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"Here was our concern. Let's say I launch a product today (that's) a straight-up-the-gut traditional cigarette," Altman explained. "The big fear was you go out there and the FDA comes out with regulations and says,
'Oh, that's not a registered product. You have to take it off the market.'" Some companies launch different versions of essentially the same cigarette to try to expand their market, Altman said. He predicted that companies with brands under development, or those that are considering new versions of current products, would scramble to introduce them within the 21-month window. Small cigarette companies were also able to get an expansion of the loophole in negotiations with Congress, Altman added. When the legislation was introduced last year, it provided that only products similar to ones introduced by mid-2003 could be marketed without prior approval from the FDA during the initial time window.
But the bill passed by the House expanded that to include products similar to ones introduced by February 2007, a gain of more than three years. Kennedy's office said changes in the effective dates of various legislative provisions are routine in drafting major bills, and that some were recommended by former senior FDA officials. But Zeller, the former tobacco office chief who is critical of the loophole, commented, "They didn't ask me." ___ The bill is
H.R. 1108. ___ On the Net: Bill text: http://thomas.loc.gov/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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