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[article provided by Lona. Thanks!]
Miffed At Hud Reply, Bond Threatens To Bar Funding Of Smoke Shops
AP 02/22/2000
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Missouri Sen. Christopher Bond says he may try to
block
more government funding of American Indian smoke shops, including some
in
Oklahoma.
Bond issued a report last month detailing how the Department of Housing
and
Urban Development doled out $4.2 million to American Indian smoke shops
and
truck stops that sell cheaper cigarettes. The GOP lawmaker chairs the
Appropriations Committee panel that controls HUD's budget.
Dissatisfied with the agency's response, Bond said Sunday, "It now appears
we may need to legislate a common-sense solution for HUD."
Agency spokesman David Egner replied that since HUD has no authority
to ban
sales of legal products in businesses it funds, Congress would need
to do
just that.
"HUD told Sen. Bond last June that we would quickly implement any law
barring HUD funding of businesses that sell tobacco products," Egner
said.
Tribal activists, meantime, accused Bond of prejudice for singling out
Indian tribes.
"He's not attacking those large corporations who utilize the large discount
stores, who pride themselves on underselling their competitors," said
W. Ron
Allen, chairman of the Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe and an official of
the
National Congress of American Indians, which is meeting in Washington
later
this week.
"As far as we're concerned, that is racist and discriminatory," Allen added.
Bond's spokesman, Dan Hubbard, said Bond will await an apology for the
charge of discrimination. "In the meantime, he awaits an explanation
as to
why it's a good idea to use taxpayer dollars to underwrite the sale
of
discount cigarettes," Hubbard said.
Bond argues that studies show cheaper cigarettes may encourage youth
smoking, Bond urged HUD to halt the subsidies. He said Sunday: "HUD
needs to
find alternative ways to encourage economic development for our populations
in need without endangering the health of our children."
However, HUD has insisted it has no legal authority to stop the grants.
A
HUD official reiterated the point in a letter to Bond last week.
"We believe there are serious policy, programmatic and legal constraints
against such an action," Hal DeCell, HUD's assistant secretary for
congressional relations, wrote in the letter to Bond.
The letter said information provided by Bond does not establish a direct
link between the federal smoke shop funds and increased teen smoking,
and
therefore the nature of a negative impact on the community "related
to such
an assumed relationship is unavoidably speculative."
Bond said he was "flabbergasted" by HUD's response and called it "a
page
right out of the tobacco lawyer handbook."
"For years big tobacco companies and their lawyers claimed there was
no
causal relationship between smoking and cancer, and now HUD uses that
same
kind of argument to defend its HUD-funded smoke shops," the senator
said.
Bond himself has come under fire for past votes supporting the tobacco
industry, from opposing several proposed tobacco taxes to opposing
1998
legislation curbing teen smoking and bringing nicotine under federal
regulation.
Egner, HUD's spokesman, said Bond mischaracterized the letter and that
"we
are simply asking the senator to provide us with any information he
has
showing that Indian-owned stores are more likely to violate laws banning
the
sale of cigarettes to minors than are non-Indian stores."
The smoke shop dispute is one of several between Bond and Housing Secretary
Andrew Cuomo. Bond also is challenging HUD's authority to sue gun makers
over violence in public housing as well as its role in a politically
charged
squabble over New York homelessness funding that has become an issue
in the
Senate race between Hillary Clinton and Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.
The senator ordered his latest report after learning last spring of
a 1997
community development block grant to the Reno Sparks Indian Colony
in Verdi,
Nev. The agency responded that "only one" smoke shop received such
a grant,
but research turned up a half-dozen awards, and a Senate staffer traveled
to
Oklahoma to see _ and videotape _ the smoke shops first-hand.
In Oklahoma, the Chickasaw Nation received $750,000 apiece for stores
in
Thackerville and Ada, while the Choctaw Nation won $750,000 each for
Broken
Bow and Poteau stations. In addition, the Muscogee Creek Nation won
$750,000
for a store in Muskogee.
In 1998 in Oklahoma, HUD awarded $750,000 each to a Chickasaw Nation
project
in Ada, a Choctaw Nation store in Poteau and a Muscogee Creek store
in
Muskogee. In 1997, $750,000 each went to the Chickasaws for a Thackerville
shop and the Choctaws for a Broken Bow station.
Tribes defend their role, arguing that tobacco is just one of the many
legal
products they sell to match their non-Indian competitors. The travel
plazas
create jobs and boost income, taxes and retail sales for communities,
Choctaw Nation Chief Gregory E. Pyle said earlier.
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