Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Historic $32.5B tobacco proposal faces final test in series of hearings

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jan, 2025 11:17 AM
  • Historic $32.5B tobacco proposal faces final test in series of hearings

A historic proposal that would see three major tobacco companies pay out billions to provinces and territories as well as former smokers across Canada is set to face its final test over the coming weeks.

The proposed $32.5-billion settlement between the companies — JTI-Macdonald Corp., Rothmans, Benson & Hedges and Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd. — and their creditors received unanimous support from those creditors in a vote last month and must now obtain the court’s approval.

Over roughly half a dozen days of hearings starting Wednesday, the companies and other parties in the case will have the chance to formally voice their concerns or objections regarding the proposed deal.

At least one of the companies has opposed the plan that was filed with the court in October, saying it would be impossible to implement unless several key issues were addressed.

The Canadian Cancer Society, which is a social stakeholder in the case, has also called for changes to add smoking-reduction measures, warning governments could otherwise fumble a unique opportunity to rein in the tobacco industry and protect the health of Canadians.

“There is a one-time, historic opportunity to get the provisions in the settlement right. It is essential that the settlement contain significant measures to reduce smoking,” Rob Cunningham, the organization’s lawyer, said in an email.

“This opportunity will never come again.”

Several health advocacy groups have similarly denounced the proposed deal as inadequate, accusing provincial governments of selling out to the tobacco industry by accepting payouts that hinge on future sales of harmful products.

The judge overseeing the years-long creditor protection proceedings acknowledged in November there were “outstanding issues,” including each company’s share of the total payout.

Ontario Superior Court Chief Justice Geoffrey Morawetz deemed the issues to be resolvable, however, and urged the parties to continue negotiating until the final hearing.

If the deal is approved, provinces and territories stand to get more than $24 billion over about two decades, while plaintiffs in two class-action lawsuits in Quebec would get more than $4 billion to split between them.

Another $2.5 billion is earmarked for Canadian smokers not included in the lawsuits, and more than $1 billion would go to a foundation to fight tobacco-related diseases. The money for the foundation also includes $131 million taken from the amount allocated to the Quebec plaintiffs.

The proposed deal was crafted by the monitors appointed to each company in collaboration with a mediator, capping off more than five years of confidential negotiations.

Morawetz has called the case one of "the most complex insolvency proceedings in Canadian history."

The legal saga began in Quebec with a landmark ruling that found the companies had chosen profits over the health of their customers and ordered them to pay about $15 billion to plaintiffs in two class-action lawsuits.

The case migrated to Ontario in 2019 when the companies sought creditor protection after the Quebec ruling was upheld on appeal.

All legal proceedings against the three giants were frozen during the negotiations, an order that has now been extended until the end of January.

The companies faced claims of more than $1 trillion in total, including lawsuits from provincial governments seeking to recover smoking-related health-care costs, court documents show.

Along with the proposed deal itself, the court must also approve the fees sought by lawyers in the Quebec class actions.

Court documents show the lawyers are seeking approval for more than $900 million in compensation for more than 175,000 hours of work in the case that began in the late 1990s.

The fee represents 22 per cent of the plaintiffs’ share of the settlement and includes tens of millions of dollars in costs incurred during the litigation, as well as future costs related to the claims process, the documents show.

MORE National ARTICLES

Environmentalists claim 'setback' for species protection in B.C. port expansion case

Environmentalists claim 'setback' for species protection in B.C. port expansion case
The David Suzuki Foundation, the Georgia Strait Alliance, the Raincoast Conservation Foundation and the Western Canada Wilderness Committee filed a legal challenge last June against the Roberts Bank Terminal 2 project in Delta, B.C.

Environmentalists claim 'setback' for species protection in B.C. port expansion case

Elections BC hasn't called in RCMP as Conservatives seek police probe of Surrey race

Elections BC hasn't called in RCMP as Conservatives seek police probe of Surrey race
Elections BC says it hasn't asked the RCMP to investigate a complaint from the B.C. Conservatives about alleged "voting irregularities" in the October provincial election, despite a call from the party for police to get involved.

Elections BC hasn't called in RCMP as Conservatives seek police probe of Surrey race

Dozens of Canadian firefighters head to California to help in fire fight

Dozens of Canadian firefighters head to California to help in fire fight
A statement from the B.C. Ministry of Forests says a team of 22 crew members and one agency representative left for Los Angeles on Monday and are in addition to a dozen technical specialists who arrived in Los Angeles on the weekend. 

Dozens of Canadian firefighters head to California to help in fire fight

B.C. starvation death inquest hears victim's emaciated state, poor living conditions

B.C. starvation death inquest hears victim's emaciated state, poor living conditions
Florence Girard was so small when she died that she "looked like a child" in her casket, her sister told a British Columbia coroner's inquest into the death of the woman. Girard died in 2018 weighing only about 50 pounds, and Astrid Dahl, who was caring for Girard as part of a program for people with developmental disabilities, was convicted in 2022 of failing to provide the necessities of life in the case.

B.C. starvation death inquest hears victim's emaciated state, poor living conditions

Freeland to announce Liberal leadership bid within the next week

Freeland to announce Liberal leadership bid within the next week
Freeland's first policy promise will be to impose dollar-for-dollar tariffs on U.S. imports to match the cost of tariffs U.S. president-elect Donald Trump has vowed to impose on Canada. Trump has promised to impose 25 per cent tariffs on all imports from Canada and Mexico on Jan. 20, the day he is inaugurated.

Freeland to announce Liberal leadership bid within the next week

Police investigating after man injured in fire outside Vancouver SkyTrain station

Police investigating after man injured in fire outside Vancouver SkyTrain station
Police in Vancouver are looking for witnesses after a man was injured in a fire outside a SkyTrain station in the city. They say the 40-year-old man was found by a driver around 2 a.m. on Sunday outside the Main Street-Science World station.

Police investigating after man injured in fire outside Vancouver SkyTrain station