Posted on 03/26/2006 6:52:32 PM PST by NormsRevenge
Molly Bowman-Styles doesn't have anything against libraries or after-school programs for kids.
But Bowman, an official with the local chapter of the American Heart Association, thinks it might be nice if the city of San Diego spent at least some tobacco-settlement revenue on programs that stop kids from smoking.
For several years now, she and other anti-smoking activists have been on a crusade to figure out exactly how the city of San Diego spends the millions it receives every year under a $206 billion 1998 legal settlement between 46 states and the major tobacco companies.
And like their counterparts in many other cities, the activists have been waging an uphill battle to make sure a portion of the money is spent on what it was supposedly meant for: to cover smoking-related medical costs and prevent people from lighting up.
Last month, Mayor Jerry Sanders proposed using future tobacco revenues as collateral to borrow money and pay off a portion of the city's $1.4 billion pension shortfall. In past years, the city has shuffled huge chunks of the money into its general fund while also earmarking some for parks, libraries and an after-school program for kids.
If the city has spent a dime of the revenue on any sort of anti-smoking campaign or health-related program, it's awfully hard to tell from looking at the previous six years' budgets. The city has received roughly $66.5 million in tobacco-settlement revenue since 2000, and a spokesman for Sanders, who took office in December, said the city doesn't appear to have spent one red cent on anything related to smoking-prevention or health.
Trying to account for all the money has become something of an obsession for Bowman and other local health advocates, many of whom still recall their elation when the settlement was announced eight years ago. At the time, they figured the cash bonanza would usher in a new era of public consciousness about the dangers of smoking.
Since then, their group the San Diego County Tobacco-Free Communities Coalition has watched with disappointment as tens of millions of dollars have vanished into the city's general fund, making the money as difficult to trace as a drop of water in a stream.
The money wasn't meant for cities and counties to do anything they wanted, said Bowman, a senior advocacy director for the heart association. People paid for that money with their lives.
Complaints spreading
Across the country, anti-smoking groups have been raising similar complaints. Cities and counties have spent the money on everything from golf-course sprinklers (Niagara County, N.Y.) to enforcement of pooper-scooper laws (Lincoln, Neb.).
The problem, the activists acknowledge, is that nothing in the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement mandates that the money be spent on anything in particular, even though the 46 states ostensibly brought the litigation to recoup the public-health-related costs of smoking.
California is expected to receive $25 billion in tobacco-settlement revenue through 2025. The state keeps half the money for itself, then distributes 45 percent to every county and the remaining five percent to four cities: San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Jose.
If you listened to all the fulminating by all the politicians when this was settled, it was all about protecting kids, said Danny McGoldrick, vice president of research for the Washington, D.C.-based Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. But then the money grab started.
According to a Web site maintained by McGoldrick's group, only four states are spending even the minimum amount recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on anti-tobacco programs. Those states are Maine, Colorado, Delaware and Mississippi.
The organization has also compiled a list of what it labels particularly egregious expenditures of the tobacco money. North Carolina has used it to promote a horse park that holds polo matches. Alabama funded boot camps for juvenile delinquents. One New York county upgraded its computer equipment and fire alarms. Alaska made dock repairs.
Deficit diversion For San Diego anti-smoking activists, the mayor's idea of using the money as collateral to help pay off the pension deficit is only the latest reminder that the money isn't going to combat smoking.
At a Feb. 6 City Council meeting, the activists said Sanders' plan might jeopardize the money should the city default on bond payments.
The American Lung Association is opposed to securitizing the funds, but we anticipate that you will do so nevertheless, Debra Kelley of the American Lung Association's San Diego chapter told the council.
She noted that not a dime has been spent on keeping tobacco away from kids. In a subsequent interview with The San Diego Union-Tribune, Kelley said the city has never been able to tell us what it has done and accomplished with this money. It just points to various black holes.
During the Feb. 6 hearing, the council was shown a spreadsheet of what has happened to the $66.5 million the city has received. More than half the money has been placed in the city's general reserve or general fund. An additional $4 million has been spent on libraries, $13 million on parks and $9 million on the 6-to-6 after-school program for kids.
A spokeswoman for the San Diego Unified School District, which runs the 6-to-6 program, said there's no organized anti-smoking component to it. Spokeswoman Music McCall did note that police officers affiliated with the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program have participated in after-school lectures at some elementary schools.
The anti-smoking and anti-drug message may come in that way, McCall said.
According to recent city budgets, $250,000 a year has also been earmarked for enforcement of underage-smoking laws. Most if not all of that money goes to the San Diego Police Department, which uses it to fund a summer camp for kids, according to a police spokesman.
Over the years, city officials have noted that the county, not the city, is largely responsible for addressing public-health issues. And the county has made a concerted effort to spend its tobacco-related revenue on public health, although not necessarily on nonsmoking projects.
In 2001, the county Board of Supervisors adopted a policy that all the revenue must be spent on health and human services programs, according to Terry Hogan, finance director for the county's Health and Human Services Agency. Those programs range from alcohol-and drug-addiction services to health care for the indigent.
Fred Sainz, a spokesman for Sanders, said he realizes the city hasn't spent much, if anything, on a concerted anti-smoking campaign. He also predicts that won't change in the future.
There are simply too many other holes to plug with the money, he said. The pension crisis has created too many strains on city services.
In recent weeks, the anti-smoking coalition has been lobbying the City Council to pass an ordinance that would require tobacco retailers to obtain a license. They've suggested that the licensing fees would pay for the cost of enforcing the new law, meaning the city wouldn't have to dip into its tobacco revenue.
But the activists haven't given up hope that the tobacco money or some of it, at least will someday be used to combat smoking.
Kelley, of the lung association, said the anti-tobacco coalition will continue to plug away in San Diego, lobbying local officials, attending council meetings, doing the same things they've been doing the past eight years.
We feel like we've met with almost everyone in the entire city, she said. It's like the city has been pouring buckets of water in a swimming pool. You just don't know where it's going.
$66.5 million: Tobacco money received by San Diego. More than half has been put into the city's general reserve or general fund.
$13 million: Parks
$9 million: 6-to-6 after-school program
$4 million: Libraries
Hey, you got a light?
San Diego spends millions on bloated city pensions. Just Great!
"Tobacco payout isn't combating smoking"
The government was given a bunch of new money and they didn't do what they were supposed to? How shocking.
Here in NC on one end of Tobacco Road (Raleigh Durham area) they spent literally millions on a path through the woods that's out in the middle of nowhere. The only people that use it to my knowledge take their horses out there to ride.
I lived in Oklahoma City for awhile in 1982-83. While I was there, a state legislator "discovered" a tax revenue account of some kind that had been "forgotten" and was going unspent. I don't recall specifics, but they found a way to spend it.
It's just one more example that if you give these Bozos money, they will find a way to spend it, whether for what was promised or not. Gummint expands to spend the available tax revenue.
I don't think the "tobacco payout" (Screw The Smoker Agenda) was ever designed to "combat smoking." It was designed to help the lawyers make all the Mercedes, Cadillac and BMW dealers rich like themselves as well as helping to put heavy pressure on real estate market in the Swiss Alps. A secondary objective was to help the DemocRATS finance their socialist (Everything is "free!") state.
I was just simple corporate extortion. If smoking is so bad, shut down the tobacco industry -- yeah, right, like the government will kill the goose that lays golden eggs. So expect more extortion, while the government counts its tax revenues.
And the money DIDN'T come from tobacco companies, it came from SMOKERS.
And not one goddamn dime has gone into lung cancer research, or emphysema research, or medical care for smokers, or even keeping kids from smoking!
I am a smoker. I am NOT surprised. I'm not going to quit smoking, but I AM going to make it a practice to point out what we by God pay for!
Why is this news?
This is the well known unconstituonal financial fraud of the latter part of the 20th century.
A few attorneys became multimillionaires overnight; the bureaucracy got billions to spend in addition to upward spiraling taxes and a focused, identifiable segment of society was unconstitutionally singled out for taxation absent the "equal protection" of the Constitution.
All that is well-known.
What's the news here?
The ultimate irony.
Smokers are not allowed to smoke in most parks now, regardless of whether there are others around, or whether they are upwind or downwind of anyone else.
Whatever the intent is, reason, logic and fairness have no role in it.
Rush was right -- yet again.
This just proves that politicians and government cannot be trusted with your money.
Here in NC on one end of Tobacco Road (Raleigh Durham area) they spent literally millions on a path through the woods that's out in the middle of nowhere.
Yikes....
Wonder why the American Cancer,Heart,Lung Society isn't spending more to counteract.
They get billions in grants to do so.
Mostly from sales off cigarettes.
Robert Woods Johnson Foundation sees to it.
This was about Federal, State and Local govts being able to get $200 billion dollars for their pet lefty projects, without having to pass unpopular legislation to do it.
The Smoking Gestapo knows that the smoking industry has a small constituency so they were easy targets.
They conveniently forget that smokers have paid hundreds of billions of dollars in taxes over the decades that no other American has had to pay.
Smokers are second-class Americans, who are forced to pay phenomenally higher taxes (just like the Muslim jizyat), are segregated into concentration camps (I tend to think of "smoking areas" as "Leper colonies", and every year, find their HARD-EARNED tax-dollars preserving fewer of their rights.
If we actually did that, just think of all the taxes the politicians wouldn't have to buy our votes with improvements to parks, schools, and libraries.
So many people saw this coming. There was no way they could possible spend all that money to fight smoking other than to give a few hundred thousand to each smoker to stop.
It was a "shake down" plain and simple. Tony Soprano would have been proud.
For the record... I'm not a smoker; however, if the govt. is going to collect tax on sticks then they should leave tobacco damn well alone.
If it is any comfort, there is a certain irony here.
The anti smoking "activists" are all for the government taking money and rights away from other people. The joke here is on them. They thought they were entitled to this money, and whadda know? The government screwed them out of it.
Of course that doesn't help those of you who are getting ripped off by the price increases AND higher taxes. But at least these peckerheads aren't getting it.
L
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