Attorney General wants to raise Washington state’s smoking age to 21

  • By DERRICK NUNNALLY The Associated Press
  • Saturday, January 24, 2015 12:01am
  • News
(The Associated Press)

(The Associated Press)

By DERRICK NUNNALLY

The Associated Press

OLYMPIA — Washington state would become the first in the country to ban tobacco for everyone under age 21 under a plan announced Wednesday by Attorney General Bob Ferguson.

Ferguson and lawmakers from the state House and Senate said bills to raise the state’s smoking age from 18 to match the legal ages for consuming alcohol and marijuana were inspired by the effectiveness of smoking bans in several cities nationwide.

The first city to do so, Needham, Massachusetts, in 2005, saw a drop of more than 50 percent in its high-school smoking rate by 2012, Ferguson said.

Dozens of cities and counties have followed suit, including New York City, Suffolk County on Long Island, New York, and Hawaii County, which encompasses the “Big Island” of its state. However, bills to make the smoking age 21 failed in the last two years in New Jersey, Utah and Colorado.

Four states — Utah, New Jersey, Alabama and Alaska — and Washington, D.C., require tobacco users to be 19 or older.

Officials in Washington state cited several studies showing most adult smokers started as teenagers as justification for the change.

“For me, it’s really about helping these kids not have a lifetime of addiction, because that’s what they face,” said Rep. Tina Orwall, D-Des Moines, the lead House sponsor of the bill in that chamber.

The House version of Ferguson’s bill has been referred to the Health Care and Wellness Committee, which is chaired by Rep. Eileen Cody, D-West Seattle, a co-sponsor of the bill.

State Sen. Mark Miloscia, R-Federal Way, lead sponsor of an identical Senate bill, said he expects a tough, possibly multi-year fight getting the change through the Capitol.

“This is the start of a conversation,” Miloscia said.

If the change passed, it would cost state government an estimated $20 million a year in tobacco-tax revenues, Ferguson said.

Since tobacco’s health effects are largely long-term, any savings to the state’s healthcare system from reducing the number of people who take up smoking would take decades to add up.

State government spends a fluctuating amount of money each year to fight tobacco use, particularly among teenagers, from tens of millions of dollars when the national tobacco lawsuit settlements of the 1990s flowed into state coffers to no money at all in 2011 after recession-era shortfalls cut available funds.

Last year, the state spent $3 million on the cause, which is $40 million short of what a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study recommended for an adequate effort, state Secretary of Health John Wiesman said.

“We obviously don’t have that money,” Wiesman said, calling the proposal a “fiscally conservative approach to that issue.”

An Olympia lobbyist for the Altria Group, a multinational tobacco company, referred calls to a Virginia office that could not be reached Wednesday evening.

More in News

Crescent School District Superintendent David Bingham is retiring after 41 years with the district, where he began as a paraeducator and boys junior varsity basketball coach. Bingham, a 1980 Port Angeles High School graduate, spent his entire career at Crescent. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Crescent superintendent to retire after 41 years, multiple jobs

Dave Bingham coached basketball, drove a bus and taught many classes

Grant to fund vessel removal

Makah Tribe to use dollars for Port of Neah Bay

x
Home Fund provides transportation reimbursement

Funding supports women getting cancer treatment

Matthew McVay of Bayside Landscaping and Pruning uses a gas-powered pole saw to trim branches off an overgrown gum tree in Port Angeles. Now is a good time for pruning and trimming before the tree saps start moving. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Tree pruning

Matthew McVay of Bayside Landscaping and Pruning uses a gas-powered pole saw… Continue reading

$99M bond to go before Port Townsend voters

District looking for renovations to campus

Presentation highlights tsunami risk, likely generated from an earthquake

Emergency management officials provide scenario, encourage preparedness

Jackson Smart, center with scissors, cuts the ribbon on Wednesday to officially open the newly remodeled section of the Port Angeles Underground Tour. With Smart are, from left, Julie Hatch, Kara Anderson, Elisa Simonsen, Sam Grello and Johnetta Bindas. (Laurel Hargis)
Section of underground tour dedicated to Port Angeles man

Jackson Smart discovered mural in 1989 and has been a tour advocate

Seven nominated for open OMC board spot

Three candidates were defeated in November general election

Navy to conduct anti-terrorism exercises

Navy Region Northwest will participate in Citadel Shield-Solid Curtain 2025… Continue reading

Construction is in the early stages at the new Hurricane Ridge Middle School in Port Angeles. A special cement delivery vehicle brings another batch for the school’s foundation. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Cement delivery

Construction is in the early stages at the new Hurricane Ridge Middle… Continue reading

Port Angeles approves donated building plans

Senior center reviews policies, procedures