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U.S. States Not Using Tobacco Funds For Prevention |
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Wednesday November 30, 8:11
PM EST
WASHINGTON (AP)--Just a
fraction of the money that states received from tobacco settlements and taxes is being
used to prevent smoking, advocacy groups reported in a study Wednesday.
The report, "A Broken Promise
to Our Children," was released by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, American Heart
Association, American Cancer Society and American Lung Association.
Some $551 million is allocated for
tobacco-use prevention programs in the 2006 budget year, the study said. That pales in
comparison with the $1.6 billion recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, said Vince Willmore, spokesman for the campaign.
Even that amount would represent a
small part of the $21.3 billion available to states this year from the 1998 tobacco
settlement and state tobacco taxes.
Only Maine, Colorado, Delaware and
Mississippi spend at least the minimum levels recommended by the CDC, the study said.
Michigan, Missouri, New Hampshire
South Carolina, Tennessee and the District of Columbia spend no state funds at all, the
report found, while 30 other states fund at less than half of the recommended amount.
States sell tobacco-related funds to
pay off budget shortfalls and use them for capital campaigns and construction projects,
the report said.
States also get prevention money
from the CDC. Averaging about $1 million per state, the total is nowhere near what the CDC
recommends, said Dr. David Nelson, senior scientific adviser for the CDC's Office on
Smoking and Health.
State minimums, based on population
size and need, range from $7.3 million for Wyoming to more than $165 million for
California.
Ballot initiatives forcing states to
spend tobacco tax or settlement money on prevention programs could solve these shortfalls
in the future, advocates said.
Colorado, which passed such an
initiative as part of a tax increase in 2004, showed the biggest progress in this year's
report. The state's prevention spending rose to $27 million from $4.3 million last year,
Willmore said. The CDC minimum for Colorado is $24.6 million.
Montana and Oklahoma's prevention
spending improved thanks to similar initiatives, he said.
The tobacco industry said money from
its $206 billion settlement with the states should be used for its agreed-upon purpose.
"There does seem to be
something of a disconnect between how (states) are spending the money and what they said
they needed it for," said John Singleton, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.'s director of
communications.
Philip Morris USA is encouraging
states to fund youth smoking prevention and similar initiatives, spokeswoman Jennifer
Golisch said.
The industry spends $15.4 billion
marketing tobacco products, nearly 28 times the amount of state spending on tobacco
prevention, the report said. Industry representatives declined to confirm or deny that
number.
11-30-05 2011ET

(END) Dow Jones Newswires 
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