Anti-Smoking Campaigns Forgotten
Yet, in
Virginia, a large portion of the tobacco money has been used to
improve an auto speedway while in New York, it was invested in a
golf course sprinkler system.
New tobacco
warehouses were built with the money in North Carolina, and in
Lincoln, Neb., officials used the money to enforce the
pooper-scooper law. In Kentucky, cattle farmers received the
money through farm subsidies. "Everything except getting our
kids not to smoke," said Joseph Califano, former secretary of
health, education, and welfare during the late 1970s. "And it's
a tragedy." Despite what officials — including Connecticut
Attorney General Richard Blumenthal — promised in 1998, 97
percent of the funds won by the states from the tobacco
companies went for anything but anti-smoking campaigns.
"We need to
use the tools and resources that this agreement will give us to
enter a new phase in this campaign," Blumenthal said in 1998.
Since then,
his state has ranked the sixth lowest in spending on
anti-smoking campaigns.
"I am
embarrassed and outraged that our state has been virtually dead
last in using the money as it was designed to do," said
Blumenthal.
In Buffalo,
N.Y., county officials chose to take less than half what they
were due so that they could receive all of the money up front.
According to County Executive Joe Giambra, most of that money
has since gone to fund civic improvements.
"Not a
penny," Giambra said of the tobacco money. "We have not spent
any money specifically from this settlement agreement."
Some States Have Limited Success
The few
states that have used the money for aggressive anti-smoking
campaigns have seen successful results.
Florida
created anti-smoking commercials, including one in which smoking
wins a mock award for causing the most deaths in a year.
"They showed
a 38 percent drop in teenage smoking, the most dramatic drop in
the country," said former health secretary Califano.
After only a
few years, however, the Florida legislature drastically cut the
money for the campaign from $70 million a year to $1 million a
year.
"We've lost
over these years hundreds of thousands of kids who have become
addicted to cigarettes, who we know we could have kept off if
the governments of the states had invested that money in tough
prevention programs," said Califano.
ABC News'
David Scott and Avni Patel contributed to this report.