Pubdate: Mon, 15 Jun 1998 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Alissa J. Rubin And Henry Weinstein Los Angeles Times ANTI-SMOKING FUNDS LOST IN FLAP OVER TOBACCO BILL WASHINGTON -- In the recent trench warfare over the Senate's tobacco control legislation, one casualty has gone hardly noticed: funding for programs to help smokers quit, to prevent non-smokers from starting and to keep children from buying cigarettes. Grab-Bag Of Programs To gain support for the legislation, the Senate added a substantial income tax cut and a grab-bag of anti-drug programs, among other provisions. With each addition, fewer dollars were left for the public health programs that were initially one of the core reasons for the legislation. In fact, the measure has become so laden with new provisions that Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., is warning that it may collapse of its own weight. ``This bill is so bad right now, I just don't think it should be passed in this form,'' Lott said Sunday on ABC's ``This Week.'' ``Everybody that has touched it has made it worse.'' The bill that arrived on the Senate floor last month would have set aside $11.5 billion in the first five years exclusively for smoking prevention and related programs. Now, with the bill facing further Senate action this week, there is no money dedicated exclusively to public health. ``This is typical of what politicians do when they get their hands on money,'' said longtime tobacco foe Michael Pertschuk of the Advocacy Institute. ``Public health invariably takes a back seat.'' Public health accounts are not the only losers. The governors are up in arms over what they say amounts to a midnight raid by the Senate. ``The nation's governors are no longer able to support the state financing section of the Senate bill,'' the National Governors Association wrote Thursday in a letter to the Senate leadership. The politically powerful group urged senators to restore their funding before completing action on the bill. The tobacco control legislation arose out of a proposed national settlement reached last June between the cigarette manufacturers and 40 states that sued them to recover their share of the costs of treating smoking-related illnesses. ``After bearing all of the risk initiating the suits and all of the expense of years of arduous negotiations and litigation . . . it is only reasonable and sensible that any final settlement include a protected core of funding for states,'' the governors wrote. Endless Debate The bill, which the Senate has been debating for three weeks with no clear end in sight, creates a tobacco trust fund made up of the revenues from the bill's proposed $1.10-a-pack increase in the price of cigarettes and the penalties paid by the tobacco companies if youth smoking failed to drop to specified levels. The trust fund would be divided into accounts to pay the states to settle their lawsuits with the cigarette manufacturers, to help tobacco farmers whose livelihoods would be threatened, to pay for anti-smoking programs and to enforce tough new Food and Drug Administration standards for cigarette manufacturers. A separate account would fund research on tobacco-related diseases. - ---