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REGULATORY POWER: A new proposed FDA rule could extinguish a Tampa legacy and 130 jobs.

FDA rules could kill 119-year-old family cigar business


By Watchdog.org -- William Patrick | Florida Watchdog——--July 3, 2014

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. J.C. Newman Cigar Co. is one of a kind, literally.
Founded in 1895 by Julius Caesar Newman, a Hungarian immigrant, the Tampa-based family business is the last of what was once 150 “Cigar City” factories. The business has outlasted 19 U.S. presidents, two world wars, a Cuban economic embargo that crushed many of its competitors and, most recently, the Great Recession. Now, the company is fighting for its life. A new executive branch regulation aimed at curbing youth access to tobacco by stomping out affordable cigars effectively would extinguish the Newman family legacy, and its 130 jobs.

“It’s totally unfair the way the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is approaching us,” Eric Newman, the cigar company’s president, told Watchdog.org. “Cigars are to Tampa what wine is to Napa Valley and what automobiles are to Michigan,” he said. “If you know anyone whose family has been in Tampa for three or four generations, chances are someone was working in the cigar industry because they were the only jobs around.” The company’s success is in no small part due to its market niche. J.C. Newman’s, known locally by its signature clock tower, El Reloj, uses 1930s vintage equipment to roll cigars that sell for $10 or less. They’re an affordable luxury, however, that does not qualify for a “premium cigar” regulatory exemption. More...

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