SCHotline Press Releases

Senate Votes for a Healthier South Carolina

Posted in Uncategorized by schotline on May 8th, 2008

Senate Votes for a Healthier South Carolina
Commits $5 million to smoking prevention and $77 million to premium
assistance

Columbia, SC - Today the South Carolina Senate approved a
50-cent-per-pack tax increase on cigarettes and similarly packaged
items. The increase is expected to generate $159 million in new revenue
for the state. The bill (H.3567) designates that $5 million annually be
placed in the Smoking Prevention and Cessation Trust Fund. The remaining
revenue, an estimated $154 million, will be divided equally between a
healthcare premium assistance plan and expanding the eligibility of
Medicaid to include more low-income families.

The bill passed by the Senate has two main focal points. The first is a
statewide smoking cessation and prevention program, and second is
extending private and public healthcare coverage to approximately
150,000 to 200,000 of the state’s uninsured residents.

“The revenue is really an additional benefit to a healthier state,”
says Senator Thomas Alexander, chair of the Special Senate Finance
Subcommittee that has been reviewing information related to a
cigarette-tax increase since January. “If we reduce the number of
smokers we all win. It’s certainly a win for all those individuals
we’ll never know by name, who would have had countless health
issues caused by smoking, but never started smoking because of our
actions here today”

The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids cites numerous studies that show
increasing the price of cigarettes is the single largest factor in
reducing the number of smokers. A 2000 U.S. Surgeon General’s Report,
Reducing Tobacco Use, confirmed that increasing the price of tobacco
products decreased tobacco use, specifically among youth and young
adults. Studies have also shown that every 10 percent increase in the
real price of cigarettes reduces the number of youth who smoke by at
least seven percent. Senator Alexander said, “The Senate has been
dedicated to a smoking cessation and prevention program throughout this
process.”

“Teens are very price sensitive and if tobacco products are more
expensive it will have a tremendous impact on teen smoking,” says
Sharon Biggers, Division Director of the Tobacco Prevention and Control
program at the Department of Health and Environmental Control.
“Currently, about 19 percent of the youth in the state smoke and
there is still a lot of work that needs to be done to educate youth
about the dangers of tobacco use.” The $5 million of proposed funding
from the Smoking Prevention and Cessation trust fund will allow the
Tobacco Prevention and Control to expand both youth and adult program
statewide.

Premium Assistance
Revenue from the proposed tax increase will also provide funding for
The Palmetto Healthcare Premium Assistance Program, which will be
administered by the Department of Insurance. The program will provide up
to three years of monthly premium assistance for South Carolina
residents who have been without health coverage for the last 12 months.
Qualified individuals age 19 to 64, who have been a U.S and South
Carolina citizen for at least one year will be able to receive an
average of $2,000 annually to pay insurance premiums on a qualifying
health plan.

Currently, many uninsured individuals are forced to seek medical
attention at hospital emergency rooms where healthcare is often more
expensive and less efficient than similar care provide in a
physician’s office.

“The Senate has demonstrated a great concern for uninsured South
Carolinians,” says Senator Alexander. “We are serious about helping
them not only access healthcare, but also providing increased
availability of healthcare either through Medicaid or through premium
assistance.”

As of January 1, 2008 the per pack cigarette tax for neighboring states
is: Alabama - 42.5 cents, Florida - 33.9 cents, Georgia - 37 cents,
North Carolina - 35 cents, Tennessee - 62 cents, and Virginia 30 cents.
The increase moves the state from last in the nation at 7 cents to 39th
in the nation with a total per pack tax of 57 cents. The last time the
General Assembly addressed cigarette tax was in 1977.

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