likelihood of suffering disability and premature death. The costs to society of the widespread use of products sold or distributed as modified risk products that do not in fact reduce risk or that increase risk include thousands of unnecessary deaths and injuries and huge costs to our health care system.
      (38) As the National Cancer Institute has found, many smokers mistakenly believe that `low tar' and `light' cigarettes cause fewer health problems than other cigarettes. As the National Cancer Institute has also found, mistaken beliefs about the health consequences of smoking `low tar' and `light' cigarettes can reduce the motivation to quit smoking entirely and thereby lead to disease and death.
      (39) Recent studies have demonstrated that there has been no reduction in risk on a population-wide basis from `low tar' and `light' cigarettes, and such products may actually increase the risk of tobacco use.
      (40) The dangers of products sold or distributed as modified risk tobacco products that do not in fact reduce risk are so high that there is a compelling governmental interest in ensuring that statements about modified risk tobacco products are complete, accurate, and relate to the overall disease risk of the product.
      (41) As the Federal Trade Commission has found, consumers have misinterpreted advertisements in which one product is claimed to be less harmful than a comparable product, even in the presence of disclosures and advisories intended to provide clarification.
      (42) Permitting manufacturers to make unsubstantiated statements concerning modified risk tobacco products, whether express or implied, even if accompanied by disclaimers would be detrimental to the public health.
      (43) The only way to effectively protect the public health from the dangers of unsubstantiated modified risk tobacco products is to empower the Food and Drug Administration to require that products that tobacco manufacturers sold or distributed for risk reduction be reviewed in advance of marketing, and to require that the evidence relied on to support claims be fully verified.
      (44) The Food and Drug Administration is a regulatory agency with the scientific expertise to identify harmful substances in products to which consumers are exposed, to design standards to limit exposure to those substances, to evaluate scientific studies supporting claims about the safety of products, and to evaluate the impact of labels, labeling, and advertising on consumer behavior in order to reduce the risk of harm and promote understanding of the impact of the product on health. In connection with its mandate to promote health and reduce the risk of harm, the Food and Drug Administration routinely makes decisions about whether and how products may be marketed in the United States.
      (45) The Federal Trade Commission was created to protect consumers from unfair or deceptive acts or practices, and to regulate unfair methods of competition. Its focus is on those marketplace practices that deceive or mislead consumers, and those that give some competitors an unfair advantage. Its mission is to regulate activities in the marketplace. Neither the Federal Trade Commission nor any other Federal agency except the Food and Drug Administration possesses the scientific expertise needed to implement effectively all provisions of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act.
      (46) If manufacturers state or imply in communications directed to consumers through the media or through a label, labeling, or advertising, that a tobacco product is approved or inspected by the Food and Drug Administration or complies with Food and Drug Administration standards, consumers are likely to be confused and misled. Depending upon the particular language used and its context, such a statement could result in consumers being misled into believing that the product is endorsed by the Food and Drug Administration for use or in consumers being misled about the harmfulness of the product because of such regulation, inspection, approval, or compliance.
      (47) In August 2006 a United States district court judge found that the major United States cigarette companies continue to target and market to youth. USA v. Philip Morris, USA, Inc., et al. (Civil Action No. 99-2496 (GK), August 17, 2006).
      (48) In August 2006 a United States district court judge found that the major United States cigarette companies dramatically increased their advertising and promotional spending in ways that encourage youth to start smoking subsequent to the signing of the Master Settlement Agreement in 1998. USA v. Philip Morris, USA, Inc., et al. (Civil Action No. 99-2496 (GK), August 17, 2006).
      (49) In August 2006 a United States district court judge found that the major United States cigarette companies have designed their cigarettes to precisely control nicotine delivery levels and provide doses of nicotine sufficient to create and sustain addiction while also concealing much of their nicotine-related research. USA v. Philip Morris, USA, Inc., et al. (Civil Action No. 99-2496 (GK), August 17, 2006).
SEC. 3. PURPOSE.
    The purposes of this division are--
      (1) to provide authority to the Food and Drug Administration to regulate tobacco products under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 301 et seq.), by recognizing it as the primary Federal regulatory authority with respect to the manufacture, marketing, and distribution of tobacco products as provided for in this division;
      (2) to ensure that the Food and Drug Administration has the authority to address issues of particular concern to public health officials, especially the use of tobacco by young people and dependence on tobacco;
      (3) to authorize the Food and Drug Administration to set national standards controlling the manufacture of tobacco products and the identity, public disclosure, and amount of ingredients used in such products;
      (4) to provide new and flexible enforcement authority to ensure that there is effective oversight of the tobacco industry's efforts to develop, introduce, and promote less harmful tobacco products;
      (5) to vest the Food and Drug Administration with the authority to regulate the levels of tar, nicotine, and other harmful components of tobacco products;
      (6) in order to ensure that consumers are better informed, to require tobacco product manufacturers to disclose research which has not previously been made available, as well as research generated in the future, relating to the health and dependency effects or safety of tobacco products;
      (7) to continue to permit the sale of tobacco products to adults in conjunction with measures to ensure that they are not sold or accessible to underage purchasers;
      (8) to impose appropriate regulatory controls on the tobacco industry;
      (9) to promote cessation to reduce disease risk and the social costs associated with tobacco-related diseases; and
      (10) to strengthen legislation against illicit trade in tobacco products.

SEC. 4. SCOPE AND EFFECT.
    (a) Intended Effect- Nothing in this division (or an amendment made by this division) shall be construed to--
      (1) establish a precedent with regard to any other industry, situation, circumstance, or legal action; or
      (2) affect any action pending in Federal, State, or tribal court, or any agreement, consent decree, or contract of any kind.
    (b) Agricultural Activities- The provisions of this division (or an amendment made by this division) which authorize the Secretary to take certain actions with regard to tobacco and tobacco products shall not be construed to affect any authority of the Secretary of Agriculture under existing law regarding the growing, cultivation, or curing of raw tobacco.
    (c) Revenue Activities- The provisions of this division (or an amendment made by this division) which authorize the Secretary to take certain actions with regard to tobacco products shall not be construed to affect any authority of the Secretary of the Treasury under chapter 52 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.

5. SEVERABILITY.
    If any provision of this division, of the amendments made by this division, or of the regulations promulgated under this division (or under such amendments), or the application of any such provision to any person or circumstance is held to be invalid, the remainder of this division, such amendments and such regulations, and the application of such provisions to any other person or circumstance shall not be affected and shall continue to be enforced to the fullest extent possible.
SEC. 6. MODIFICATION OF DEADLINES FOR SECRETARIAL ACTION.
    (a) Delayed Commencement of Dates for Secretarial Action-
      (1) IN GENERAL- Except as provided in subsection (c), with respect to any time periods specified in this division (or in an amendment made by this division) that begin on the date of enactment of this Act, within which the Secretary of Health and Human Services is required to carry out and complete specified activities, the calculation of such time periods shall commence on the date described in subsection (b).
      (2) LIMITATION- Subsection (a) shall only apply with respect to obligations of the Secretary of Health and Human Services that must be completed within a specified time period and shall not apply to the obligations of any other person or to any other provision of this division (including the amendments made by this division) that do not create such obligations of the Secretary and are not contingent on actions by the Secretary.
    (b) Date Described- The date described in this subsection is the first day of the first fiscal quarter following the initial 2 consecutive fiscal quarters of fiscal year 2010 for which the Secretary of Health and Human Services has collected fees under section 919 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (as added by section 101).
    (c) Exception- Subsection (a) shall not apply to any time period (or date) contained--
      (1) in section 102, except that the reference to `180 days' in subsection (a)(1) of such section shall be deemed to be `270 days'; and
      (2) in sections 201 through 204 (or the amendments made by any such sections).
    (d) Adjustment- The Secretary of Health and Human Services may extend or reduce the duration of one or more time periods to which subsection (a) applies if the Secretary determines appropriate, except that no such period shall be extended for more than 90 days.
TITLE I--AUTHORITY OF THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
SEC. 101. AMENDMENT OF FEDERAL FOOD, DRUG, AND COSMETIC ACT.
    (a) Definition of Tobacco Products- Section 201 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 321) is amended by adding at the end the following:
    `(rr)(1) The term `tobacco product' means any product made or derived from tobacco that is intended for human consumption, including any component, part, or accessory of a tobacco product (except for raw materials other than tobacco used in manufacturing a component, part, or accessory of a tobacco product).
    `(2) The term `tobacco product' does not mean an article that is a drug under subsection (g)(1), a device under subsection (h), or a combination product described in section 503(g).
    `(3) The products described in paragraph (2) shall be subject to chapter V of this Act.
    `(4) A tobacco product shall not be marketed in combination with any other article or product regulated under this Act (including a drug, biologic, food, cosmetic, medical device, or a dietary supplement).'.
    (b) FDA Authority Over Tobacco Products- The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 301 et seq.) is amended--
      (1) by redesignating chapter IX as chapter X;
      (2) by redesignating sections 901 through 910 as sections 1001 through 1010; and
      (3) by inserting after chapter VIII the following:
`CHAPTER IX--TOBACCO PRODUCTS
`SEC. 900. DEFINITIONS.
    `In this chapter:
      `(1) ADDITIVE- The term `additive' means any substance the intended use of which results or may reasonably be expected to result, directly or indirectly, in its becoming a component or otherwise affecting the characteristic of any tobacco product (including any substances intended for use as a flavoring or coloring or in producing, manufacturing, packing, processing, preparing, treating, packaging, transporting, or holding), except that such term does not include tobacco or a pesticide chemical residue in or on raw tobacco or a pesticide chemical.
      `(2) BRAND- The term `brand' means a variety of tobacco product distinguished by the tobacco used, tar content, nicotine content, flavoring used, size, filtration, packaging, logo, registered trademark, brand name, identifiable pattern of colors, or any combination of such attributes.
      `(3) CIGARETTE- The term `cigarette'--
        `(A) means a product that--
          `(i) is a tobacco product; and
          `(ii) meets the definition of the term `cigarette' in section 3(1) of the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act; and
        `(B) includes tobacco, in any form, that is functional in the product, which, because of its appearance, the type of tobacco used in the filler, or its packaging and labeling, is likely to be offered to, or purchased by, consumers as a cigarette or as roll-your-own tobacco.
      `(4) CIGARETTE TOBACCO- The term `cigarette tobacco' means any product that consists of loose tobacco that is intended for use by consumers in a cigarette. Unless otherwise stated, the requirements applicable to cigarettes under this chapter shall also apply to cigarette tobacco.
      `(5) COMMERCE- The term `commerce' has the meaning given that term by section 3(2) of the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act.
      `(6) COUNTERFEIT TOBACCO PRODUCT- The term `counterfeit tobacco product' means a tobacco product (or the container or labeling of such a product) that, without authorization, bears the trademark, trade name, or other identifying mark, imprint, or device, or any likeness thereof, of a tobacco product listed in a registration under section 905(i)(1).
      `(7) DISTRIBUTOR- The term `distributor' as regards a tobacco product means any person who furthers the distribution of a tobacco product, whether domestic or imported, at any point from the original place of manufacture to the person who sells or distributes the product to individuals for personal consumption. Common carriers are not considered distributors for purposes of this chapter.
      `(8) ILLICIT TRADE- The term `illicit trade' means any practice or conduct prohibited by law which relates to production, shipment, receipt, possession, distribution, sale, or purchase of tobacco products including any practice or conduct intended to facilitate such activity.
      `(9) INDIAN COUNTRY- The term `Indian country' has the meaning given such term in section 1151 of title 18, United States Code.
      `(10) INDIAN TRIBE- The term `Indian tribe' has the meaning given such term in section 4(e) of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act.
      `(11) LITTLE CIGAR- The term `little cigar' means a product that--
        `(A) is a tobacco product; and
        `(B) meets the definition of the term `little cigar' in section 3(7) of the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act.
      `(12) NICOTINE- The term `nicotine' means the chemical substance named 3-(1-Methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl) pyridine or C[10]H[14]N[2], including any salt or complex of nicotine.
      `(13) PACKAGE- The term `package' means a pack, box, carton, or container of any kind or, if no other container, any wrapping (including cellophane), in which a tobacco product is offered for sale, sold, or otherwise distributed to consumers.
      `(14) RETAILER- The term `retailer' means any person, government, or entity who sells tobacco products to individuals for personal consumption, or who operates a facility where self-service displays of tobacco products are permitted.
      `(15) ROLL-YOUR-OWN TOBACCO- The term `roll-your-own tobacco' means any tobacco product which, because of its appearance, type, packaging, or labeling, is suitable for use and likely to be offered to, or purchased by, consumers as tobacco for making cigarettes.
      `(16) SMALL TOBACCO PRODUCT MANUFACTURER- The term `small tobacco product manufacturer' means a tobacco product manufacturer that employs fewer than 350 employees. For purposes of determining the number of employees of a manufacturer under the preceding sentence, the employees of a manufacturer are deemed to include the employees of each entity that controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with such manufacturer.
      `(17) SMOKE CONSTITUENT- The term `smoke constituent' means any chemical or chemical compound in mainstream or sidestream tobacco smoke that either transfers from any component of the cigarette to the smoke or that is formed by the combustion or heating of tobacco, additives, or other component of the tobacco product.
      `(18) SMOKELESS TOBACCO- The term `smokeless tobacco' means any tobacco product that consists of cut, ground, powdered, or leaf tobacco and that is intended to be placed in the oral or nasal cavity.
      `(19) STATE; TERRITORY- The terms `State' and `Territory' shall have the meanings given to such terms in section 201.
      `(20) TOBACCO PRODUCT MANUFACTURER- The term `tobacco product manufacturer' means any person, including any repacker or relabeler, who--
        `(A) manufactures, fabricates, assembles, processes, or labels a tobacco product; or
        `(B) imports a finished tobacco product for sale or distribution in the United States.
      `(21) TOBACCO WAREHOUSE-
        `(A) Subject to subparagraphs (B) and (C), the term `tobacco warehouse' includes any person--
          `(i) who--
            `(I) removes foreign material from tobacco leaf through nothing other than a mechanical process;
            `(II) humidifies tobacco leaf with nothing other than potable water in the form of steam or mist; or
            `(III) de-stems, dries, and packs tobacco leaf for storage and shipment;
          `(ii) who performs no other actions with respect to tobacco leaf; and
          `(iii) who provides to any manufacturer to whom the person sells tobacco all information related to the person's actions described in clause (i) that is necessary for compliance with this Act.
        `(B) The term `tobacco warehouse' excludes any person who--
          `(i) reconstitutes tobacco leaf;
          `(ii) is a manufacturer, distributor, or retailer of a tobacco product; or
          `(iii) applies any chemical, additive, or substance to the tobacco leaf other than potable water in the form of steam or mist.
        `(C) The definition of the term `tobacco warehouse' in subparagraph (A) shall not apply to the extent to which the Secretary determines, through rulemaking, that regulation under this chapter of the actions described in such subparagraph is appropriate for the protection of the public health.
      `(22) UNITED STATES- The term `United States' means the 50 States of the United States of America and the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Wake Island, Midway Islands, Kingman Reef, Johnston Atoll, the Northern Mariana Islands, and any other trust territory or possession of the United States.
`SEC. 901. FDA AUTHORITY OVER TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
    `(a) In General- Tobacco products, including modified risk tobacco products for which an order has been issued in accordance with section 911, shall be regulated by the Secretary under this chapter and shall not be subject to the provisions of chapter V.
    `(b) Applicability- This chapter shall apply to all cigarettes, cigarette tobacco, roll-your-own tobacco, and smokeless tobacco and to any other tobacco products that the Secretary by regulation deems to be subject to this chapter.
    `(c) Scope-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- Nothing in this chapter, or any policy issued or regulation promulgated thereunder, or in sections 101(a), 102, or 103 of title I, title II, or title III of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, shall be construed to affect, expand, or limit the Secretary's authority over (including the authority to determine whether products may be regulated), or the regulation of, products under this Act that are not tobacco products under chapter V or any other chapter.
      `(2) LIMITATION OF AUTHORITY-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to tobacco leaf that is not in the possession of a manufacturer of tobacco products, or to the producers of tobacco leaf, including tobacco growers, tobacco warehouses, and tobacco grower cooperatives, nor shall any employee of the Food and Drug Administration have any authority to enter onto a farm owned by a producer of tobacco leaf without the written consent of such producer.
        `(B) EXCEPTION- Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), if a producer of tobacco leaf is also a tobacco product manufacturer or controlled by a tobacco product manufacturer, the producer shall be subject to this chapter in the producer's capacity as a manufacturer. The exception in this subparagraph shall not apply to a producer of tobacco leaf who grows tobacco under a contract with a tobacco product manufacturer and who is not otherwise engaged in the manufacturing process.
        `(C) RULE OF CONSTRUCTION- Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to grant the Secretary authority to promulgate regulations on any matter that involves the production of tobacco leaf or a producer thereof, other than activities by a manufacturer affecting production.
    `(d) Rulemaking Procedures- Each rulemaking under this chapter shall be in accordance with chapter 5 of title 5, United States Code. This subsection shall not be construed to affect the rulemaking provisions of section 102(a) of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act.
    `(e) Center for Tobacco Products- Not later than 90 days after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the Secretary shall establish within the Food and Drug Administration the Center for Tobacco Products, which shall report to the Commissioner of Food and Drugs in the same manner as the other agency centers within the Food and Drug Administration. The Center shall be responsible for the implementation of this chapter and related matters assigned by the Commissioner.
    `(f) Office To Assist Small Tobacco Product Manufacturers- The Secretary shall establish within the Food and Drug Administration an identifiable office to provide technical and other nonfinancial assistance to small tobacco product manufacturers to assist them in complying with the requirements of this Act.
    `(g) Consultation Prior to Rulemaking- Prior to promulgating rules under this chapter, the Secretary shall endeavor to consult with other Federal agencies as appropriate.
`SEC. 902. ADULTERATED TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
    `A tobacco product shall be deemed to be adulterated if--
      `(1) it consists in whole or in part of any filthy, putrid, or decomposed substance, or is otherwise contaminated by any added poisonous or added deleterious substance that may render the product injurious to health;
      `(2) it has been prepared, packed, or held under insanitary conditions whereby it may have been contaminated with filth, or whereby it may have been rendered injurious to health;
      `(3) its package is composed, in whole or in part, of any poisonous or deleterious substance which may render the contents injurious to health;
      `(4) the manufacturer or importer of the tobacco product fails to pay a user fee assessed to such manufacturer or importer pursuant to section 919 by the date specified in section 919 or by the 30th day after final agency action on a resolution of any dispute as to the amount of such fee;
      `(5) it is, or purports to be or is represented as, a tobacco product which is subject to a tobacco product standard established under section 907 unless such tobacco product is in all respects in conformity with such standard;
      `(6)(A) it is required by section 910(a) to have premarket review and does not have an order in effect under section 910(c)(1)(A)(i); or
      `(B) it is in violation of an order under section 910(c)(1)(A);
      `(7) the methods used in, or the facilities or controls used for, its manufacture, packing, or storage are not in conformity with applicable requirements under section 906(e)(1) or an applicable condition prescribed by an order under section 906(e)(2); or
      `(8) it is in violation of section 911.
`SEC. 903. MISBRANDED TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
    `(a) In General- A tobacco product shall be deemed to be misbranded--
      `(1) if its labeling is false or misleading in any particular;
      `(2) if in package form unless it bears a label containing--
        `(A) the name and place of business of the tobacco product manufacturer, packer, or distributor;
        `(B) an accurate statement of the quantity of the contents in terms of weight, measure, or numerical count;
        `(C) an accurate statement of the percentage of the tobacco used in the product that is domestically grown tobacco and the percentage that is foreign grown tobacco; and
        `(D) the statement required under section 920(a),
      except that under subparagraph (B) reasonable variations shall be permitted, and exemptions as to small packages shall be established, by regulations prescribed by the Secretary;
      `(3) if any word, statement, or other information required by or under authority of this chapter to appear on the label or labeling is not prominently placed thereon with such conspicuousness (as compared with other words, statements, or designs in the labeling) and in such terms as to render it likely to be read and understood by the ordinary individual under customary conditions of purchase and use;
      `(4) if it has an established name, unless its label bears, to the exclusion of any other nonproprietary name, its established name prominently printed in type as required by the Secretary by regulation;
      `(5) if the Secretary has issued regulations requiring that its labeling bear adequate directions for use, or adequate warnings against use by children, that are necessary for the protection of users unless its labeling conforms in all respects to such regulations;
      `(6) if it was manufactured, prepared, propagated, compounded, or processed in an establishment not duly registered under section 905(b), 905(c), 905(d), or 905(h), if it was not included in a list required by section 905(i), if a notice or other information respecting it was not provided as required by such section or section 905(j), or if it does not bear such symbols from the uniform system for identification of tobacco products prescribed under section 905(e) as the Secretary by regulation requires;
      `(7) if, in the case of any tobacco product distributed or offered for sale in any State--
        `(A) its advertising is false or misleading in any particular; or
        `(B) it is sold or distributed in violation of regulations prescribed under section 906(d);
      `(8) unless, in the case of any tobacco product distributed or offered for sale in any State, the manufacturer, packer, or distributor thereof includes in all advertisements and other descriptive printed matter issued or caused to be issued by the manufacturer, packer, or distributor with respect to that tobacco product--
        `(A) a true statement of the tobacco product's established name as described in paragraph (4), printed prominently; and
        `(B) a brief statement of--
          `(i) the uses of the tobacco product and relevant warnings, precautions, side effects, and contraindications; and
          `(ii) in the case of specific tobacco products made subject to a finding by the Secretary after notice and opportunity for comment that such action is appropriate to protect the public health, a full description of the components of such tobacco product or the formula showing quantitatively each ingredient of such tobacco product to the extent required in regulations which shall be issued by the Secretary after an opportunity for a hearing;
      `(9) if it is a tobacco product subject to a tobacco product standard established under section 907, unless it bears such labeling as may be prescribed in such tobacco product standard; or
      `(10) if there was a failure or refusal--
        `(A) to comply with any requirement prescribed under section 904 or 908; or
        `(B) to furnish any material or information required under section 909.
    `(b) Prior Approval of Label Statements- The Secretary may, by regulation, require prior approval of statements made on the label of a tobacco product to ensure that such statements do not violate the misbranding provisions of subsection (a) and that such statements comply with other provisions of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (including the amendments made by such Act).

No regulation issued under this subsection may require prior approval by the Secretary of the content of any advertisement, except for modified risk tobacco products as provided in section 911. No advertisement of a tobacco product published after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act shall, with respect to the language of label statements as prescribed under section 4 of the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act and section 3 of the Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act of 1986 or the regulations issued under such sections, be subject to the provisions of sections 12 through 15 of the Federal Trade Commission Act.
`SEC. 904. SUBMISSION OF HEALTH INFORMATION TO THE SECRETARY.
    `(a) Requirement- Each tobacco product manufacturer or importer, or agents thereof, shall submit to the Secretary the following information:
      `(1) Not later than 6 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, a listing of all ingredients, including tobacco, substances, compounds, and additives that are, as of such date, added by the manufacturer to the tobacco, paper, filter, or other part of each tobacco product by brand and by quantity in each brand and subbrand.
      `(2) A description of the content, delivery, and form of nicotine in each tobacco product measured in milligrams of nicotine in accordance with regulations promulgated by the Secretary in accordance with section 4(e) of the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act.
      `(3) Beginning 3 years after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, a listing of all constituents, including smoke constituents as applicable, identified by the Secretary as harmful or potentially harmful to health in each tobacco product, and as applicable in the smoke of each tobacco product, by brand and by quantity in each brand and subbrand. Effective beginning 3 years after such date of enactment, the manufacturer, importer, or agent shall comply with regulations promulgated under section 915 in reporting information under this paragraph, where applicable.
      `(4) Beginning 6 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, all documents developed after such date of enactment that relate to health, toxicological, behavioral, or physiologic effects of current or future tobacco products, their constituents (including smoke constituents), ingredients, components, and additives.
    `(b) Data Submission- At the request of the Secretary, each tobacco product manufacturer or importer of tobacco products, or agents thereof, shall submit the following:
      `(1) Any or all documents (including underlying scientific information) relating to research activities, and research findings, conducted, supported, or possessed by the manufacturer (or agents thereof) on the health, toxicological, behavioral, or physiologic effects of tobacco products and their constituents (including smoke constituents), ingredients, components, and additives.
      `(2) Any or all documents (including underlying scientific information) relating to research activities, and research findings, conducted, supported, or possessed by the manufacturer (or agents thereof) that relate to the issue of whether a reduction in risk to health from tobacco products can occur upon the employment of technology available or known to the manufacturer.
      `(3) Any or all documents (including underlying scientific or financial information) relating to marketing research involving the use of tobacco products or marketing practices and the effectiveness of such practices used by tobacco manufacturers and distributors.
    An importer of a tobacco product not manufactured in the United States shall supply the information required of a tobacco product manufacturer under this subsection.
    `(c) Time for Submission-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- At least 90 days prior to the delivery for introduction into interstate commerce of a tobacco product not on the market on the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the manufacturer of such product shall provide the information required under subsection (a).
      `(2) DISCLOSURE OF ADDITIVE- If at any time a tobacco product manufacturer adds to its tobacco products a new tobacco additive or increases the quantity of an existing tobacco additive, the manufacturer shall, except as provided in paragraph (3), at least 90 days prior to such action so advise the Secretary in writing.
      `(3) DISCLOSURE OF OTHER ACTIONS- If at any time a tobacco product manufacturer eliminates or decreases an existing additive, or adds or increases an additive that has by regulation been designated by the Secretary as an additive that is not a human or animal carcinogen, or otherwise harmful to health under intended conditions of use, the manufacturer shall within 60 days of such action so advise the Secretary in writing.
    `(d) Data List-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- Not later than 3 years after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, and annually thereafter, the Secretary shall publish in a format that is understandable and not misleading to a lay person, and place on public display (in a manner determined by the Secretary) the list established under subsection (e).
      `(2) CONSUMER RESEARCH- The Secretary shall conduct periodic consumer research to ensure that the list published under paragraph (1) is not misleading to lay persons. Not later than 5 years after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the Secretary shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on the results of such research, together with recommendations on whether such publication should be continued or modified.
    `(e) Data Collection- Not later than 24 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the Secretary shall establish, and periodically revise as appropriate, a list of harmful and potentially harmful constituents, including smoke constituents, to health in each tobacco product by brand and by quantity in each brand and subbrand. The Secretary shall publish a public notice requesting the submission by interested persons of scientific and other information concerning the harmful and potentially harmful constituents in tobacco products and tobacco smoke.
`SEC. 905. ANNUAL REGISTRATION.
    `(a) Definitions- In this section:
      `(1) MANUFACTURE, PREPARATION, COMPOUNDING, OR PROCESSING- The term `manufacture, preparation, compounding, or processing' shall include repackaging or otherwise changing the container, wrapper, or labeling of any tobacco product package in furtherance of the distribution of the tobacco product from the original place of manufacture to the person who makes final delivery or sale to the ultimate consumer or user.
      `(2) NAME- The term `name' shall include in the case of a partnership the name of each partner and, in the case of a corporation, the name of each corporate officer and director, and the State of incorporation.
    `(b) Registration by Owners and Operators- On or before December 31 of each year, every person who owns or operates any establishment in any State engaged in the manufacture, preparation, compounding, or processing of a tobacco product or tobacco products shall register with the Secretary the name, places of business, and all such establishments of that person. If enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act occurs in the second half of the calendar year, the Secretary shall designate a date no later than 6 months into the subsequent calendar year by which registration pursuant to this subsection shall occur.
    `(c) Registration by New Owners and Operators- Every person upon first engaging in the manufacture, preparation, compounding, or processing of a tobacco product or tobacco products in any establishment owned or operated in any State by that person shall immediately register with the Secretary that person's name, place of business, and such establishment.
    `(d) Registration of Added Establishments- Every person required to register under subsection (b) or (c) shall immediately register with the Secretary any additional establishment which that person owns or operates in any State and in which that person begins the manufacture, preparation, compounding, or processing of a tobacco product or tobacco products.
    `(e) Uniform Product Identification System- The Secretary may by regulation prescribe a uniform system for the identification of tobacco products and may require that persons who are required to list such tobacco products under subsection (i) shall list such tobacco products in accordance with such system.
    `(f) Public Access to Registration Information- The Secretary shall make available for inspection, to any person so requesting, any registration filed under this section.
    `(g) Biennial Inspection of Registered Establishments- Every establishment registered with the Secretary under this section shall be subject to inspection under section 704 or subsection (h), and every such establishment engaged in the manufacture, compounding, or processing of a tobacco product or tobacco products shall be so inspected by 1 or more officers or employees duly designated by the Secretary at least once in the 2-year period beginning with the date of registration of such establishment under this section and at least once in every successive 2-year period thereafter.
    `(h) Registration by Foreign Establishments- Any establishment within any foreign country engaged in the manufacture, preparation, compounding, or processing of a tobacco product or tobacco products, shall register under this section under regulations promulgated by the Secretary. Such regulations shall require such establishment to provide the information required by subsection (i) and shall include provisions for registration of any such establishment upon condition that adequate and effective means are available, by arrangement with the government of such foreign country or otherwise, to enable the Secretary to determine from time to time whether tobacco products manufactured, prepared, compounded, or processed in such establishment, if imported or offered for import into the United States, shall be refused admission on any of the grounds set forth in section 801(a).
    `(i) Registration Information-
      `(1) PRODUCT LIST- Every person who registers with the Secretary under subsection (b), (c), (d), or (h) shall, at the time of registration under any such subsection, file with the Secretary a list of all tobacco products which are being manufactured, prepared, compounded, or processed by that person for commercial distribution and which have not been included in any list of tobacco products filed by that person with the Secretary under this paragraph or paragraph (2) before such time of registration. Such list shall be prepared in such form and manner as the Secretary may prescribe and shall be accompanied by--
        `(A) in the case of a tobacco product contained in the applicable list with respect to which a tobacco product standard has been established under section 907 or which is subject to section 910, a reference to the authority for the marketing of such tobacco product and a copy of all labeling for such tobacco product;
        `(B) in the case of any other tobacco product contained in an applicable list, a copy of all consumer information and other labeling for such tobacco product, a representative sampling of advertisements for such tobacco product, and, upon request made by the Secretary for good cause, a copy of all advertisements for a particular tobacco product; and
        `(C) if the registrant filing a list has determined that a tobacco product contained in such list is not subject to a tobacco product standard established under section 907, a brief statement of the basis upon which the registrant made such determination if the Secretary requests such a statement with respect to that particular tobacco product.
      `(2) CONSULTATION WITH RESPECT TO FORMS- The Secretary shall consult with the Secretary of the Treasury in developing the forms to be used for registration under this section to minimize the burden on those persons required to register with both the Secretary and the Tax and Trade Bureau of the Department of the Treasury.
      `(3) BIANNUAL REPORT OF ANY CHANGE IN PRODUCT LIST- Each person who registers with the Secretary under this section shall report to the Secretary once during the month of June of each year and once during the month of December of each year the following:
        `(A) A list of each tobacco product introduced by the registrant for commercial distribution which has not been included in any list previously filed by that person with the Secretary under this subparagraph or paragraph (1). A list under this subparagraph shall list a tobacco product by its established name and shall be accompanied by the other information required by paragraph (1).
        `(B) If since the date the registrant last made a report under this paragraph that person has discontinued the manufacture, preparation, compounding, or processing for commercial distribution of a tobacco product included in a list filed under subparagraph (A) or paragraph (1), notice of such discontinuance, the date of such discontinuance, and the identity of its established name.
        `(C) If since the date the registrant reported under subparagraph (B) a notice of discontinuance that person has resumed the manufacture, preparation, compounding, or processing for commercial distribution of the tobacco product with respect to which such notice of discontinuance was reported, notice of such resumption, the date of such resumption, the identity of such tobacco product by established name, and other information required by paragraph (1), unless the registrant has previously reported such resumption to the Secretary under this subparagraph.
        `(D) Any material change in any information previously submitted under this paragraph or paragraph (1).
    `(j) Report Preceding Introduction of Certain Substantially Equivalent Products Into Interstate Commerce-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- Each person who is required to register under this section and who proposes to begin the introduction or delivery for introduction into interstate commerce for commercial distribution of a tobacco product intended for human use that was not commercially marketed (other than for test marketing) in the United States as of February 15, 2007, shall, at least 90 days prior to making such introduction or delivery, report to the Secretary (in such form and manner as the Secretary shall prescribe)--
        `(A) the basis for such person's determination that--
          `(i) the tobacco product is substantially equivalent, within the meaning of section 910, to a tobacco product commercially marketed (other than for test marketing) in the United States as of February 15, 2007, or to a tobacco product that the Secretary has previously determined, pursuant to subsection (a)(3) of section 910, is substantially equivalent and that is in compliance with the requirements of this Act; or
          `(ii) the tobacco product is modified within the meaning of paragraph (3), the modifications are to a product that is commercially marketed and in compliance with the requirements of this Act, and all of the modifications are covered by exemptions granted by the Secretary pursuant to paragraph (3); and
        `(B) action taken by such person to comply with the requirements under section 907 that are applicable to the tobacco product.
      `(2) APPLICATION TO CERTAIN POST-FEBRUARY 15, 2007, PRODUCTS- A report under this subsection for a tobacco product that was first introduced or delivered for introduction into interstate commerce for commercial distribution in the United States after February 15, 2007, and prior to the date that is 21 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act shall be submitted to the Secretary not later than 21 months after such date of enactment.
      `(3) EXEMPTIONS-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- The Secretary may exempt from the requirements of this subsection relating to the demonstration that a tobacco product is substantially equivalent within the meaning of section 910, tobacco products that are modified by adding or deleting a tobacco additive, or increasing or decreasing the quantity of an existing tobacco additive, if the Secretary determines that--
          `(i) such modification would be a minor modification of a tobacco product that can be sold under this Act;
          `(ii) a report under this subsection is not necessary to ensure that permitting the tobacco product to be marketed would be appropriate for protection of the public health; and
          `(iii) an exemption is otherwise appropriate.
        `(B) REGULATIONS- Not later than 15 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the Secretary shall issue regulations to implement this paragraph.
`SEC. 906. GENERAL PROVISIONS RESPECTING CONTROL OF TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
    `(a) In General- Any requirement established by or under section 902, 903, 905, or 909 applicable to a tobacco product shall apply to such tobacco product until the applicability of the requirement to the tobacco product has been changed by action taken under section 907, section 910, section 911, or subsection (d) of this section, and any requirement established by or under section 902, 903, 905, or 909 which is inconsistent with a requirement imposed on such tobacco product under section 907, section 910, section 911, or subsection (d) of this section shall not apply to such tobacco product.
    `(b) Information on Public Access and Comment- Each notice of proposed rulemaking or other notification under section 907, 908, 909, 910, or 911 or under this section, any other notice which is published in the Federal Register with respect to any other action taken under any such section and which states the reasons for such action, and each publication of findings required to be made in connection with rulemaking under any such section shall set forth--
      `(1) the manner in which interested persons may examine data and other information on which the notice or findings is based; and
      `(2) the period within which interested persons may present their comments on the notice or findings (including the need therefore) orally or in writing, which period shall be at least 60 days but may not exceed 90 days unless the time is extended by the Secretary by a notice published in the Federal Register stating good cause therefore.
    `(c) Limited Confidentiality of Information- Any information reported to or otherwise obtained by the Secretary or the Secretary's representative under section 903, 904, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, or 704, or under subsection (e) or (f) of this section, which is exempt from disclosure under subsection (a) of section 552 of title 5, United States Code, by reason of subsection (b)(4) of that section shall be considered confidential and shall not be disclosed, except that the information may be disclosed to other officers or employees concerned with carrying out this chapter, or when relevant in any proceeding under this chapter.
    `(d) Restrictions-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- The Secretary may by regulation require restrictions on the sale and distribution of a tobacco product, including restrictions on the access to, and the advertising and promotion of, the tobacco product, if the Secretary determines that such regulation would be appropriate for the protection of the public health.

The Secretary may by regulation impose restrictions on the advertising and promotion of a tobacco product consistent with and to full extent permitted by the first amendment to the Constitution. The finding as to whether such regulation would be appropriate for the protection of the public health shall be determined with respect to the risks and benefits to the population as a whole, including users and nonusers of the tobacco product, and taking into account--
        `(A) the increased or decreased likelihood that existing users of tobacco products will stop using such products; and
        `(B) the increased or decreased likelihood that those who do not use tobacco products will start using such products.
      No such regulation may require that the sale or distribution of a tobacco product be limited to the written or oral authorization of a practitioner licensed by law to prescribe medical products.
      `(2) LABEL STATEMENTS- The label of a tobacco product shall bear such appropriate statements of the restrictions required by a regulation under subsection (a) as the Secretary may in such regulation prescribe.
      `(3) LIMITATIONS-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- No restrictions under paragraph (1) may--
          `(i) prohibit the sale of any tobacco product in face-to-face transactions by a specific category of retail outlets; or
          `(ii) establish a minimum age of sale of tobacco products to any person older than 18 years of age.
        `(B) MATCHBOOKS- For purposes of any regulations issued by the Secretary, matchbooks of conventional size containing not more than 20 paper matches, and which are customarily given away for free with the purchase of tobacco products, shall be considered as adult-written publications which shall be permitted to contain advertising. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, if the Secretary finds that such treatment of matchbooks is not appropriate for the protection of the public health, the Secretary may determine by regulation that matchbooks shall not be considered adult-written publications.
      `(4) REMOTE SALES-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- The Secretary shall--
          `(i) within 18 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, promulgate regulations regarding the sale and distribution of tobacco products that occur through means other than a direct, face-to-face exchange between a retailer and a consumer in order to prevent the sale and distribution of tobacco products to individuals who have not attained the minimum age established by applicable law for the purchase of such products, including requirements for age verification; and
          `(ii) within 2 years after such date of enactment, issue regulations to address the promotion and marketing of tobacco products that are sold or distributed through means other than a direct, face-to-face exchange between a retailer and a consumer in order to protect individuals who have not attained the minimum age established by applicable law for the purchase of such products.
        `(B) RELATION TO OTHER AUTHORITY- Nothing in this paragraph limits the authority of the Secretary to take additional actions under the other paragraphs of this subsection.
    `(e) Good Manufacturing Practice Requirements-
      `(1) METHODS, FACILITIES, AND CONTROLS TO CONFORM-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- In applying manufacturing restrictions to tobacco, the Secretary shall, in accordance with subparagraph (B), prescribe regulations (which may differ based on the type of tobacco product involved) requiring that the methods used in, and the facilities and controls used for, the manufacture, preproduction design validation (including a process to assess the performance of a tobacco product), packing, and storage of a tobacco product conform to current good manufacturing practice, or hazard analysis and critical control point methodology, as prescribed in such regulations to assure that the public health is protected and that the tobacco product is in compliance with this chapter. Such regulations may provide for the testing of raw tobacco for pesticide chemical residues regardless of whether a tolerance for such chemical residues has been established.
        `(B) REQUIREMENTS- The Secretary shall--
          `(i) before promulgating any regulation under subparagraph (A), afford the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee an opportunity to submit recommendations with respect to the regulation proposed to be promulgated;
          `(ii) before promulgating any regulation under subparagraph (A), afford opportunity for an oral hearing;
          `(iii) provide the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee a reasonable time to make its recommendation with respect to proposed regulations under subparagraph (A);
          `(iv) in establishing the effective date of a regulation promulgated under this subsection, take into account the differences in the manner in which the different types of tobacco products have historically been produced, the financial resources of the different tobacco product manufacturers, and the state of their existing manufacturing facilities, and shall provide for a reasonable period of time for such manufacturers to conform to good manufacturing practices; and
          `(v) not require any small tobacco product manufacturer to comply with a regulation under subparagraph (A) for at least 4 years following the effective date established by the Secretary for such regulation.
      `(2) EXEMPTIONS; VARIANCES-
        `(A) PETITION- Any person subject to any requirement prescribed under paragraph (1) may petition the Secretary for a permanent or temporary exemption or variance from such requirement. Such a petition shall be submitted to the Secretary in such form and manner as the Secretary shall prescribe and shall--
          `(i) in the case of a petition for an exemption from a requirement, set forth the basis for the petitioner's determination that compliance with the requirement is not required to assure that the tobacco product will be in compliance with this chapter;
          `(ii) in the case of a petition for a variance from a requirement, set forth the methods proposed to be used in, and the facilities and controls proposed to be used for, the manufacture, packing, and storage of the tobacco product in lieu of the methods, facilities, and controls prescribed by the requirement; and
          `(iii) contain such other information as the Secretary shall prescribe.
        `(B) REFERRAL TO THE TOBACCO PRODUCTS SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY COMMITTEE- The Secretary may refer to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee any petition submitted under subparagraph (A). The Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee shall report its recommendations to the Secretary with respect to a petition referred to it within 60 days after the date of the petition's referral. Within 60 days after--
          `(i) the date the petition was submitted to the Secretary under subparagraph (A); or
          `(ii) the day after the petition was referred to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee,
        whichever occurs later, the Secretary shall by order either deny the petition or approve it.
        `(C) APPROVAL- The Secretary may approve--
          `(i) a petition for an exemption for a tobacco product from a requirement if the Secretary determines that compliance with such requirement is not required to assure that the tobacco product will be in compliance with this chapter; and
          `(ii) a petition for a variance for a tobacco product from a requirement if the Secretary determines that the methods to be used in, and the facilities and controls to be used for, the manufacture, packing, and storage of the tobacco product in lieu of the methods, facilities, and controls prescribed by the requirement are sufficient to assure that the tobacco product will be in compliance with this chapter.
        `(D) CONDITIONS- An order of the Secretary approving a petition for a variance shall prescribe such conditions respecting the methods used in, and the facilities and controls used for, the manufacture, packing, and storage of the tobacco product to be granted the variance under the petition as may be necessary to assure that the tobacco product will be in compliance with this chapter.
        `(E) HEARING- After the issuance of an order under subparagraph (B) respecting a petition, the petitioner shall have an opportunity for an informal hearing on such order.
      `(3) COMPLIANCE- Compliance with requirements under this subsection shall not be required before the end of the 3-year period following the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act.
    `(f) Research and Development- The Secretary may enter into contracts for research, testing, and demonstrations respecting tobacco products and may obtain tobacco products for research, testing, and demonstration purposes.
`SEC. 907. TOBACCO PRODUCT STANDARDS.
    `(a) In General-
      `(1) SPECIAL RULES-
        `(A) SPECIAL RULE FOR CIGARETTES- Beginning 3 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, a cigarette or any of its component parts (including the tobacco, filter, or paper) shall not contain, as a constituent (including a smoke constituent) or additive, an artificial or natural flavor (other than tobacco or menthol) or an herb or spice, including strawberry, grape, orange, clove, cinnamon, pineapple, vanilla, coconut, licorice, cocoa, chocolate, cherry, or coffee, that is a characterizing flavor of the tobacco product or tobacco smoke. Nothing in this subparagraph shall be construed to limit the Secretary's authority to take action under this section or other sections of this Act applicable to menthol or any artificial or natural flavor, herb, or spice not specified in this subparagraph.
        `(B) ADDITIONAL SPECIAL RULE- Beginning 2 years after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, a tobacco product manufacturer shall not use tobacco, including foreign grown tobacco, that contains a pesticide chemical residue that is at a level greater than is specified by any tolerance applicable under Federal law to domestically grown tobacco.
      `(2) REVISION OF TOBACCO PRODUCT STANDARDS- The Secretary may revise the tobacco product standards in paragraph (1) in accordance with subsection (c).
      `(3) TOBACCO PRODUCT STANDARDS-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- The Secretary may adopt tobacco product standards in addition to those in paragraph (1) if the Secretary finds that a tobacco product standard is appropriate for the protection of the public health.
        `(B) DETERMINATIONS-
          `(i) CONSIDERATIONS- In making a finding described in subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall consider scientific evidence concerning--
            `(I) the risks and benefits to the population as a whole, including users and nonusers of tobacco products, of the proposed standard;
            `(II) the increased or decreased likelihood that existing users of tobacco products will stop using such products; and
            `(III) the increased or decreased likelihood that those who do not use tobacco products will start using such products.
          `(ii) ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS- In the event that the Secretary makes a determination, set forth in a proposed tobacco product standard in a proposed rule, that it is appropriate for the protection of public health to require the reduction or elimination of an additive, constituent (including a smoke constituent), or other component of a tobacco product because the Secretary has found that the additive, constituent, or other component is or may be harmful, any party objecting to the proposed standard on the ground that the proposed standard will not reduce or eliminate the risk of illness or injury may provide for the Secretary's consideration scientific evidence that demonstrates that the proposed standard will not reduce or eliminate the risk of illness or injury.
      `(4) CONTENT OF TOBACCO PRODUCT STANDARDS- A tobacco product standard established under this section for a tobacco product--
        `(A) shall include provisions that are appropriate for the protection of the public health, including provisions, where appropriate--
          `(i) for nicotine yields of the product;
          `(ii) for the reduction or elimination of other constituents, including smoke constituents, or harmful components of the product; or
          `(iii) relating to any other requirement under subparagraph (B);
        `(B) shall, where appropriate for the protection of the public health, include--
          `(i) provisions respecting the construction, components, ingredients, additives, constituents, including smoke constituents, and properties of the tobacco product;
          `(ii) provisions for the testing (on a sample basis or, if necessary, on an individual basis) of the tobacco product;
          `(iii) provisions for the measurement of the tobacco product characteristics of the tobacco product;
          `(iv) provisions requiring that the results of each or of certain of the tests of the tobacco product required to be made under clause (ii) show that the tobacco product is in conformity with the portions of the standard for which the test or tests were required; and
          `(v) a provision requiring that the sale and distribution of the tobacco product be restricted but only to the extent that the sale and distribution of a tobacco product may be restricted under a regulation under section 906(d);
        `(C) shall, where appropriate, require the use and prescribe the form and content of labeling for the proper use of the tobacco product; and
        `(D) shall require tobacco products containing foreign-grown tobacco to meet the same standards applicable to tobacco products containing domestically grown tobacco.
      `(5) PERIODIC REEVALUATION OF TOBACCO PRODUCT STANDARDS- The Secretary shall provide for periodic evaluation of tobacco product standards established under this section to determine whether such standards should be changed to reflect new medical, scientific, or other technological data. The Secretary may provide for testing under paragraph (4)(B) by any person.
      `(6) INVOLVEMENT OF OTHER AGENCIES; INFORMED PERSONS- In carrying out duties under this section, the Secretary shall endeavor to--
        `(A) use personnel, facilities, and other technical support available in other Federal agencies;
        `(B) consult with other Federal agencies concerned with standard setting and other nationally or internationally recognized standard-setting entities; and
        `(C) invite appropriate participation, through joint or other conferences, workshops, or other means, by informed persons representative of scientific, professional, industry, agricultural, or consumer organizations who in the Secretary's judgment can make a significant contribution.
    `(b) Considerations by Secretary-
      `(1) TECHNICAL ACHIEVABILITY- The Secretary shall consider information submitted in connection with a proposed standard regarding the technical achievability of compliance with such standard.
      `(2) OTHER CONSIDERATIONS- The Secretary shall consider all other information submitted in connection with a proposed standard, including information concerning the countervailing effects of the tobacco product standard on the health of adolescent tobacco users, adult tobacco users, or nontobacco users, such as the creation of a significant demand for contraband or other tobacco products that do not meet the requirements of this chapter and the significance of such demand.
    `(c) Proposed Standards-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- The Secretary shall publish in the Federal Register a notice of proposed rulemaking for the establishment, amendment, or revocation of any tobacco product standard.
      `(2) REQUIREMENTS OF NOTICE- A notice of proposed rulemaking for the establishment or amendment of a tobacco product standard for a tobacco product shall--
        `(A) set forth a finding with supporting justification that the tobacco product standard is appropriate for the protection of the public health;
        `(B) invite interested persons to submit a draft or proposed tobacco product standard for consideration by the Secretary;
        `(C) invite interested persons to submit comments on structuring the standard so that it does not advantage foreign-grown tobacco over domestically grown tobacco; and
        `(D) invite the Secretary of Agriculture to provide any information or analysis which the Secretary of Agriculture believes is relevant to the proposed tobacco product standard.
      `(3) FINDING- A notice of proposed rulemaking for the revocation of a tobacco product standard shall set forth a finding with supporting justification that the tobacco product standard is no longer appropriate for the protection of the public health.
      `(4) COMMENT- The Secretary shall provide for a comment period of not less than 60 days.
    `(d) Promulgation-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- After the expiration of the period for comment on a notice of proposed rulemaking published under subsection (c) respecting a tobacco product standard and after consideration of comments submitted under subsections (b) and (c) and any report from the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee, the Secretary shall--
        `(A) if the Secretary determines that the standard would be appropriate for the protection of the public health, promulgate a regulation establishing a tobacco product standard and publish in the Federal Register findings on the matters referred to in subsection (c); or
        `(B) publish a notice terminating the proceeding for the development of the standard together with the reasons for such termination.
      `(2) EFFECTIVE DATE- A regulation establishing a tobacco product standard shall set forth the date or dates upon which the standard shall take effect, but no such regulation may take effect before 1 year after the date of its publication unless the Secretary determines that an earlier effective date is necessary for the protection of the public health.

Such date or dates shall be established so as to minimize, consistent with the public health, economic loss to, and disruption or dislocation of, domestic and international trade. In establishing such effective date or dates, the Secretary shall consider information submitted in connection with a proposed product standard by interested parties, including manufacturers and tobacco growers, regarding the technical achievability of compliance with the standard, and including information concerning the existence of patents that make it impossible to comply in the timeframe envisioned in the proposed standard. If the Secretary determines, based on the Secretary's evaluation of submitted comments, that a product standard can be met only by manufacturers requiring substantial changes to the methods of farming the domestically grown tobacco used by the manufacturer, the effective date of that product standard shall be not less than 2 years after the date of publication of the final regulation establishing the standard.
      `(3) LIMITATION ON POWER GRANTED TO THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION- Because of the importance of a decision of the Secretary to issue a regulation--
        `(A) banning all cigarettes, all smokeless tobacco products, all little cigars, all cigars other than little cigars, all pipe tobacco, or all roll-your-own tobacco products; or
        `(B) requiring the reduction of nicotine yields of a tobacco product to zero,
      the Secretary is prohibited from taking such actions under this Act.
      `(4) AMENDMENT; REVOCATION-
        `(A) AUTHORITY- The Secretary, upon the Secretary's own initiative or upon petition of an interested person, may by a regulation, promulgated in accordance with the requirements of subsection (c) and paragraph (2), amend or revoke a tobacco product standard.
        `(B) EFFECTIVE DATE- The Secretary may declare a proposed amendment of a tobacco product standard to be effective on and after its publication in the Federal Register and until the effective date of any final action taken on such amendment if the Secretary determines that making it so effective is in the public interest.
      `(5) REFERRAL TO ADVISORY COMMITTEE-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- The Secretary may refer a proposed regulation for the establishment, amendment, or revocation of a tobacco product standard to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee for a report and recommendation with respect to any matter involved in the proposed regulation which requires the exercise of scientific judgment.
        `(B) INITIATION OF REFERRAL- The Secretary may make a referral under this paragraph--
          `(i) on the Secretary's own initiative; or
          `(ii) upon the request of an interested person that--
            `(I) demonstrates good cause for the referral; and
            `(II) is made before the expiration of the period for submission of comments on the proposed regulation.
        `(C) PROVISION OF DATA- If a proposed regulation is referred under this paragraph to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee, the Secretary shall provide the Advisory Committee with the data and information on which such proposed regulation is based.
        `(D) REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION- The Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee shall, within 60 days after the referral of a proposed regulation under this paragraph and after independent study of the data and information furnished to it by the Secretary and other data and information before it, submit to the Secretary a report and recommendation respecting such regulation, together with all underlying data and information and a statement of the reason or basis for the recommendation.
        `(E) PUBLIC AVAILABILITY- The Secretary shall make a copy of each report and recommendation under subparagraph (D) publicly available.
    `(e) Menthol Cigarettes-
      `(1) REFERRAL; CONSIDERATIONS- Immediately upon the establishment of the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee under section 917(a), the Secretary shall refer to the Committee for report and recommendation, under section 917(c)(4), the issue of the impact of the use of menthol in cigarettes on the public health, including such use among children, African-Americans, Hispanics, and other racial and ethnic minorities. In its review, the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee shall address the considerations listed in subsections (a)(3)(B)(i) and (b).
      `(2) REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION- Not later than 1 year after its establishment, the Tobacco Product Scientific Advisory Committee shall submit to the Secretary the report and recommendations required pursuant to paragraph (1).
      `(3) RULE OF CONSTRUCTION- Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to limit the Secretary's authority to take action under this section or other sections of this Act applicable to menthol.
    `(f) Dissolvable Tobacco Products-
      `(1) REFERRAL; CONSIDERATIONS- The Secretary shall refer to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee for report and recommendation, under section 917(c)(4), the issue of the nature and impact of the use of dissolvable tobacco products on the public health, including such use among children. In its review, the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee shall address the considerations listed in subsection (a)(3)(B)(i).
      `(2) REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION- Not later than 2 years after its establishment, the Tobacco Product Scientific Advisory Committee shall submit to the Secretary the report and recommendations required pursuant to paragraph (1).
      `(3) RULE OF CONSTRUCTION- Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to limit the Secretary's authority to take action under this section or other sections of this Act at any time applicable to any dissolvable tobacco product.
`SEC. 908. NOTIFICATION AND OTHER REMEDIES.
    `(a) Notification- If the Secretary determines that--
      `(1) a tobacco product which is introduced or delivered for introduction into interstate commerce for commercial distribution presents an unreasonable risk of substantial harm to the public health; and
      `(2) notification under this subsection is necessary to eliminate the unreasonable risk of such harm and no more practicable means is available under the provisions of this chapter (other than this section) to eliminate such risk,
    the Secretary may issue such order as may be necessary to assure that adequate notification is provided in an appropriate form, by the persons and means best suited under the circumstances involved, to all persons who should properly receive such notification in order to eliminate such risk. The Secretary may order notification by any appropriate means, including public service announcements. Before issuing an order under this subsection, the Secretary shall consult with the persons who are to give notice under the order.
    `(b) No Exemption From Other Liability- Compliance with an order issued under this section shall not relieve any person from liability under Federal or State law. In awarding damages for economic loss in an action brought for the enforcement of any such liability, the value to the plaintiff in such action of any remedy provided under such order shall be taken into account.
    `(c) Recall Authority-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- If the Secretary finds that there is a reasonable probability that a tobacco product contains a manufacturing or other defect not ordinarily contained in tobacco products on the market that would cause serious, adverse health consequences or death, the Secretary shall issue an order requiring the appropriate person (including the manufacturers, importers, distributors, or retailers of the tobacco product) to immediately cease distribution of such tobacco product. The order shall provide the person subject to the order with an opportunity for an informal hearing, to be held not later than 10 days after the date of the issuance of the order, on the actions required by the order and on whether the order should be amended to require a recall of such tobacco product. If, after providing an opportunity for such a hearing, the Secretary determines that inadequate grounds exist to support the actions required by the order, the Secretary shall vacate the order.
      `(2) AMENDMENT OF ORDER TO REQUIRE RECALL-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- If, after providing an opportunity for an informal hearing under paragraph (1), the Secretary determines that the order should be amended to include a recall of the tobacco product with respect to which the order was issued, the Secretary shall, except as provided in subparagraph (B), amend the order to require a recall. The Secretary shall specify a timetable in which the tobacco product recall will occur and shall require periodic reports to the Secretary describing the progress of the recall.
        `(B) NOTICE- An amended order under subparagraph (A)--
          `(i) shall not include recall of a tobacco product from individuals; and
          `(ii) shall provide for notice to persons subject to the risks associated with the use of such tobacco product.
        In providing the notice required by clause (ii), the Secretary may use the assistance of retailers and other persons who distributed such tobacco product. If a significant number of such persons cannot be identified, the Secretary shall notify such persons under section 705(b).
      `(3) REMEDY NOT EXCLUSIVE- The remedy provided by this subsection shall be in addition to remedies provided by subsection (a).
`SEC. 909. RECORDS AND REPORTS ON TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
    `(a) In General- Every person who is a tobacco product manufacturer or importer of a tobacco product shall establish and maintain such records, make such reports, and provide such information, as the Secretary may by regulation reasonably require to assure that such tobacco product is not adulterated or misbranded and to otherwise protect public health. Regulations prescribed under the preceding sentence--
      `(1) may require a tobacco product manufacturer or importer to report to the Secretary whenever the manufacturer or importer receives or otherwise becomes aware of information that reasonably suggests that one of its marketed tobacco products may have caused or contributed to a serious unexpected adverse experience associated with the use of the product or any significant increase in the frequency of a serious, expected adverse product experience;
      `(2) shall require reporting of other significant adverse tobacco product experiences as determined by the Secretary to be necessary to be reported;
      `(3) shall not impose requirements unduly burdensome to a tobacco product manufacturer or importer, taking into account the cost of complying with such requirements and the need for the protection of the public health and the implementation of this chapter;
      `(4) when prescribing the procedure for making requests for reports or information, shall require that each request made under such regulations for submission of a report or information to the Secretary state the reason or purpose for such request and identify to the fullest extent practicable such report or information;
      `(5) when requiring submission of a report or information to the Secretary, shall state the reason or purpose for the submission of such report or information and identify to the fullest extent practicable such report or information; and
      `(6) may not require that the identity of any patient or user be disclosed in records, reports, or information required under this subsection unless required for the medical welfare of an individual, to determine risks to public health of a tobacco product, or to verify a record, report, or information submitted under this chapter.
    In prescribing regulations under this subsection, the Secretary shall have due regard for the professional ethics of the medical profession and the interests of patients. The prohibitions of paragraph (6) continue to apply to records, reports, and information concerning any individual who has been a patient, irrespective of whether or when he ceases to be a patient.
    `(b) Reports of Removals and Corrections-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- Except as provided in paragraph (2), the Secretary shall by regulation require a tobacco product manufacturer or importer of a tobacco product to report promptly to the Secretary any corrective action taken or removal from the market of a tobacco product undertaken by such manufacturer or importer if the removal or correction was undertaken--
        `(A) to reduce a risk to health posed by the tobacco product; or
        `(B) to remedy a violation of this chapter caused by the tobacco product which may present a risk to health.
      A tobacco product manufacturer or importer of a tobacco product who undertakes a corrective action or removal from the market of a tobacco product which is not required to be reported under this subsection shall keep a record of such correction or removal.
      `(2) EXCEPTION- No report of the corrective action or removal of a tobacco product may be required under paragraph (1) if a report of the corrective action or removal is required and has been submitted under subsection (a).
`SEC. 910. APPLICATION FOR REVIEW OF CERTAIN TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
    `(a) In General-
      `(1) NEW TOBACCO PRODUCT DEFINED- For purposes of this section the term `new tobacco product' means--
        `(A) any tobacco product (including those products in test markets) that was not commercially marketed in the United States as of February 15, 2007; or
        `(B) any modification (including a change in design, any component, any part, or any constituent, including a smoke constituent, or in the content, delivery or form of nicotine, or any other additive or ingredient) of a tobacco product where the modified product was commercially marketed in the United States after February 15, 2007.
      `(2) PREMARKET REVIEW REQUIRED-
        `(A) NEW PRODUCTS- An order under subsection (c)(1)(A)(i) for a new tobacco product is required unless--
          `(i) the manufacturer has submitted a report under section 905(j); and the Secretary has issued an order that the tobacco product--
            `(I) is substantially equivalent to a tobacco product commercially marketed (other than for test marketing) in the United States as of February 15, 2007; and
            `(II) is in compliance with the requirements of this Act; or
          `(ii) the tobacco product is exempt from the requirements of section 905(j) pursuant to a regulation issued under section 905(j)(3).
        `(B) APPLICATION TO CERTAIN POST-FEBRUARY 15, 2007, PRODUCTS- Subparagraph (A) shall not apply to a tobacco product--
          `(i) that was first introduced or delivered for introduction into interstate commerce for commercial distribution in the United States after February 15, 2007, and prior to the date that is 21 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act; and
          `(ii) for which a report was submitted under section 905(j) within such 21-month period,
        except that subparagraph (A) shall apply to the tobacco product if the Secretary issues an order that the tobacco product is not substantially equivalent.
      `(3) SUBSTANTIALLY EQUIVALENT DEFINED-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- In this section and section 905(j), the term `substantially equivalent' or `substantial equivalence' means, with respect to the tobacco product being compared to the predicate tobacco product, that the Secretary by order has found that the tobacco product--
          `(i) has the same characteristics as the predicate tobacco product; or
          `(ii) has different characteristics and the information submitted contains information, including clinical data if deemed necessary by the Secretary, that demonstrates that it is not appropriate to regulate the product under this section because the product does not raise different questions of public health.
        `(B) CHARACTERISTICS- In subparagraph (A), the term `characteristics' means the materials, ingredients, design, composition, heating source, or other features of a tobacco product.
        `(C) LIMITATION- A tobacco product may not be found to be substantially equivalent to a predicate tobacco product that has been removed from the market at the initiative of the Secretary or that has been determined by a judicial order to be misbranded or adulterated.
      `(4) HEALTH INFORMATION-
        `(A) SUMMARY- As part of a submission under section 905(j) respecting a tobacco product, the person required to file a premarket notification under such section shall provide an adequate summary of any health information related to the tobacco product or state that such information will be made available upon request by any person.
        `(B) REQUIRED INFORMATION- Any summary under subparagraph (A) respecting a tobacco product shall contain detailed information regarding data concerning adverse health effects and shall be made available to the public by the Secretary within 30 days of the issuance of a determination that such tobacco product is substantially equivalent to another tobacco product.
    `(b) Application-
      `(1) CONTENTS- An application under this section shall contain--
        `(A) full reports of all information, published or known to, or which should reasonably be known to, the applicant, concerning investigations which have been made to show the health risks of such tobacco product and whether such tobacco product presents less risk than other tobacco products;
        `(B) a full statement of the components, ingredients, additives, and properties, and of the principle or principles of operation, of such tobacco product;
        `(C) a full description of the methods used in, and the facilities and controls used for, the manufacture, processing, and, when relevant, packing and installation of, such tobacco product;
        `(D) an identifying reference to any tobacco product standard under section 907 which would be applicable to any aspect of such tobacco product, and either adequate information to show that such aspect of such tobacco product fully meets such tobacco product standard or adequate information to justify any deviation from such standard;
        `(E) such samples of such tobacco product and of components thereof as the Secretary may reasonably require;
        `(F) specimens of the labeling proposed to be used for such tobacco product; and
        `(G) such other information relevant to the subject matter of the application as the Secretary may require.
      `(2) REFERRAL TO TOBACCO PRODUCTS SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY COMMITTEE- Upon receipt of an application meeting the requirements set forth in paragraph (1), the Secretary--
        `(A) may, on the Secretary's own initiative; or
        `(B) may, upon the request of an applicant,
      refer such application to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee for reference and for submission (within such period as the Secretary may establish) of a report and recommendation respecting the application, together with all underlying data and the reasons or basis for the recommendation.
    `(c) Action on Application-
      `(1) DEADLINE-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- As promptly as possible, but in no event later than 180 days after the receipt of an application under subsection (b), the Secretary, after considering the report and recommendation submitted under subsection (b)(2), shall--
          `(i) issue an order that the new product may be introduced or delivered for introduction into interstate commerce if the Secretary finds that none of the grounds specified in paragraph (2) of this subsection applies; or
          `(ii) issue an order that the new product may not be introduced or delivered for introduction into interstate commerce if the Secretary finds (and sets forth the basis for such finding as part of or accompanying such denial) that 1 or more grounds for denial specified in paragraph (2) of this subsection apply.
        `(B) RESTRICTIONS ON SALE AND DISTRIBUTION- An order under subparagraph (A)(i) may require that the sale and distribution of the tobacco product be restricted but only to the extent that the sale and distribution of a tobacco product may be restricted under a regulation under section 906(d).
      `(2) DENIAL OF APPLICATION- The Secretary shall deny an application submitted under subsection (b) if, upon the basis of the information submitted to the Secretary as part of the application and any other information before the Secretary with respect to such tobacco product, the Secretary finds that--
        `(A) there is a lack of a showing that permitting such tobacco product to be marketed would be appropriate for the protection of the public health;
        `(B) the methods used in, or the facilities or controls used for, the manufacture, processing, or packing of such tobacco product do not conform to the requirements of section 906(e);
        `(C) based on a fair evaluation of all material facts, the proposed labeling is false or misleading in any particular; or
        `(D) such tobacco product is not shown to conform in all respects to a tobacco product standard in effect under section 907, and there is a lack of adequate information to justify the deviation from such standard.
      `(3) DENIAL INFORMATION- Any denial of an application shall, insofar as the Secretary determines to be practicable, be accompanied by a statement informing the applicant of the measures required to remove such application from deniable form (which measures may include further research by the applicant in accordance with 1 or more protocols prescribed by the Secretary).
      `(4) BASIS FOR FINDING- For purposes of this section, the finding as to whether the marketing of a tobacco product for which an application has been submitted is appropriate for the protection of the public health shall be determined with respect to the risks and benefits to the population as a whole, including users and nonusers of the tobacco product, and taking into account--
        `(A) the increased or decreased likelihood that existing users of tobacco products will stop using such products; and
        `(B) the increased or decreased likelihood that those who do not use tobacco products will start using such products.
      `(5) BASIS FOR ACTION-
        `(A) INVESTIGATIONS- For purposes of paragraph (2)(A), whether permitting a tobacco product to be marketed would be appropriate for the protection of the public health shall, when appropriate, be determined on the basis of well-controlled investigations, which may include 1 or more clinical investigations by experts qualified by training and experience to evaluate the tobacco product.
        `(B) OTHER EVIDENCE- If the Secretary determines that there exists valid scientific evidence (other than evidence derived from investigations described in subparagraph (A)) which is sufficient to evaluate the tobacco product, the Secretary may authorize that the determination for purposes of paragraph (2)(A) be made on the basis of such evidence.
    `(d) Withdrawal and Temporary Suspension-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- The Secretary shall, upon obtaining, where appropriate, advice on scientific matters from the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee, and after due notice and opportunity for informal hearing for a tobacco product for which an order was issued under subsection (c)(1)(A)(i), issue an order withdrawing the order if the Secretary finds--
        `(A) that the continued marketing of such tobacco product no longer is appropriate for the protection of the public health;
        `(B) that the application contained or was accompanied by an untrue statement of a material fact;
        `(C) that the applicant--
          `(i) has failed to establish a system for maintaining records, or has repeatedly or deliberately failed to maintain records or to make reports, required by an applicable regulation under section 909;
          `(ii) has refused to permit access to, or copying or verification of, such records as required by section 704; or
          `(iii) has not complied with the requirements of section 905;
        `(D) on the basis of new information before the Secretary with respect to such tobacco product, evaluated together with the evidence before the Secretary when the application was reviewed, that the methods used in, or the facilities and controls used for, the manufacture, processing, packing, or installation of such tobacco product do not conform with the requirements of section 906(e) and were not brought into conformity with such requirements within a reasonable time after receipt of written notice from the Secretary of nonconformity;
        `(E) on the basis of new information before the Secretary, evaluated together with the evidence before the Secretary when the application was reviewed, that the labeling of such tobacco product, based on a fair evaluation of all material facts, is false or misleading in any particular and was not corrected within a reasonable time after receipt of written notice from the Secretary of such fact; or
        `(F) on the basis of new information before the Secretary, evaluated together with the evidence before the Secretary when such order was issued, that such tobacco product is not shown to conform in all respects to a tobacco product standard which is in effect under section 907, compliance with which was a condition to the issuance of an order relating to the application, and that there is a lack of adequate information to justify the deviation from such standard.
      `(2) APPEAL- The holder of an application subject to an order issued under paragraph (1) withdrawing an order issued pursuant to subsection (c)(1)(A)(i) may, by petition filed on or before the 30th day after the date upon which such holder receives notice of such withdrawal, obtain review thereof in accordance with section 912.
      `(3) TEMPORARY SUSPENSION- If, after providing an opportunity for an informal hearing, the Secretary determines there is reasonable probability that the continuation of distribution of a tobacco product under an order would cause serious, adverse health consequences or death, that is greater than ordinarily caused by tobacco products on the market, the Secretary shall by order temporarily suspend the authority of the manufacturer to market the product.

If the Secretary issues such an order, the Secretary shall proceed expeditiously under paragraph (1) to withdraw such application.
    `(e) Service of Order- An order issued by the Secretary under this section shall be served--
      `(1) in person by any officer or employee of the department designated by the Secretary; or
      `(2) by mailing the order by registered mail or certified mail addressed to the applicant at the applicant's last known address in the records of the Secretary.
    `(f) Records-
      `(1) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION- In the case of any tobacco product for which an order issued pursuant to subsection (c)(1)(A)(i) for an application filed under subsection (b) is in effect, the applicant shall establish and maintain such records, and make such reports to the Secretary, as the Secretary may by regulation, or by order with respect to such application, prescribe on the basis of a finding that such records and reports are necessary in order to enable the Secretary to determine, or facilitate a determination of, whether there is or may be grounds for withdrawing or temporarily suspending such order.
      `(2) ACCESS TO RECORDS- Each person required under this section to maintain records, and each person in charge of custody thereof, shall, upon request of an officer or employee designated by the Secretary, permit such officer or employee at all reasonable times to have access to and copy and verify such records.
    `(g) Investigational Tobacco Product Exemption for Investigational Use- The Secretary may exempt tobacco products intended for investigational use from the provisions of this chapter under such conditions as the Secretary may by regulation prescribe.
`SEC. 911. MODIFIED RISK TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
    `(a) In General- No person may introduce or deliver for introduction into interstate commerce any modified risk tobacco product unless an order issued pursuant to subsection (g) is effective with respect to such product.
    `(b) Definitions- In this section:
      `(1) MODIFIED RISK TOBACCO PRODUCT- The term `modified risk tobacco product' means any tobacco product that is sold or distributed for use to reduce harm or the risk of tobacco-related disease associated with commercially marketed tobacco products.
      `(2) SOLD OR DISTRIBUTED-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- With respect to a tobacco product, the term `sold or distributed for use to reduce harm or the risk of tobacco-related disease associated with commercially marketed tobacco products' means a tobacco product--
          `(i) the label, labeling, or advertising of which represents explicitly or implicitly that--
            `(I) the tobacco product presents a lower risk of tobacco-related disease or is less harmful than one or more other commercially marketed tobacco products;
            `(II) the tobacco product or its smoke contains a reduced level of a substance or presents a reduced exposure to a substance; or
            `(III) the tobacco product or its smoke does not contain or is free of a substance;
          `(ii) the label, labeling, or advertising of which uses the descriptors `light', `mild', or `low' or similar descriptors; or
          `(iii) the tobacco product manufacturer of which has taken any action directed to consumers through the media or otherwise, other than by means of the tobacco product's label, labeling, or advertising, after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, respecting the product that would be reasonably expected to result in consumers believing that the tobacco product or its smoke may present a lower risk of disease or is less harmful than one or more commercially marketed tobacco products, or presents a reduced exposure to, or does not contain or is free of, a substance or substances.
        `(B) LIMITATION- No tobacco product shall be considered to be `sold or distributed for use to reduce harm or the risk of tobacco-related disease associated with commercially marketed tobacco products', except as described in subparagraph (A).
        `(C) SMOKELESS TOBACCO PRODUCT- No smokeless tobacco product shall be considered to be `sold or distributed for use to reduce harm or the risk of tobacco-related disease associated with commercially marketed tobacco products' solely because its label, labeling, or advertising uses the following phrases to describe such product and its use: `smokeless tobacco', `smokeless tobacco product', `not consumed by smoking', `does not produce smoke', `smokefree', `smoke-free', `without smoke', `no smoke', or `not smoke'.
      `(3) EFFECTIVE DATE- The provisions of paragraph (2)(A)(ii) shall take effect 12 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act for those products whose label, labeling, or advertising contains the terms described in such paragraph on such date of enactment. The effective date shall be with respect to the date of manufacture, provided that, in any case, beginning 30 days after such effective date, a manufacturer shall not introduce into the domestic commerce of the United States any product, irrespective of the date of manufacture, that is not in conformance with paragraph (2)(A)(ii).
    `(c) Tobacco Dependence Products- A product that is intended to be used for the treatment of tobacco dependence, including smoking cessation, is not a modified risk tobacco product under this section if it has been approved as a drug or device by the Food and Drug Administration and is subject to the requirements of chapter V.
    `(d) Filing- Any person may file with the Secretary an application for a modified risk tobacco product. Such application shall include--
      `(1) a description of the proposed product and any proposed advertising and labeling;
      `(2) the conditions for using the product;
      `(3) the formulation of the product;
      `(4) sample product labels and labeling;
      `(5) all documents (including underlying scientific information) relating to research findings conducted, supported, or possessed by the tobacco product manufacturer relating to the effect of the product on tobacco-related diseases and health-related conditions, including information both favorable and unfavorable to the ability of the product to reduce risk or exposure and relating to human health;
      `(6) data and information on how consumers actually use the tobacco product; and
      `(7) such other information as the Secretary may require.
    `(e) Public Availability- The Secretary shall make the application described in subsection (d) publicly available (except matters in the application which are trade secrets or otherwise confidential, commercial information) and shall request comments by interested persons on the information contained in the application and on the label, labeling, and advertising accompanying such application.
    `(f) Advisory Committee-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- The Secretary shall refer to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee any application submitted under this section.
      `(2) RECOMMENDATIONS- Not later than 60 days after the date an application is referred to the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee under paragraph (1), the Advisory Committee shall report its recommendations on the application to the Secretary.
    `(g) Marketing-
      `(1) MODIFIED RISK PRODUCTS- Except as provided in paragraph (2), the Secretary shall, with respect to an application submitted under this section, issue an order that a modified risk product may be commercially marketed only if the Secretary determines that the applicant has demonstrated that such product, as it is actually used by consumers, will--
        `(A) significantly reduce harm and the risk of tobacco-related disease to individual tobacco users; and
        `(B) benefit the health of the population as a whole taking into account both users of tobacco products and persons who do not currently use tobacco products.
      `(2) SPECIAL RULE FOR CERTAIN PRODUCTS-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- The Secretary may issue an order that a tobacco product may be introduced or delivered for introduction into interstate commerce, pursuant to an application under this section, with respect to a tobacco product that may not be commercially marketed under paragraph (1) if the Secretary makes the findings required under this paragraph and determines that the applicant has demonstrated that--
          `(i) such order would be appropriate to promote the public health;
          `(ii) any aspect of the label, labeling, and advertising for such product that would cause the tobacco product to be a modified risk tobacco product under subsection (b) is limited to an explicit or implicit representation that such tobacco product or its smoke does not contain or is free of a substance or contains a reduced level of a substance, or presents a reduced exposure to a substance in tobacco smoke;
          `(iii) scientific evidence is not available and, using the best available scientific methods, cannot be made available without conducting long-term epidemiological studies for an application to meet the standards set forth in paragraph (1); and
          `(iv) the scientific evidence that is available without conducting long-term epidemiological studies demonstrates that a measurable and substantial reduction in morbidity or mortality among individual tobacco users is reasonably likely in subsequent studies.
        `(B) ADDITIONAL FINDINGS REQUIRED- To issue an order under subparagraph (A) the Secretary must also find that the applicant has demonstrated that--
          `(i) the magnitude of the overall reductions in exposure to the substance or substances which are the subject of the application is substantial, such substance or substances are harmful, and the product as actually used exposes consumers to the specified reduced level of the substance or substances;
          `(ii) the product as actually used by consumers will not expose them to higher levels of other harmful substances compared to the similar types of tobacco products then on the market unless such increases are minimal and the reasonably likely overall impact of use of the product remains a substantial and measurable reduction in overall morbidity and mortality among individual tobacco users;
          `(iii) testing of actual consumer perception shows that, as the applicant proposes to label and market the product, consumers will not be misled into believing that the product--
            `(I) is or has been demonstrated to be less harmful; or
            `(II) presents or has been demonstrated to present less of a risk of disease than 1 or more other commercially marketed tobacco products; and
          `(iv) issuance of an order with respect to the application is expected to benefit the health of the population as a whole taking into account both users of tobacco products and persons who do not currently use tobacco products.
        `(C) CONDITIONS OF MARKETING-
          `(i) IN GENERAL- Applications subject to an order under this paragraph shall be limited to a term of not more than 5 years, but may be renewed upon a finding by the Secretary that the requirements of this paragraph continue to be satisfied based on the filing of a new application.
          `(ii) AGREEMENTS BY APPLICANT- An order under this paragraph shall be conditioned on the applicant's agreement to conduct postmarket surveillance and studies and to submit to the Secretary the results of such surveillance and studies to determine the impact of the order on consumer perception, behavior, and health and to enable the Secretary to review the accuracy of the determinations upon which the order was based in accordance with a protocol approved by the Secretary.
          `(iii) ANNUAL SUBMISSION- The results of such postmarket surveillance and studies described in clause (ii) shall be submitted annually.
      `(3) BASIS- The determinations under paragraphs (1) and (2) shall be based on--
        `(A) the scientific evidence submitted by the applicant; and
        `(B) scientific evidence and other information that is made available to the Secretary.
      `(4) BENEFIT TO HEALTH OF INDIVIDUALS AND OF POPULATION AS A WHOLE- In making the determinations under paragraphs (1) and (2), the Secretary shall take into account--
        `(A) the relative health risks to individuals of the tobacco product that is the subject of the application;
        `(B) the increased or decreased likelihood that existing users of tobacco products who would otherwise stop using such products will switch to the tobacco product that is the subject of the application;
        `(C) the increased or decreased likelihood that persons who do not use tobacco products will start using the tobacco product that is the subject of the application;
        `(D) the risks and benefits to persons from the use of the tobacco product that is the subject of the application as compared to the use of products for smoking cessation approved under chapter V to treat nicotine dependence; and
        `(E) comments, data, and information submitted by interested persons.
    `(h) Additional Conditions for Marketing-
      `(1) MODIFIED RISK PRODUCTS- The Secretary shall require for the marketing of a product under this section that any advertising or labeling concerning modified risk products enable the public to comprehend the information concerning modified risk and to understand the relative significance of such information in the context of total health and in relation to all of the diseases and health-related conditions associated with the use of tobacco products.
      `(2) COMPARATIVE CLAIMS-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- The Secretary may require for the marketing of a product under this subsection that a claim comparing a tobacco product to 1 or more other commercially marketed tobacco products shall compare the tobacco product to a commercially marketed tobacco product that is representative of that type of tobacco product on the market (for example the average value of the top 3 brands of an established regular tobacco product).
        `(B) QUANTITATIVE COMPARISONS- The Secretary may also require, for purposes of subparagraph (A), that the percent (or fraction) of change and identity of the reference tobacco product and a quantitative comparison of the amount of the substance claimed to be reduced shall be stated in immediate proximity to the most prominent claim.
      `(3) LABEL DISCLOSURE-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- The Secretary may require the disclosure on the label of other substances in the tobacco product, or substances that may be produced by the consumption of that tobacco product, that may affect a disease or health-related condition or may increase the risk of other diseases or health-related conditions associated with the use of tobacco products.
        `(B) CONDITIONS OF USE- If the conditions of use of the tobacco product may affect the risk of the product to human health, the Secretary may require the labeling of conditions of use.
      `(4) TIME- An order issued under subsection (g)(1) shall be effective for a specified period of time.
      `(5) ADVERTISING- The Secretary may require, with respect to a product for which an applicant obtained an order under subsection (g)(1), that the product comply with requirements relating to advertising and promotion of the tobacco product.
    `(i) Postmarket Surveillance and Studies-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- The Secretary shall require, with respect to a product for which an applicant obtained an order under subsection (g)(1), that the applicant conduct postmarket surveillance and studies for such a tobacco product to determine the impact of the order issuance on consumer perception, behavior, and health, to enable the Secretary to review the accuracy of the determinations upon which the order was based, and to provide information that the Secretary determines is otherwise necessary regarding the use or health risks involving the tobacco product. The results of postmarket surveillance and studies shall be submitted to the Secretary on an annual basis.
      `(2) SURVEILLANCE PROTOCOL- Each applicant required to conduct a surveillance of a tobacco product under paragraph (1) shall, within 30 days after receiving notice that the applicant is required to conduct such surveillance, submit, for the approval of the Secretary, a protocol for the required surveillance. The Secretary, within 60 days of the receipt of such protocol, shall determine if the principal investigator proposed to be used in the surveillance has sufficient qualifications and experience to conduct such surveillance and if such protocol will result in collection of the data or other information designated by the Secretary as necessary to protect the public health.
    `(j) Withdrawal of Authorization- The Secretary, after an opportunity for an informal hearing, shall withdraw an order under subsection (g) if the Secretary determines that--
      `(1) the applicant, based on new information, can no longer make the demonstrations required under subsection (g), or the Secretary can no longer make the determinations required under subsection (g);
      `(2) the application failed to include material information or included any untrue statement of material fact;
      `(3) any explicit or implicit representation that the product reduces risk or exposure is no longer valid, including if--
        `(A) a tobacco product standard is established pursuant to section 907;
        `(B) an action is taken that affects the risks presented by other commercially marketed tobacco products that were compared to the product that is the subject of the application; or
        `(C) any postmarket surveillance or studies reveal that the order is no longer consistent with the protection of the public health;
      `(4) the applicant failed to conduct or submit the postmarket surveillance and studies required under subsection (g)(2)(C)(ii) or subsection (i); or
      `(5) the applicant failed to meet a condition imposed under subsection (h).
    `(k) Chapter IV or V- A product for which the Secretary has issued an order pursuant to subsection (g) shall not be subject to chapter IV or V.
    `(l) Implementing Regulations or Guidance-
      `(1) SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE- Not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the Secretary shall issue regulations or guidance (or any combination thereof) on the scientific evidence required for assessment and ongoing review of modified risk tobacco products.

Such regulations or guidance shall--
        `(A) to the extent that adequate scientific evidence exists, establish minimum standards for scientific studies needed prior to issuing an order under subsection (g) to show that a substantial reduction in morbidity or mortality among individual tobacco users occurs for products described in subsection (g)(1) or is reasonably likely for products described in subsection (g)(2);
        `(B) include validated biomarkers, intermediate clinical endpoints, and other feasible outcome measures, as appropriate;
        `(C) establish minimum standards for postmarket studies, that shall include regular and long-term assessments of health outcomes and mortality, intermediate clinical endpoints, consumer perception of harm reduction, and the impact on quitting behavior and new use of tobacco products, as appropriate;
        `(D) establish minimum standards for required postmarket surveillance, including ongoing assessments of consumer perception;
        `(E) require that data from the required studies and surveillance be made available to the Secretary prior to the decision on renewal of a modified risk tobacco product; and
        `(F) establish a reasonable timetable for the Secretary to review an application under this section.
      `(2) CONSULTATION- The regulations or guidance issued under paragraph (1) shall be developed in consultation with the Institute of Medicine, and with the input of other appropriate scientific and medical experts, on the design and conduct of such studies and surveillance.
      `(3) REVISION- The regulations or guidance under paragraph (1) shall be revised on a regular basis as new scientific information becomes available.
      `(4) NEW TOBACCO PRODUCTS- Not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the Secretary shall issue a regulation or guidance that permits the filing of a single application for any tobacco product that is a new tobacco product under section 910 and which the applicant seeks to commercially market under this section.
    `(m) Distributors- Except as provided in this section, no distributor may take any action, after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, with respect to a tobacco product that would reasonably be expected to result in consumers believing that the tobacco product or its smoke may present a lower risk of disease or is less harmful than one or more commercially marketed tobacco products, or presents a reduced exposure to, or does not contain or is free of, a substance or substances.
`SEC. 912. JUDICIAL REVIEW.
    `(a) Right To Review-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- Not later than 30 days after--
        `(A) the promulgation of a regulation under section 907 establishing, amending, or revoking a tobacco product standard; or
        `(B) a denial of an application under section 910(c),
      any person adversely affected by such regulation or denial may file a petition for judicial review of such regulation or denial with the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia or for the circuit in which such person resides or has their principal place of business.
      `(2) REQUIREMENTS-
        `(A) COPY OF PETITION- A copy of the petition filed under paragraph (1) shall be transmitted by the clerk of the court involved to the Secretary.
        `(B) RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS- On receipt of a petition under subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall file in the court in which such petition was filed--
          `(i) the record of the proceedings on which the regulation or order was based; and
          `(ii) a statement of the reasons for the issuance of such a regulation or order.
        `(C) DEFINITION OF RECORD- In this section, the term `record' means--
          `(i) all notices and other matter published in the Federal Register with respect to the regulation or order reviewed;
          `(ii) all information submitted to the Secretary with respect to such regulation or order;
          `(iii) proceedings of any panel or advisory committee with respect to such regulation or order;
          `(iv) any hearing held with respect to such regulation or order; and
          `(v) any other information identified by the Secretary, in the administrative proceeding held with respect to such regulation or order, as being relevant to such regulation or order.
    `(b) Standard of Review- Upon the filing of the petition under subsection (a) for judicial review of a regulation or order, the court shall have jurisdiction to review the regulation or order in accordance with chapter 7 of title 5, United States Code, and to grant appropriate relief, including interim relief, as provided for in such chapter. A regulation or denial described in subsection (a) shall be reviewed in accordance with section 706(2)(A) of title 5, United States Code.
    `(c) Finality of Judgment- The judgment of the court affirming or setting aside, in whole or in part, any regulation or order shall be final, subject to review by the Supreme Court of the United States upon certiorari or certification, as provided in section 1254 of title 28, United States Code.
    `(d) Other Remedies- The remedies provided for in this section shall be in addition to, and not in lieu of, any other remedies provided by law.
    `(e) Regulations and Orders Must Recite Basis in Record- To facilitate judicial review, a regulation or order issued under section 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, or 916 shall contain a statement of the reasons for the issuance of such regulation or order in the record of the proceedings held in connection with its issuance.
`SEC. 913. EQUAL TREATMENT OF RETAIL OUTLETS.
    `The Secretary shall issue regulations to require that retail establishments for which the predominant business is the sale of tobacco products comply with any advertising restrictions applicable to retail establishments accessible to individuals under the age of 18.
`SEC. 914. JURISDICTION OF AND COORDINATION WITH THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION.
    `(a) Jurisdiction-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- Except where expressly provided in this chapter, nothing in this chapter shall be construed as limiting or diminishing the authority of the Federal Trade Commission to enforce the laws under its jurisdiction with respect to the advertising, sale, or distribution of tobacco products.
      `(2) ENFORCEMENT- Any advertising that violates this chapter or a provision of the regulations referred to in section 102 of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, is an unfair or deceptive act or practice under section 5(a) of the Federal Trade Commission Act and shall be considered a violation of a rule promulgated under section 18 of that Act.
    `(b) Coordination- With respect to the requirements of section 4 of the Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act and section 3 of the Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Health Education Act of 1986--
      `(1) the Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission shall coordinate with the Secretary concerning the enforcement of such Act as such enforcement relates to unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the advertising of cigarettes or smokeless tobacco; and
      `(2) the Secretary shall consult with the Chairman of such Commission in revising the label statements and requirements under such sections.
`SEC. 915. REGULATION REQUIREMENT.
    `(a) Testing, Reporting, and Disclosure- Not later than 36 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the Secretary shall promulgate regulations under this Act that meet the requirements of subsection (b).
    `(b) Contents of Rules- The regulations promulgated under subsection (a)--
      `(1) shall require testing and reporting of tobacco product constituents, ingredients, and additives, including smoke constituents, by brand and subbrand that the Secretary determines should be tested to protect the public health, provided that, for purposes of the testing requirements of this paragraph, tobacco products manufactured and sold by a single tobacco product manufacturer that are identical in all respects except the labels, packaging design, logo, trade dress, trademark, brand name, or any combination thereof, shall be considered as a single brand; and
      `(2) may require that tobacco product manufacturers, packagers, or importers make disclosures relating to the results of the testing of tar and nicotine through labels or advertising or other appropriate means, and make disclosures regarding the results of the testing of other constituents, including smoke constituents, ingredients, or additives, that the Secretary determines should be disclosed to the public to protect the public health and will not mislead consumers about the risk of tobacco-related disease.
    `(c) Authority- The Secretary shall have the authority under this chapter to conduct or to require the testing, reporting, or disclosure of tobacco product constituents, including smoke constituents.
    `(d) Small Tobacco Product Manufacturers-
      `(1) FIRST COMPLIANCE DATE- The initial regulations promulgated under subsection (a) shall not impose requirements on small tobacco product manufacturers before the later of--
        `(A) the end of the 2-year period following the final promulgation of such regulations; and
        `(B) the initial date set by the Secretary for compliance with such regulations by manufacturers that are not small tobacco product manufacturers.
      `(2) TESTING AND REPORTING INITIAL COMPLIANCE PERIOD-
        `(A) 4-year PERIOD- The initial regulations promulgated under subsection (a) shall give each small tobacco product manufacturer a 4-year period over which to conduct testing and reporting for all of its tobacco products. Subject to paragraph (1), the end of the first year of such 4-year period shall coincide with the initial date of compliance under this section set by the Secretary with respect to manufacturers that are not small tobacco product manufacturers or the end of the 2-year period following the final promulgation of such regulations, as described in paragraph (1)(A). A small tobacco product manufacturer shall be required--
          `(i) to conduct such testing and reporting for 25 percent of its tobacco products during each year of such 4-year period; and
          `(ii) to conduct such testing and reporting for its largest-selling tobacco products (as determined by the Secretary) before its other tobacco products, or in such other order of priority as determined by the Secretary.
        `(B) CASE-BY-CASE DELAY- Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), the Secretary may, on a case-by-case basis, delay the date by which an individual small tobacco product manufacturer must conduct testing and reporting for its tobacco products under this section based upon a showing of undue hardship to such manufacturer. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, the Secretary shall not extend the deadline for a small tobacco product manufacturer to conduct testing and reporting for all of its tobacco products beyond a total of 5 years after the initial date of compliance under this section set by the Secretary with respect to manufacturers that are not small tobacco product manufacturers.
      `(3) SUBSEQUENT AND ADDITIONAL TESTING AND REPORTING- The regulations promulgated under subsection (a) shall provide that, with respect to any subsequent or additional testing and reporting of tobacco products required under this section, such testing and reporting by a small tobacco product manufacturer shall be conducted in accordance with the timeframes described in paragraph (2)(A), except that, in the case of a new product, or if there has been a modification described in section 910(a)(1)(B) of any product of a small tobacco product manufacturer since the last testing and reporting required under this section, the Secretary shall require that any subsequent or additional testing and reporting be conducted in accordance with the same timeframe applicable to manufacturers that are not small tobacco product manufacturers.
      `(4) JOINT LABORATORY TESTING SERVICES- The Secretary shall allow any 2 or more small tobacco product manufacturers to join together to purchase laboratory testing services required by this section on a group basis in order to ensure that such manufacturers receive access to, and fair pricing of, such testing services.
    `(e) Extensions for Limited Laboratory Capacity-
      `(1) IN GENERAL- The regulations promulgated under subsection (a) shall provide that a small tobacco product manufacturer shall not be considered to be in violation of this section before the deadline applicable under paragraphs (3) and (4), if--
        `(A) the tobacco products of such manufacturer are in compliance with all other requirements of this chapter; and
        `(B) the conditions described in paragraph (2) are met.
      `(2) CONDITIONS- Notwithstanding the requirements of this section, the Secretary may delay the date by which a small tobacco product manufacturer must be in compliance with the testing and reporting required by this section until such time as the testing is reported if, not later than 90 days before the deadline for reporting in accordance with this section, a small tobacco product manufacturer provides evidence to the Secretary demonstrating that--
        `(A) the manufacturer has submitted the required products for testing to a laboratory and has done so sufficiently in advance of the deadline to create a reasonable expectation of completion by the deadline;
        `(B) the products currently are awaiting testing by the laboratory; and
        `(C) neither that laboratory nor any other laboratory is able to complete testing by the deadline at customary, nonexpedited testing fees.
      `(3) EXTENSION- The Secretary, taking into account the laboratory testing capacity that is available to tobacco product manufacturers, shall review and verify the evidence submitted by a small tobacco product manufacturer in accordance with paragraph (2). If the Secretary finds that the conditions described in such paragraph are met, the Secretary shall notify the small tobacco product manufacturer that the manufacturer shall not be considered to be in violation of the testing and reporting requirements of this section until the testing is reported or until 1 year after the reporting deadline has passed, whichever occurs sooner. If, however, the Secretary has not made a finding before the reporting deadline, the manufacturer shall not be considered to be in violation of such requirements until the Secretary finds that the conditions described in paragraph (2) have not been met, or until 1 year after the reporting deadline, whichever occurs sooner.
      `(4) ADDITIONAL EXTENSION- In addition to the time that may be provided under paragraph (3), the Secretary may provide further extensions of time, in increments of no more than 1 year, for required testing and reporting to occur if the Secretary determines, based on evidence properly and timely submitted by a small tobacco product manufacturer in accordance with paragraph (2), that a lack of available laboratory capacity prevents the manufacturer from completing the required testing during the period described in paragraph (3).
    `(f) Rule of Construction- Nothing in subsection (d) or (e) shall be construed to authorize the extension of any deadline, or to otherwise affect any timeframe, under any provision of this Act or the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act other than this section.
`SEC. 916. PRESERVATION OF STATE AND LOCAL AUTHORITY.
    `(a) In General-
      `(1) PRESERVATION- Except as provided in paragraph (2)(A), nothing in this chapter, or rules promulgated under this chapter, shall be construed to limit the authority of a Federal agency (including the Armed Forces), a State or political subdivision of a State, or the government of an Indian tribe to enact, adopt, promulgate, and enforce any law, rule, regulation, or other measure with respect to tobacco products that is in addition to, or more stringent than, requirements established under this chapter, including a law, rule, regulation, or other measure relating to or prohibiting the sale, distribution, possession, exposure to, access to, advertising and promotion of, or use of tobacco products by individuals of any age, information reporting to the State, or measures relating to fire safety standards for tobacco products. No provision of this chapter shall limit or otherwise affect any State, tribal, or local taxation of tobacco products.
      `(2) PREEMPTION OF CERTAIN STATE AND LOCAL REQUIREMENTS-
        `(A) IN GENERAL- No State or political subdivision of a State may establish or continue in effect with respect to a tobacco product any requirement which is different from, or in addition to, any requirement under the provisions of this chapter relating to tobacco product standards, premarket review, adulteration, misbranding, labeling, registration, good manufacturing standards, or modified risk tobacco products.
        `(B) EXCEPTION- Subparagraph (A) does not apply to requirements relating to the sale, distribution, possession, information reporting to the State, exposure to, access to, the advertising and promotion of, or use of, tobacco products by individuals of any age, or relating to fire safety standards for tobacco products. Information disclosed to a State under subparagraph (A) that is exempt from disclosure under section 552(b)(4) of title 5, United States Code, shall be treated as a trade secret and confidential information by the State.
    `(b) Rule of Construction Regarding Product Liability- No provision of this chapter relating to a tobacco product shall be construed to modify or otherwise affect any action or the liability of any person under the product liability law of any State.
`SEC. 917. TOBACCO PRODUCTS SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY COMMITTEE.
    `(a) Establishment- Not later than 6 months after the date of enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the Secretary shall establish a 12-member advisory committee, to be known as the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee (in this section referred to as the `Advisory Committee').
    `(b) Membership-
      `(1) IN GENERAL-
        `(A) MEMBERS- The Secretary shall appoint as members of the Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee individuals who are technically qualified by training and experience in medicine, medical ethics, science, or technology involving the manufacture, evaluation, or use of tobacco products, who are of appropriately diversified professional backgrounds.

           
           

          Comments

           
          The Political Guide - User Comments
           
          Bill Number : H R 1256

          Short Title : Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act
          Title : To protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products, to amend title 5, United States Code, to make certain modifications in the Thrift Savings Plan, the Civil Service Retirement System, and the Federal Employees' Retirement System, and for other purposes.

           
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          Votes

           
          Congressional Votes on H R 1256
           
          Bill Number : H R 1256

          Title : To protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products, to amend title 5, United States Code, to make certain modifications in the Thrift Savings Plan, the Civil Service Retirement System, and the Federal Employees' Retirement System, and for other purposes.

          Votes in the US Senate
          Roll NumberVote DateQuestionDescriptionVote Result
          2062009-06-10On the Cloture MotionMotion to Invoke Cloture on H.R. 1256; Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control ActA
          2072009-06-11On Passage of the BillH.R. 1256 As Amended; Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control ActP
          2052009-06-09On the Amendment S.Amdt. 1246Burr Amdt. No. 1246; In the nature of a substitute.R
          2042009-06-08On the Cloture Motion S.Amdt. 1247Motion to Invoke Cloture on Amdt. 1247 ; In the nature of a substitute.A
          2032009-06-02On the Cloture MotionMotion to Invoke Cloture on the Motion to Proceed to H.R. 1256; Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control ActA
           
          Votes in the US House
          Roll NumberVote DateQuestionDescriptionVote Result
          1872009-04-02On Passage Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control ActP
          1862009-04-02On Motion to Recommit with Instructions Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control ActF
          1852009-04-02On Agreeing to the Amendment Buyer of Indiana Substitute AmendmentF
          3352009-06-12On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control ActP

          Sponsors

           
          Congressional Sponsors of H R 1256
           
          Bill Number : H R 1256

          Title : To protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products, to amend title 5, United States Code, to make certain modifications in the Thrift Savings Plan, the Civil Service Retirement System, and the Federal Employees' Retirement System, and for other purposes.

          Sponsor: Rep Waxman, Henry A. [CA-30] (introduced 3/3/2009)      

          , ALPHABETICAL [followed by Cosponsors withdrawn]:     (Sort: by date)
          Rep Abercrombie, Neil [HI-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Ackerman, Gary L. [NY-5] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Altmire, Jason [PA-4] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Andrews, Robert E. [NJ-1] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Arcuri, Michael A. [NY-24] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Baldwin, Tammy [WI-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Barrow, John [GA-12] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Berry, Marion [AR-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Bilbray, Brian P. [CA-50] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Bishop, Sanford D., Jr. [GA-2] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Bishop, Timothy H. [NY-1] - 3/17/2009
          Rep Blumenauer, Earl [OR-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Bono Mack, Mary [CA-45] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Bordallo, Madeleine Z. [GU] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Boswell, Leonard L. [IA-3] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Boucher, Rick [VA-9] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Brady, Robert A. [PA-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Braley, Bruce L. [IA-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Capps, Lois [CA-23] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Carnahan, Russ [MO-3] - 3/26/2009
          Rep Carney, Christopher P. [PA-10] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Carson, Andre [IN-7] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Castle, Michael N. [DE] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Castor, Kathy [FL-11] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Christensen, Donna M. [VI] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Cleaver, Emanuel [MO-5] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Cohen, Steve [TN-9] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Connolly, Gerald E. "Gerry" [VA-11] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Conyers, John, Jr. [MI-14] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Costa, Jim [CA-20] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Costello, Jerry F. [IL-12] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Courtney, Joe [CT-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Cummings, Elijah E. [MD-7] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Dahlkemper, Kathleen A. [PA-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Davis, Danny K. [IL-7] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Davis, Susan A. [CA-53] - 3/3/2009
          Rep DeFazio, Peter A. [OR-4] - 3/3/2009
          Rep DeGette, Diana [CO-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Delahunt, William D. [MA-10] - 3/3/2009
          Rep DeLauro, Rosa L. [CT-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Dent, Charles W. [PA-15] - 3/6/2009
          Rep Dicks, Norman D. [WA-6] - 3/18/2009
          Rep Dingell, John D. [MI-15] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Doyle, Michael F. [PA-14] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Edwards, Chet [TX-17] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Ellison, Keith [MN-5] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Emerson, Jo Ann [MO-8] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Engel, Eliot L. [NY-17] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Eshoo, Anna G. [CA-14] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Faleomavaega, Eni F.H. [AS] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Farr, Sam [CA-17] - 3/24/2009
          Rep Fattah, Chaka [PA-2] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Filner, Bob [CA-51] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Frank, Barney [MA-4] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Frelinghuysen, Rodney P. [NJ-11] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Gerlach, Jim [PA-6] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Giffords, Gabrielle [AZ-8] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Gonzalez, Charles A. [TX-20] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Green, Gene [TX-29] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Grijalva, Raul M. [AZ-7] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Gutierrez, Luis V. [IL-4] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Hall, John J. [NY-19] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Hare, Phil [IL-17] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Harman, Jane [CA-36] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Heinrich, Martin [NM-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Higgins, Brian [NY-27] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Himes, James A. [CT-4] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Hinchey, Maurice D. [NY-22] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Hirono, Mazie K. [HI-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Hodes, Paul W. [NH-2] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Holden, Tim [PA-17] - 3/26/2009
          Rep Holt, Rush D. [NJ-12] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Honda, Michael M. [CA-15] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Inslee, Jay [WA-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Israel, Steve [NY-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Jackson, Jesse L., Jr. [IL-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Jackson-Lee, Sheila [TX-18] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Johnson, Henry C. "Hank," Jr. [GA-4] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Kagen, Steve [WI-8] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Kennedy, Patrick J. [RI-1] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Kildee, Dale E. [MI-5] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Kilroy, Mary Jo [OH-15] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Kind, Ron [WI-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Kirk, Mark Steven [IL-10] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Klein, Ron [FL-22] - 3/23/2009
          Rep Kucinich, Dennis J. [OH-10] - 3/18/2009
          Rep Lance, Leonard [NJ-7] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Langevin, James R. [RI-2] - 3/17/2009
          Rep Larsen, Rick [WA-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Larson, John B. [CT-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Lee, Barbara [CA-9] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Levin, Sander M. [MI-12] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Lewis, John [GA-5] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Lipinski, Daniel [IL-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep LoBiondo, Frank A. [NJ-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Loebsack, David [IA-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Lofgren, Zoe [CA-16] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Lowey, Nita M. [NY-18] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Lujan, Ben Ray [NM-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Lynch, Stephen F. [MA-9] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Maffei, Daniel B. [NY-25] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Maloney, Carolyn B. [NY-14] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Markey, Betsy [CO-4] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Markey, Edward J. [MA-7] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Marshall, Jim [GA-8] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Massa, Eric J. J. [NY-29] - 3/25/2009
          Rep Matheson, Jim [UT-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Matsui, Doris O. [CA-5] - 3/3/2009
          Rep McCarthy, Carolyn [NY-4] - 3/3/2009
          Rep McCollum, Betty [MN-4] - 3/3/2009
          Rep McDermott, Jim [WA-7] - 3/3/2009
          Rep McGovern, James P. [MA-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep McMahon, Michael E. [NY-13] - 3/3/2009
          Rep McNerney, Jerry [CA-11] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Meeks, Gregory W. [NY-6] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Michaud, Michael H. [ME-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Miller, Candice S. [MI-10] - 3/19/2009
          Rep Miller, George [CA-7] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Mitchell, Harry E. [AZ-5] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Moore, Dennis [KS-3] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Moore, Gwen [WI-4] - 3/23/2009
          Rep Moran, James P. [VA-8] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Murphy, Christopher S. [CT-5] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Murtha, John P. [PA-12] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Nadler, Jerrold [NY-8] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Napolitano, Grace F. [CA-38] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Norton, Eleanor Holmes [DC] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Oberstar, James L. [MN-8] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Olver, John W. [MA-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Pallone, Frank, Jr. [NJ-6] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Pascrell, Bill, Jr. [NJ-8] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Payne, Donald M. [NJ-10] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Peters, Gary C. [MI-9] - 3/23/2009
          Rep Pingree, Chellie [ME-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Platts, Todd Russell [PA-19] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Polis, Jared [CO-2] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Rangel, Charles B. [NY-15] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Reichert, David G. [WA-8] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Reyes, Silvestre [TX-16] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Ross, Mike [AR-4] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Rothman, Steven R. [NJ-9] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Roybal-Allard, Lucille [CA-34] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Ruppersberger, C. A. Dutch [MD-2] - 3/23/2009
          Rep Rush, Bobby L. [IL-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Ryan, Tim [OH-17] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Sanchez, Linda T. [CA-39] - 3/24/2009
          Rep Sanchez, Loretta [CA-47] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Sarbanes, John P. [MD-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Schakowsky, Janice D. [IL-9] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Schiff, Adam B. [CA-29] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Schwartz, Allyson Y. [PA-13] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Scott, Robert C. "Bobby" [VA-3] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Serrano, Jose E. [NY-16] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Sestak, Joe [PA-7] - 3/25/2009
          Rep Shea-Porter, Carol [NH-1] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Sherman, Brad [CA-27] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Slaughter, Louise McIntosh [NY-28] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Smith, Adam [WA-9] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Smith, Christopher H. [NJ-4] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Snyder, Vic [AR-2] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Stark, Fortney Pete [CA-13] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Sutton, Betty [OH-13] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Tauscher, Ellen O. [CA-10] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Thompson, Mike [CA-1] - 3/24/2009
          Rep Tiberi, Patrick J. [OH-12] - 3/10/2009
          Rep Tierney, John F. [MA-6] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Tonko, Paul D. [NY-21] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Towns, Edolphus [NY-10] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Van Hollen, Chris [MD-8] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Walz, Timothy J. [MN-1] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Wasserman Schultz, Debbie [FL-20] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Watson, Diane E. [CA-33] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Weiner, Anthony D. [NY-9] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Welch, Peter [VT] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Wexler, Robert [FL-19] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Woolsey, Lynn C. [CA-6] - 3/16/2009
          Rep Wu, David [OR-1] - 3/3/2009
          Rep Yarmuth, John A. [KY-3] - 3/3/2009

          Other Info

           
          Actions on H R 1256, Committees, and Related Items
           
          Bill Number : H R 1256

          Title : To protect the public health by providing the Food and Drug Administration with certain authority to regulate tobacco products, to amend title 5, United States Code, to make certain modifications in the Thrift Savings Plan, the Civil Service Retirement System, and the Federal Employees' Retirement System, and for other purposes.

           

           
          Major Actions
           
          MAJOR ACTIONS:
          3/3/2009 Introduced in House
          3/26/2009 Reported by the Committee on Energy and Commerce. H. Rept. 111-58, Part I.
          3/26/2009 Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Oversight and Government. H. Rept. 111-58, Part II.
          4/2/2009 Passed/agreed to in House: On passage Passed by recorded vote: 298 - 112 (Roll no. 187).
          6/11/2009 Passed/agreed to in Senate: Passed Senate with an amendment by Yea-Nay Vote. 79 - 17. Record Vote Number: 207.
          6/12/2009 Resolving differences -- House actions: On motion that the House agree to the Senate amendment Agreed to by the Yeas and Nays: 307 - 97 (Roll no. 335).
          6/12/2009 Cleared for White House.
          6/16/2009 Presented to President.
          6/22/2009 Signed by President.
          6/22/2009 Became Public Law No: 111-031 [Text, PDF]

           
          All Actions
           
          ALL ACTIONS:
          3/3/2009:Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
          3/3/2009:Referred to House Energy and Commerce
          3/3/2009:Referred to the Subcommittee on Health.
          3/4/2009:Subcommittee on Health Discharged.
          3/4/2009:Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held.
          3/4/2009:Ordered to be Reported by the Yeas and Nays: 39 - 13.
          3/3/2009:Referred to House Oversight and Government Reform
          3/18/2009:Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held.
          3/18/2009:Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by Voice Vote.
          3/26/2009 4:45pm:Reported by the Committee on Energy and Commerce. H. Rept. 111-58, Part I.
          3/26/2009 4:46pm:Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Oversight and Government. H. Rept. 111-58, Part II.
          3/26/2009 4:47pm:Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 24.
          3/31/2009 6:49pm:Rules Committee Resolution H. Res. 307 Reported to House. Rule provides for consideration of H.R. 1256 with 1 hour of general debate. Previous question shall be considered as ordered without intervening motions except motion to recommit with or without instructions. Measure will be considered read. A specified amendment is in order. Upon the adoption of this resolution it shall be in order to consider in the House the bill H.R. 1256. All points of order against consideration of the bill are waived except those arising under clause 9 or 10 of rule XXI. The amendment printed in part A of the report shall be considered as adopted.
          4/1/2009 7:25pm:Rule H. Res. 307 passed House.
          4/1/2009 7:26pm:Considered under the provisions of rule H. Res. 307. (consideration: CR H4318-4368; text of measure as reported in House: CR H4318-4338)
          4/1/2009 7:26pm:Rule provides for consideration of H.R. 1256 with 1 hour of general debate. Previous question shall be considered as ordered without intervening motions except motion to recommit with or without instructions. Measure will be considered read. A specified amendment is in order. Upon the adoption of this resolution it shall be in order to consider in the House the bill H.R. 1256. All points of order against consideration of the bill are waived except those arising under clause 9 or 10 of rule XXI. The amendment printed in part A of the report shall be considered as adopted.
          4/1/2009 7:27pm:DEBATE - The House proceeded with one hour of debate on H.R. 1256.
          4/1/2009 8:13pm:DEBATE - Pursuant to the provisions on H.Res. 307, the House proceeded with 30 minutes of debate on the Buyer amendment in the nature of a substitute.
          4/1/2009 8:44pm:POSTPONED PROCEEDINGS - At the conclusion of debate on the Buyer amendment in the nature of a substitute, the Chair postponed further proceedings on H.R. 1256 until a time to be announced.
          4/2/2009 11:16am:Considered as unfinished business. (consideration: CR H4412-4415)
          4/2/2009 11:33am:Mr. Rogers (MI) moved to recommit with instructions to Energy and Commerce. (consideration: CR H4413-4414; text: CR H4413)
          4/2/2009 11:33am:DEBATE - The House proceeded with 10 minutes of debate on the Rogers (MI) motion to recommit with instructions. The insutructions contained in the motion seek to require the bill to be reported back to the House with an amendment prohibiting certain uses of funds.
          4/2/2009 11:43am:The previous question on the motion to recommit with instructions was ordered without objection. (consideration: CR H4414)
          4/2/2009 12:01pm:On motion to recommit with instructions Failed by recorded vote: 169 - 256 (Roll no. 186).
          4/2/2009 12:07pm:On passage Passed by recorded vote: 298 - 112 (Roll no. 187).
          4/2/2009 12:07pm:Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
          4/2/2009:Received in the Senate.
          4/3/2009:Read the first time. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under Read the First Time.
          4/20/2009:Read the second time. Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 47.
          5/21/2009:Motion to proceed to consideration of measure made in Senate. (consideration: CR S5887)
          5/21/2009:Cloture motion on the motion to proceed to the measure presented in Senate. (consideration: CR S5887; text: CR S5887)
          5/21/2009:Motion to proceed to consideration of measure withdrawn in Senate. (consideration: CR S5887)
          6/2/2009:Cloture on the motion to proceed to the measure invoked in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 84 - 11. Record Vote Number: 203. (consideration: CR S5918-5922, S5922-5941; text: CR S5922)
          6/3/2009:Motion to proceed to measure considered in Senate by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S5994-6017)
          6/3/2009:Motion to proceed to consideration of measure agreed to in Senate. (consideration: CR S6017)
          6/3/2009:Measure laid before Senate by motion. (consideration: CR S6017-6020, S6020-6023)
          6/4/2009:Considered by Senate. (consideration: CR S6170-6171)
          6/4/2009:Cloture motion on the bill presented in Senate. (consideration: CR S6171; text: CR S6171)
          6/8/2009:Considered by Senate. (consideration: CR S6231-6232, S6233-6234, S6241-6242, S6243-6244, S6244-6247)
          6/9/2009:Considered by Senate. (consideration: CR S6347, S6352-6354)
          6/10/2009:Considered by Senate. (consideration: CR S6406-6412)
          6/10/2009:Cloture on the bill invoked in Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 67 - 30. Record Vote Number: 206. (consideration: CR S6412; text: CR S6412)
          6/11/2009:Passed Senate with an amendment by Yea-Nay Vote. 79 - 17. Record Vote Number: 207. (consideration: CR S6497-6523; text as passed Senate: CR S6501-6523)
          6/11/2009:Message on Senate action sent to the House.
          6/11/2009 5:18pm:Rules Committee Resolution H. Res. 532 Reported to House. Rule provides for consideration of Senate Amendment to H.R. 1256 with 1 hour of general debate. Previous question shall be considered as ordered without intervening motions. Waives all points of order against consideration of the motion except those arising under clause 10 of rule XXI. Provides that the Senate amendment shall be considered as read. Although the rule waives all points of order against consideration of the motion (except those arising under clause 10 of rule XXI), the Committee is not aware of any points of order against the motion. The waiver of all points of order (except those arising under clause 10 of rule XXI) is prophylactic.
          6/12/2009 10:16am:Rule H. Res. 532 passed House.
          6/12/2009 10:17am:Pursuant to the provisions of H. Res. 532, the House moved to agree to the Senate amendment. (consideration: CR H6630-6660)
          6/12/2009 10:17am:DEBATE - The House proceeded with one hour of debate on the motion to agree to the Senate amendment to H.R. 1256.
          6/12/2009 11:27am:The previous question was ordered pursuant to the rule. (consideration: CR H6660)
          6/12/2009 11:54am:On motion that the House agree to the Senate amendment Agreed to by the Yeas and Nays: 307 - 97 (Roll no. 335). (text as House agreed to Senate amendment: CR H6630-6651)
          6/12/2009 11:54am:Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
          6/12/2009:Cleared for White House.
          6/16/2009:Presented to President.
          6/22/2009:Signed by President.
          6/22/2009:Became Public Law No: 111-31.
           

           
          Committes
           
          COMMITTEE(S): Committee/Subcommittee: Activity: House Energy and Commerce Referral, Markup, Reporting
           

           
          Related Items
           

          RELATED BILL DETAILS:  (additional related bills may be identified in Status) Bill:Relationship:H.RES.307Rule related to H.R.1256 in House