| Tobacco War: |
| Epigraph |
| Preface |
| • | Notes |
| 1. Introduction |
| • | The Changing Environment of Tobacco |
| • | Recurring Themes |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 2. Beginnings: The Nonsmokers' Rights Movement |
| • | The Berkeley Ordinance |
| • | Proposition 5 |
| • | The Tobacco Industry Joins the Battle |
| • | The $43 Million Claim |
| • | The Postmortem |
| • | Proposition 10 |
| • | Going Local |
| • | The San Francisco Ordinance |
| • | The Tobacco Industry's Counterattack |
| • | Tobacco Control Advocates Mobilize |
| • | The Proposition P Campaign |
| • | Lessons from the Proposition P Campaign |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 3. Proposition 99 Emerges |
| • | The Idea |
| • | The Coalition for a Healthy California |
| • | The Legislative Effort |
| • | The CMA and the Tobacco Industry |
| • | The Napkin Deal |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 4. Beating the Tobacco Industry at the Polls |
| • | Locking in Money for Prevention |
| • | Organizing the Campaign |
| • | The Industry Campaign |
| • | Getting the Medical Providers to Buy In |
| • | Collecting the Signatures |
| • | Launching the Election Campaign |
| • | Putting the Issue before the Voters |
| • | The CMA's Quiet Withdrawal |
| • | The Fake Cop Fiasco |
| • | Reflections on the Industry's Defeat |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 5. Moving to the Legislature |
| • | The Tobacco Industry's Pricing Strategy |
| • | Conflicting Views of Health Education |
| • | A Hostile Legislative Environment |
| • | California's Fiscal Problems |
| • | Down the Legislative Path |
| • | The Coalition's Disintegration |
| • | The Governor's Budget |
| • | The Tobacco Industry's Legislative Strategies |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 6. Proposition 99's First Implementing Legislation |
| • | The Voluntary Health Agencies' Legislation |
| • | Other Significant Tobacco Education Legislation |
| • | The Child Health and Disability Prevention Program |
| • | Negotiations and Agreements |
| • | Project 90 |
| • | The Battle over the Media Campaign |
| • | The Research Account |
| • | The Outcome |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 7. Implementing the Tobacco Control Program |
| • | Two Different Models |
| • | Leadership at DHS |
| • | The Media Campaign |
| • | The Local Lead Agencies |
| • | Encouraging Diversity |
| • | The Schools: A Different Approach |
| • | Early Leadership Problems |
| • | Monitoring and Accountability |
| • | Formalizing Noncooperation between DHS and the Schools |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 8. The Tobacco Industry's Response |
| • | The Industry and the Media Campaign |
| • | “It's the Law” |
| • | The Industry and the Schools |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 9. The Battle over Local Tobacco Control Ordinances |
| • | Beverly Hills |
| • | Lodi |
| • | Sacramento |
| • | The Escalating Fight over Local Ordinances |
| • | Long Beach |
| • | Placer County |
| • | The Sacramento Battle over Measure G |
| • | The Tobacco Industry's Plan: “California's Negative Environment” |
| • | The Tobacco Industry and the California Public Records Act |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 10. Continued Erosion of the Health Education Account: 1990-1994 |
| • | Early Postures |
| • | The CMA Position |
| • | Governor Wilson's Budget Cuts |
| • | The Tobacco Industry's Strategy |
| • | The Final Negotiations |
| • | AB 99 Emerges |
| • | The Governor Tries to Kill the Media Campaign |
| • | The First Litigation: ALA's Lawsuit |
| • | The 1992-1993 Budget Fight |
| • | Positioning for 1994 |
| • | The Governor Kills the Research Account |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 11. Battles over Preemption |
| • | SB 376: The First Threat of Preemption |
| • | The Voluntary Health Agencies Accept Preemption |
| • | The Birth of AB 13 |
| • | The Tobacco Industry's Response: AB 996 |
| • | The View from outside Sacramento |
| • | AB 13 and AB 996 on the Assembly Floor |
| • | On to the Senate |
| • | The Philip Morris Plan |
| • | The Philip Morris Initiative |
| • | The Continuing Fight over AB 13 |
| • | The Philip Morris Signature Drive |
| • | The Legislature Passes AB 13 |
| • | AB 13 and Proposition 188 |
| • | The Stealth Campaign |
| • | The “No” Campaign |
| • | The Wellness Foundation |
| • | The Federal Communications Commission |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 12. The End of Acquiescence |
| • | The Governor's 1994-1995 Budget |
| • | The Creation of AB 816 |
| • | Objections to CHDP |
| • | The Hit List |
| • | The ANR-SAYNO Lawsuit |
| • | The Conference Committee Hearing |
| • | The CMA |
| • | Last-Minute Efforts to Stop AB 816 |
| • | The Floor Fight |
| • | The Final Bill |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 13. The Lawsuits |
| • | Child Health and Disability Prevention |
| • | Comprehensive Perinatal Outreach |
| • | The Health Groups' Victory |
| • | The Lawsuit's Aftermath: SB 493 in 1995 |
| • | The SB 493 Lawsuits |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 14. Doing It Differently |
| • | The Need for a Change |
| • | The December Meeting |
| • | The CMA |
| • | The Governor's Budget |
| • | Changes in the Legislature |
| • | The Coalitions Form |
| • | The “Hall of Shame” Advertisement |
| • | The Wellness Grant |
| • | The CMA House of Delegates Meeting |
| • | The Philip Morris Memo |
| • | The Governor's May Revision |
| • | Reaction to the Governor's New Budget |
| • | Attempted Restrictions on the Media Campaign |
| • | The Research Account |
| • | The Final Budget Negotiation |
| • | Engaging the Media |
| • | The End of the Diversions |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 15. Political Interference in Program Management |
| • | Squashing the Media Campaign |
| • | “Nicotine Soundbites” |
| • | Implementing Pringle's Pro-Tobacco Policies |
| • | Shutting Out the Public Health Community |
| • | The TEROC Purge |
| • | The Strengthened Advertisements |
| • | The 1998 Hearings |
| • | Trying to Control TEROC |
| • | Delayed Implementation of the Smoke-free Workplace Law |
| • | Pulling the Advertisements for Smoke-Free Bars |
| • | The California Tobacco Survey: TCS “Fires” John Pierce |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| 16. Lessons Learned |
| • | The Players |
| • | The Keys to Success: Ideas, Power, and Leadership |
| • | Ideas: Knowing What You Want |
| • | Power: Turning Ideas into Action |
| • | Leadership: Seizing Opportunities and Challenging the Status Quo |
| • | Conclusion |
| • | Notes |
| Appendix A |
| • | ORGANIZATIONS AND PROGRAMS |
| • | PEOPLE |
| Appendix B Important California Tobacco Control Events |
| About the Authors |