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COLUMBIA
DAILY TRIBUNE
Nixon
blasts tobacco fund appropriation
Anti-smoking efforts ignored, he says.
Monday, April 17, 2006
JEFFERSON CITY (AP) - Missouri is
expected to receive its regular payment from a national
settlement with big tobacco companies today. That
roughly $125 million will push the state past the $1
billion mark, with payments dating back to 2001.
Attorney General Jay Nixon is
using that benchmark payment to express his
disappointment that the state has not dedicated serious
amounts of money to thwarting smoking.
Nixon’s office, along with
attorneys general in most other states, helped negotiate
the settlement, which was intended to help cover
governments’ health-care costs from people made sick by
tobacco use.
Missouri has not dedicated that
money to efforts to get people to quit smoking or to
keeping children from starting the habit. Nixon said
other states that have used their tobacco funds to
reduce smoking are already reaping the benefits and
Missouri will be paying for it down the line in higher
health costs for smokers.
"It’s just kind of stunning that
not one dollar of this money has been used to reduce
smoking in Missouri," Nixon said.
A recent state audit found that
about $1.8 million of $965 million in previously
received tobacco settlement money has gone to battling
tobacco use. Much of the tobacco money, however, has
gone to keep Missouri’s budget balanced. The state
Department of Health and Senior Services’ anti-tobacco
work is paid for by federal grants.
Nixon said using the tobacco
settlement money to shore up the budget rather than on
programs to cut youth smoking "is a short-term excuse
for not getting at the long-term solution."
Still, Nixon said he opposes for
several reasons a proposed constitutional amendment that
would raise tobacco taxes, dedicating much of the new
money to health-care providers and programs and a
smaller share to anti-tobacco efforts. Backers hope the
higher tax alone will deter youths from smoking. Nixon
questioned whether the money raised would end up where
supporters intend.
"It’s
just really hard to have confidence in the legislature
and various administrations who have had a billion
dollars run through their fingers already and not spent
a penny on smoking cessation," he said.
The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention has said Missouri should spend at least
$33 million a year for a comprehensive anti-tobacco
program.
A 2005 state health survey found
12.7 percent of middle school students and 30.7 percent
of high school students had used tobacco in the past
month. The tobacco use rate among adults was 26.4
percent, the health department said. Nixon said it’s
emblematic of the problem that Missouri’s youth smoking
rate is higher than its adult rate.
"Working with people to get them
to quit smoking clearly saves health-care dollars and
improves the quality of life for everybody," he said.
The state health department
estimated that nearly 10,000 Missourians die from
tobacco-related illness each year and that the state
spends nearly $2 billion annually to treat
smoking-related illness.
Gov. Matt Blunt proposed spending
$1 million of the settlement on smoking cessation
programs in the next budget year, which starts July 1.
The House also recommended that spending, but the Senate
version of the budget, at least thus far, cut it.
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