House
Health, Education and Welfare Committee hears Rep. Tanzi bill raising smoking
age to 21
STATE HOUSE – Focusing on the health
benefits that have come from similar adoption elsewhere, Rep. Teresa Tanzi
(D-Dist. 34, South Kingstown, Narragansett) testified yesterday before the
House Committee on Health, Education and Welfare in support of her proposed
legislation that would increase the minimum age for tobacco purchases in Rhode
Island from 18 to 21.
The
legislation (2015-H 5225) would apply to all forms of tobacco
and non-medical nicotine delivery systems, and would take effect immediately
upon passage.
Representative
Tanzi spoke at the committee hearing, saying she introduced the legislation
because she believes the state needs to enact stronger, science-based policies
to protect the long term health of youth and for the sake overall public
health. She also debunked the arguments that the law would have a profound
economic impact.
"But
there’s a difference between anecdotal evidence and actual evidence. The fact
is that it amounts to a 2 percent reduction in sales for one item in the store.
And I ask you to weigh it against the known health benefits. In Needham, there
was a 48 percent drop in those under the age of 21 who used a cigarette in the
last 30 days, and there was a 62 percent drop in those who smoked 10 to 30
cigarettes a day.”
According
to a 2015 report issued by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies,
if the tobacco age were raised now to age 21 nationwide, modeling suggests that
for the cohort of people born between 2000 and 2019 there would be about 10
percent fewer lifetime premature deaths, lung cancer deaths, and years of life
lost from cigarette smoking. Given the status quo projections, this translates
to about 249,000 fewer premature deaths, 45,000 fewer deaths from lung cancer,
and 4.2 million fewer years of life lost.
“Nicotine
addiction is tough to break, and most smokers get hooked at a young age. My
hope is that making it harder for younger people to get cigarettes would have
the effect of preventing smokers from starting in the first place, and the
evidence is mounting in support of this,” Representative Tanzi told the
committee. “The bottom line is public policy can create better health outcomes
for more Rhode Islanders, and when the science is this strong in support of a
change in policy, it would be irresponsible not to act.”
Tanzi
went on to say, “The General Assembly was given a budget with a mandate to
reduce state Medicaid spending by $90 million, and until we truly commit to
innovate, we will never achieve the level of spending reductions on healthcare
costs that the public expects us to achieve.
It is time we search beyond
further devastating cuts in programs as we have in the past, and serve the true
purpose of healthcare reform by revolutionizing public health from the ground
up. Bending the cost curve is great to talk about, but it will never be achieved
by nibbling at the edges. While cost savings will not be realized now, they
will never come if we fail to act now.”
Several
states — New Jersey, Alaska, Alabama and Utah — have set their minimum age for
tobacco purchases at age 19. Last year, New York City banned sales to those
younger than 21. Representative Tanzi’s bill would make Rhode Island the first
state to do so.
The
legislation is cosponsored by Rep. Mia Ackerman (D-Dist. 45, Cumberland,
Lincoln), Rep. Arthur Handy (D-Dist. 18, Cranston), Rep. John J. Lombardi
(D-Dist. 8, Providence) and Rep. Shelby Maldonado (D-Dist. 56, Central Falls.