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SCOTUS skeptical that state abortion bans conflict with federal health care law; Iowa advocates for immigrants push back on Texas-style deportation bill; new hearings, same arguments on both sides for ND pipeline project; clean-air activists to hold "die-in" Friday at LA City Hall.

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"Squad" member Summer Lee wins her primary with a pro-peace platform, Biden signs huge foreign aid bills including support for Ukraine and Israel, and the Arizona House repeals an abortion ban as California moves to welcome Arizona doctors.

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The urban-rural death divide is widening for working-age Americans, many home internet connections established for rural students during COVID have been broken, and a new federal rule aims to put the "public" back in public lands.

Report: AZ Underfunding Tobacco Prevention Programs

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Wednesday, December 24, 2014   

PHOENIX - Arizona will spend about $19 million of the $424 million it will get from the big tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes this fiscal year on efforts to prevent kids from smoking and helping others to quit. That's according to a recent report from the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. John Schachter, director of state communications at Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, says the state's lack of investment will continue to cost lives and money.

"If Arizona doesn't really start increasing the funding consistently and constantly, it's going to continue to pay health-care costs for people with smoking-related illnesses," Schachter says. "It's going to continue to see its kids sucked into that world, and we're going to see the state pay in lives and money."

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends Arizona should be spending $64 million per year on smoking-prevention programs. Nationally, Schachter says, this year the states will collect $25 billion from the 1998 tobacco settlement and tobacco taxes, but they will spend less than two percent of it on anti-tobacco programs.

He points to Florida which has cut its high school smoking rate to 7.5 percent from 15 percent by adequately funding tobacco prevention through a voter-approved ballot initiative.

"We would actually save 2.3 million lives, over $120 billion in health-care costs," says Schachter. "We would prevent seven million kids from becoming adult smokers if we can get every state to just achieve Florida's rate, let alone go beyond that."

Schachter says Arizona's 14 percent high-school smoking rate is line with the national average. He adds tobacco use kills an estimated 8,400 Arizonans each year and taxpayers spend nearly $2.4 billion on health care for sick smokers.


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