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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Beam
DATE TYPED 2/10/05
HB 453
SHORT TITLE Promote Tobacco Use Prevention and Control
SB
ANALYST Collard
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
$3,000.0
Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB 81, HB 290, HB 319, HB 354, SB 50, SB 56, SB 389, and SB 515
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 453, introduced for the Legislative Health and Human Services Committee, appropri-
ates $3 million from the general fund to DOH for the purpose of increasing funding for the to-
bacco use prevention and control program (TUPAC).
Significant Issues
DOH notes the $3 million proposed in this bill would increase TUPAC funding to $9 million
($4.92 per capita). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that
minimum annual funding for tobacco control in New Mexico should start at $7.93 per capita or a
total of $14.2 million based on Census 2000. TUPAC FY05 funding is $5 million, which is 35
percent of the CDC “best practices” minimum funding level. The budget for FY06 includes $6
million for TUPAC. The Tobacco Settlement Revenue Oversight Committee recommended
funding at $8 million.
pg_0002
House Bill 453 -- Page 2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $3 million contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general fund.
Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY06 shall revert to the gen-
eral fund.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DOH indicates this additional funding would require three additional FTEs to implement any
expansion of statewide programs.
RELATIONSHIP
House Bill 453 relates to House Bill 81, which proposes to repeal the cigarette tax increase;
House Bill 290, which would redistribute master settlement agreement payments into the To-
bacco Settlement program fund; House Bill 319, which would raise the tax on non-cigarette to-
bacco products; House Bill 354, and its duplicate Senate Bill 515, which would prohibit smoking
in workplaces and public places; Senate Bill 50, which proposes to repeal the cigarette tax in-
crease; Senate Bill 56, which would change the requirements of cigarette tax stamps; and Senate
Bill 389, which would prohibit smoking in jails and schools.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DOH states tobacco exacts a heavy death toll in our state. More than 2,100 New Mexicans die
each year from smoking-related conditions (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
Smoking Attributable Deaths, 1999), and more than 2 thousand children in the state have lost at
least one parent as a result of tobacco use. If current trends continue, 44 thousand New Mexi-
cans currently under age 18 will ultimately die from smoking (CDC, State Highlights, 2002).
Smoking-related conditions also exact a heavy economic cost. An analysis estimated that $360
million was spent in New Mexico in 1998 on direct health care costs due to smoking. Of this
amount, $144 million was for Medicaid services, representing 15 percent of all New Mexico
Medicaid expenditures. Indirect costs for absenteeism and forfeited future earnings due to smok-
ing-caused morbidity and premature deaths totaled an additional $397 million. (Smoking Attrib-
utable Morbidity, Mortality and Economic Costs, CDC-2002)
According to the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey data, 22 percent of New Mexico
adults reported smoking in the past 30 days. Interest in quitting among adult smokers is high;
2003 data indicated that 51 percent of daily smokers had intentionally quit for at least one day
during the previous year, and the 2001 New Mexico Adult Tobacco Survey documented 53 per-
cent of smokers planned to quit during the next 6 months.
More New Mexico high school students have smoked during the previous 30 days than their
peers nationwide, (30 percent versus 22 percent) according to the 2003 Youth Risk and Resil-
iency Survey. In 2003, 14 percent of New Mexico male youth reported using smokeless tobacco
products on one or more days during the previous 30 days, compared to 8 percent in 2001. These
data document the ongoing need for effective tobacco prevention and cessation initiatives target-
ing youth.
pg_0003
House Bill 453 -- Page 3
Sustained, well-funded, comprehensive tobacco control programs are associated with a decrease
in adult use of tobacco in California, Massachusetts, and Oregon. Additionally, youth smoking
rates in California (16 percent in 8
th
grade and 6 percent in 10
th
grade) and Massachusetts re-
mained low while the rates rose nationwide from 1993–96 (29 percent increase in 8
th
graders and
23 percent in 10
th
graders). (Wakefied and Chaloupka, 2000).
If a comprehensive tobacco control program is funded for 10 years at the CDC minimum, an es-
timated 43 percent decrease in tobacco sales can be expected (Journal of Health Economics,
2003). The CDC recommended minimum funding for New Mexico is $14.2 million per year.
This could result in an estimated cost savings of $375 million in New Mexico over a ten-year
period. Based on other states’ experiences, New Mexico can expect to save between $2 to $3.63
for every $1 invested in a comprehensive tobacco control program
(
http://www.dhs.ca.gov/tobacco/documents/TCSupdate.PDF
). According to the Campaign for
Tobacco Free kids, appropriating $13.7 million for tobacco control for five consecutive years in
NM would lead to a long-term savings of $114.8 million in future Medicaid costs.
All money provided to New Mexico TUPAC goes directly to communities, schools and other
prevention programs throughout New Mexico. The increased funding proposed would be utilized
to expand comprehensive tobacco control initiatives in all counties, increase quit line promotion
and evaluation, increase prevention initiatives focused on youth, and expand services to New
Mexicans disproportionately affected by tobacco use.
HPC cites the following national smoking statistics:
.
According to Tobacco Facts, one out of five people who dies in the United States, dies be-
cause of smoking, approximately 430 thousand people annually.
.
Smoking is the number one preventable cause of premature death in the United States.
.
Smokers, on the average, live 7 years less than those who do not smoke.
.
According to the Surgeon General, smoking causes heart disease, lung and esophageal can-
cer, chronic lung disease, and contributes to cancers of the bladder, pancreas and kidney.
.
Men who smoke are 22 times more likely to die from lung cancer and 10 times more likely to
die from bronchitis and emphysema.
.
Second-hand smoke exposes non-smokers to carcinogenic elements in cigarette smoke. This
includes correctional guards, visitors, other prisoners, instructors and possibly other children.
.
Over 90 percent of adults who smoke began smoking in adolescence.
HPC cites the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, utilizing data from CDC-2001 and 2002 data
and notes the following statistics for New Mexico:
.
According to new research data released, states would prevent kids alive today from becom-
ing smokers and save them from premature, smoking-caused deaths if every state funded a
tobacco prevention and cessation program at minimum levels recommended by CDC.
.
If New Mexico follows CDC recommendations for tobacco prevention spending, a minimum
of 17,240 youths would not smoke and a minimum of 5,510 youths would not die from
smoking related causes. New Mexico would save approximately $206.9 million in future
youth related health costs.
.
36.2 percent (approximately 42,850) of New Mexico high school students smoke cigarettes.
Kids (under 18) in New Mexico who become new daily smokers each year are 5,000.
.
13.8 percent (approximately 16,334) of New Mexico high school students use spit tobacco.
.
National youth smoking rates have declined somewhat since 1997, but remain at historically
pg_0004
House Bill 453 -- Page 4
high levels. According to the National Youth Tobacco Survey, 28.4 percent of all high school
kids smoke.
.
In New Mexico, 23.6 percent (approximately 323,929) of adults are smokers, which compare
23.3 percent of United States adults.
HPC also cites Tobacco-Free Kids Statistics (
www.tobaccofreekids.org
):
.
Average state cigarette tax as of 1/8/04 – 73.5 cents.
.
Tobacco state average as of 1/8/04 – 12.4 cents.
.
Non-tobacco state average as of 1/8/04 – 82.6 cents.
.
Studies show that higher cigarette taxes are an effective ways to reduce smoking among both
youth and adults. A 10 percent increase in the price of cigarettes will reduce youth smoking
by about seven percent and overall cigarette consumption by three to five percent.
Finally, HPC cites monetary costs in New Mexico that are caused by smoking:
.
An annual healthcare cost in New Mexico directly caused by smoking is $360 million and
the portion covered by state Medicaid was $144 million. Residents' state & federal tax bur-
den from smoking-caused government expenditures was $507 per household. (Source: US
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-2001 and 2002 data).
.
As of January 2002, New Mexico ranked 38
th
in the amount of cigarette tax per pack.
(Source: The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids).
Any legislation that motivates New Mexicans to quit or reduce smoking is in the best interest of
New Mexicans health.
KBC/sb