Pubdate: Mon, 11 May 1998 Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Contact: Website: http://www.examiner.com/ Author: Judy Holland TOBACCO SETTLEMENT FUND BATTLE Congressional grab for money imperils opportunity for legislative accord WASHINGTON - Efforts in Congress to curb teen smoking are being endangered by a fight over how the government should spend the billions of dollars that any new federal tobacco law would exact from the cigarette companies. Some lawmakers want the money to pay for tax cuts, boost the Medicare system or pay down the national debt. President Clinton wants to spend it for child care tax credits, more teachers and school construction. The money fight is being exploited by the cigarette makers, which are claiming in a nationwide advertising campaign that they would be unfairly taxed by the pending legislation to pay for new government spending. One recent tobacco industry ad bears the headline, "Big Taxes, Big Government, There they go again . . ." Longtime smoking foe Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Los Angeles, called the tug of war over tobacco dollars "an unseemly fight over money" that has threatened to distract Congress from its goal of curbing underage smoking. Rep. John Linder, R-Ga., who favors a narrow teen smoking bill rather than the sweeping legislation moving through the Senate, said the money fight "is just another form of greed." He predicted the Senate bill "doesn't have a prayer of passing the House" because there's no public support for it. Fearing that money fights could extinguish chances for enacting anti-smoking legislation, Rep. James Hansen, R-Utah, and Rep. Martin Meehan, D-Mass., introduced legislation that would spread the tobacco money around to some of the causes being pushed by their colleagues. The Hansen-Meehan bill - designed to raise about $500 billion over 25 years from the tobacco industry - would earmark 55 percent to pay down the national debt, about 35 percent to settle state lawsuits against cigarette makers and about 10 percent for anti-smoking programs. Hansen, who along with Meehan co-chairs a House tobacco task force, said they were besieged by people wanting a share of any tobacco money. The supplicants included coal miners, asbestos victims, emphysema patients and those wanting money for Medicare and Medicaid. "When anybody sees a pot of money, they all throw their line in hoping to reel one in," Hansen said. The Senate bill sponsored by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. - which would force tobacco companies to cough up $516 billion over 25 years - is silent on the issue of how to spend the money. "We didn't want to have a fight in the (Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation) committee," McCain said. McCain said he wants the money to reimburse states for costs of treating sick smokers, as well as pay for anti-smoking programs, fund federal tobacco research and help veterans, many of whom got free cigarettes in their military rations. But McCain said congressional Republicans won't allow tobacco dollars to pay for any new spending programs, such as the Clinton administration's proposal to spend $65 billion for child care tax credits and early childhood education, more teachers and new school construction. Clinton insists he won't let tobacco legislation die in a dispute with Republicans over how to spend money from an increased cigarette tax. "I would never stand in the way of a tobacco bill that actually reduced childhood smoking because they disagreed with me about how to invest the money," he said last week. Meanwhile, health advocacy groups have their own ideas on how the money should be spent. Bill Novelli, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, a coalition of major health groups and anti-smoking advocates, said he hopes $3.5 billion would be spent for anti-smoking measures, to help the Food and Drug Administration regulate tobacco and to fund research on tobacco addiction. John Garrison of the American Lung Association said the money fight has obscured the real reason for a cigarette price increase: to make smoking too expensive for minors. ©1998 San Francisco Examiner - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett