A10 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2020 LATIMES.COM
Decaffeinated coffee and re-
duced-sugar soft drinks have long
been around. Now, according to a
small biotechnology company, it’s
time for low-nicotine cigarettes.
Altria Group Inc. and RJ Reyn-
olds Tobacco told regulators two
years ago that such a product
might not be possible. But their
claims may be upended after 22nd
Century Group Inc., a
Williamsville, N.Y., company, went
before the Food and Drug Admin-
istration this month seeking to
market cigarettes with 95% less
nicotine than conventional ones.
22nd Century has for years
made Spectrum cigarettes, which
have varying levels of nicotine and
have been used for government-
funded research on tobacco and
addiction.
It won authorization from the
FDA in December to start selling a
brand to the public, which will be
named VLN. The next step is to get
permission to market the ciga-
rettes as a low-nicotine alternative.
“The product greatly reduces
your nicotine consumption, and it
smells, burns and tastes like a con-
ventional cigarette,” John
Pritchard, the company’s vice
president of regulatory science,
said in a phone interview before the
Feb. 14 FDA meeting.
His company aims to disrupt
the nearly $100-billion U.S. tobacco
industry by marketing its ciga-
rettes as a tool to wean adult smok-
ers off addictive nicotine.
Pritchard said he planned to pre-
sent data showing that former
smokers or those who never
smoked have low interest in the
product.
A nod from the FDA would give
22nd Century a useful marketing
tool that Marlboro maker Altria
lacks. Altria is selling Philip Morris
International’s IQOS device,
which heats but doesn’t burn to-
bacco, in the U.S.
But the agency still hasn’t ap-
proved an application to market it
as a reduced risk compared with
cigarettes.
22nd Century said its applica-
tion should be easier to evaluate
than Altria’s, given the body of re-
search on its Spectrum cigarettes,
which were used as part of $100 mil-
lion of federal grants to study low-
nicotine cigarettes.
The company also says its cen-
tral claim — that its cigarettes have
95% less nicotine content — is eas-
ier to verify than the reduced-risk
designation that Altria is seeking
for IQOS. It hopes to start selling
the cigarettes by the second quar-
ter.
After the FDA declared in 2018
that it intended to establish rules
on maximum nicotine levels in
cigarettes, Altria said it wasn’t
clear whether substantially reduc-
ing cigarettes’ nicotine “is techni-
cally achievable” or whether it
would lead to reduced smoking.
Reynolds, meanwhile, said the
industry is “at least 20 years away
from producing tobacco at a com-
mercial scale that would meet the
range of low-level nicotine dis-
cussed.”
22nd Century counters that by
citing the FDA’s own assessment of
a plan to lower nicotine to the levels
found in VLN products. The
agency says the restrictions would
lead to 5 million additional adult
smokers quitting within a year of
the plan going into effect, while
averting more than 8 million to-
bacco-related deaths by the end of
this century.
The company holds patents on
methods of producing cigarettes
by targeting different genes and
enzymes in tobacco plants, and
makes them from genetically engi-
neered tobacco.
It is also working on non-GMO
tobacco lines.
Kary writes for Bloomberg.
Reduced-nicotine cigarettes may soon be in U.S.
By Tiffany Kary
Nearly a decade after she
stopped smoking, Mabel Battle
still has the last pack of cigarettes
she ever bought. She keeps it as a
reminder of all the gray Ohio win-
ter workdays she spent standing
outside her office with the other
shivering smokers getting a nico-
tine fix.
The cigarette pack, still sealed
in its original cellophane, is a testa-
ment to her willpower, she says: af-
ter countless failed attempts, she
finally quit.
However, her success at giving
up is also a striking result of a con-
tentious corporate experiment.
What finally prodded her into her
decision was a fear that her habit
might threaten her employment. “I
wanted to keep my job more than I
wanted to smoke cigarettes,” Bat-
tle says.
The Cleveland Clinic, where
Battle works as a health unit coor-
dinator, has been a leader in corpo-
rate anti-smoking initiatives. It
first banned smoking on its 170-
acre campus in 2008, and followed
that up with a new policy to chemi-
cally screen job applicants for nico-
tine and refuse employment to
those who test positive.
Workers such as Battle who
were on staff before the ban would
not be fired for smoking in their
free time, but she could see the cul-
ture changing.
“Being a healthcare worker is
setting an example,” says Dr.
Bruce Rogen, the chief medical of-
ficer of the Cleveland Clinic’s em-
ployee health plan. Since the clinic
instituted the ban and started of-
fering free smoking-cessation pro-
grams to employees, Rogen says,
hundreds of people at the clinic
have quit.
Only 21 states (including Ohio,
where the clinic is based) allow
companies to exclude smokers
from their workforce outright. Cal-
ifornia is not one of them. And in
those states this sort of policy has
become the norm in the healthcare
sector, Rogen says. Now the prac-
tice is spreading, and companies in
other industries are implementing
similar policies.
This delights anti-smoking ac-
tivists. However, it has led civil lib-
erties advocates to sound alarms
about employers’ creeping control
over workers’ lives even when they
are off the clock.
U-Haul, the Arizona-based
moving company with about 30,
workers, this month became one of
the country’s largest employers to
stop hiring nicotine users — a term
that includes not just smokers but
users of “nicotine products.” This
potentially covers people who test
positive for nicotine because they
are trying to give up smoking using
vaping, gum or patches.
Like the Cleveland Clinic, U-
Haul will allow those hired before
the restriction to keep their jobs.
The hiring ban will apply only in
the same 21 states, and not in Cali-
fornia.
However, should a company
choose to fire any workers who use
nicotine, the employees would
have little recourse, depending on
where they work.
Smokers are not a “protected
class” safeguarded by federal law,
such as racial minorities or people
with disabilities. That means in
“at-will” employment states, a ca-
pricious boss can fire an employee
for practically any reason, whether
that is smoking off-duty or some-
thing as arbitrary as wearing the
wrong color shirt to work.
“How far do the employer’s
rights [to fire someone] go? It’s
pretty much fair game unless the
state prohibits it,” says Cathleen
Scott, a Florida employment law-
yer. “[A worker’s] choice is to take it
or leave — that’s how it works in an
‘at-will’ employer environment.”
The states that do not allow
companies to ban nicotine users
often have laws that prohibit dis-
crimination against “legal off-duty
conduct,” says Karen Buesing, an
employment law specialist at Ak-
erman in Tampa, Fla. But the ex-
tent of the protections offered by
these laws can vary, and there is a
lot of debate around cases of em-
ployees who have been fired for le-
gally using medical marijuana.
Only a handful of employment
cases over off-duty nicotine use
have made it to court, but employ-
ment lawyers believe there could
be ways to get these bans made il-
legal.
Off-duty “smoking bans have
not been litigated sufficiently for
the public to have a grasp as to
whether [they are] enforceable,”
says Daniel Gwinn, an employ-
ment lawyer in Michigan. “It seems
interesting to me that you can be
grossly obese, which is a lifestyle is-
sue, and you can get protection
[under U.S. labor law] ... but you
can’t get protection for smoking.”
As for U-Haul, the company
says its new anti-nicotine policy is
part of its commitment to employ-
ee “wellness,” but there are also
clear financial motives at work.
When health insurance is provided
by employers, companies pay more
for health coverage if their work-
force includes a lot of smokers,
Buesing says.
About 1 in every 4 companies
with more than 500 employees of-
fers nonsmokers a reduced rate on
their healthcare premiums, says
Steven Noeldner, partner at con-
sultancy Mercer.
Yet off-duty smoking bans are
only one type of potentially inva-
sive “wellness” program offered by
companies. “Fitness contests” are
growing increasingly common, in
which employees use step-count-
ers or other tracking devices to
prove how active they are in ex-
change for a discount on their
health insurance.
These programs are perfectly
legal as long as they are structured
correctly, but companies can get
into trouble if the devices they use
track more than just employees’
steps, Buesing says.
Most companies use third-
party services to aggregate and an-
onymize the data they collect from
these wellness initiatives to try to
avoid this issue. But many compa-
nies are implementing even more
intrusive programs — such as
tracking workers’ locations via
company-issued mobile phones.
“Technology is creating new
ways to track and monitor employ-
ees,” says Brian Kropp, chief of hu-
man resources research at Gart-
ner, a technology consultancy.
Companies often scrape employ-
ees’ web-browsing history and
monitor what they write and say on
company equipment, he says. Oth-
ers go even further, turning on
workers’ webcams and using facial
recognition software to gauge their
sentiment about their jobs.
“The relationship between em-
ployees and employers is chang-
ing,” he says. Companies and their
staff used to be “basically strang-
ers” after the workday ended, but
that is no longer the way things are.
As with off-duty smoking bans,
lawyers say the legal landscape on
electronic surveillance is still
evolving. Complaints around these
issues often settle out of court —
such as a 2015 lawsuit brought by
Myrna Arias, a saleswoman who
was fired for turning off the GPS on
her company phone while off duty.
“What companies are truly
struggling with ... is that they have
not thought through the ethical
[ramifications of their] decisions,”
Kropp says. U-Haul’s manage-
ment is decreasing its health insur-
ance costs, but it is also making a
statement about what the com-
pany believes are appropriate be-
haviors, he says.
These practices do not typically
go down well with workers’ rights
advocates.
“There was a time when em-
ployers used to make sure their
employees went to church and
didn’t drink. ... Mine operators
would inspect people’s homes,”
says Dale Ewart, who heads the
Florida operations of labor union
1199SEIU United Healthcare Work-
ers East. “No one wants to live like
that. Your off-the-job behavior
should have no bearing on your
employment.”
Still, Gartner’s research shows
a growing level of acquiescence to
employer surveillance.
“A couple of years ago the per-
ception was, ‘This is so Big
Brother,’ ” Kropp says.
But thanks to the growth of dig-
ital surveillance in people’s day-to-
day lives by companies such as
Amazon and Facebook, that view
is changing. “If employees know
the employer is collecting data and
they know what it’s being used for,
and it’s being used for something
helpful, they are OK with it,” he
says.
And this can also be the case
with smoking bans. Battle, from
the Cleveland Clinic, initially held a
negative view of her company’s
smoking policy. “When they first
started it, I felt like [it was discrimi-
natory],” she says.
Eight years later, she feels dif-
ferent.
“After I quit, I was glad they did
it,” she says. “I am happy those
cigarettes are out of my life.”
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Smoke, no hire? It’s legal in 21 states
California doesn’t let employers reject nicotine users, but other places do, raising civil liberties issues
By Billy Nauman
OFF-DUTY SMOKING BANSare only one type of potentially invasive “employee wellness” policy in place at some companies.
Spencer PlattGetty Images
U-HAUL,the Arizona-based moving company, became one of the country’s largest employers to
stop hiring nicotine users — a term that includes not just smokers but users of “nicotine products.”
Charlie NeibergallAssociated Press
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