|
Attorney General Gansler Announces Court Victory
for Maryland Tobacco Farmers
BALTIMORE, MD (August 20, 2007) - Attorney General Douglas F.
Gansler announced today that the State of Maryland and its tobacco
farmers have achieved a significant victory in their efforts to
hold the nation’s largest tobacco companies accountable to
a 1999 Trust Agreement. The North Carolina court ruling requires
Philip Morris, USA, Inc., R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, and Lorillard
Tobacco Company to make payments through 2010 totaling about $13
million for the benefit of Maryland farmers, and $9 million for
Pennsylvania farmers.
The 1999 Trust Agreement between the tobacco companies and tobacco-grower
states was intended to address the economic consequences of the
1998 Master Settlement Agreement (MSA). The controversy centered
on a provision in the Agreement that states that the payments to
the farmers could end in the event of federal legislation benefitting
farmers. The tobacco companies contended they no longer needed
to make payments to Maryland and Pennsylvania farmers after Congress
passed the Fair and Equitable Tobacco Reform Act (FETRA) in 2004.
The legislation provided payments to tobacco farmers from other
tobacco-grower states, but no payments for Maryland and Pennsylvania
farmers. When the tobacco companies stopped paying, Maryland and
Pennsylvania pursued action in North Carolina court.
“This decision protects our farmers from the tobacco companies’ efforts
to deny them the benefits bargained for in the Trust Agreement,” said
Attorney General Gansler. “The Court agreed with us that
the Trust Agreement was intended to provide a safety net to Maryland
farmers and that our farmers must continue to receive these benefits.”
Despite the fact that farmers in other tobacco growing states
benefitted from FETRA because they participate in the tobacco quota
system, the tobacco companies asserted that they no longer had
to make Trust payments for the benefit of Maryland and Pennsylvania
farmers. The North Carolina court ruled that FETRA did not affect
the tobacco companies’ obligation under the 1999 agreement
and must still make payments to Maryland and Pennsylvania.
“We applaud the North Carolina court ruling in the challenge
to get the tobacco companies to live up to their agreement with
Maryland farmers,” said Maryland Agriculture Secretary Roger
Richardson. “This is an important first step to ensure Maryland
farmers will receive payments under the National Tobacco Grower
Settlement Trust.”
|