COLUMBIA, S.C. - A plan to raise cigarette
taxes by 22 cents a pack was rejected Wednesday by a House panel
working to restructure the state's ailing Medicaid system.
Rep. Rex Rice, R-Easley, said the tax would raise about $66
million for preventive health-care programs and provide a more
stable source of money for Medicaid, which serves South Carolina's
poorest residents.
Rice had pushed a plan to raise the tax by 42 cents a pack but
reduced that just before the six-member House Medicaid Reform Ad Hoc
Committee killed it on a voice vote.
A plan Republican House leaders unveiled Tuesday would generate
$45 million for Medicaid programs next year and $36 million a year
afterward by refinancing the state's tobacco settlement bonds.
That means there's no need for an additional tax to cover rising
Medicaid costs, said Rep. Rick Quinn, R-Columbia, chairman of the ad
hoc committee.
Rice and others say that does not address more than $60 million
in Medicaid spending that lacks a reliable, annual source of
funding. "I'm trying to permanently fund the health-care needs with
the tobacco tax," Rice said.
"I still think we're going to have the same problems next year"
in covering the state portion of Medicaid's budget, said Jane Wiley,
a lobbyist for AARP, which supports senior citizens' issues as well
as the proposed tax.
Quinn said the cigarette tax is not a stable source of revenue
because smoking rates decline slightly each year and a tax increase
would hasten that.
"It's clear that raising the tax decreases consumption," he said.
"The cigarette tax is not a panacea. ... It's a declining source of
funding."
Cigarette tax plans aren't dead. Because of the way bills are
handled in the House, Rice will be able to argue for a cigarette tax
increase when the bill goes to the floor for debate.
At the same time, the $5.1 billion budget bill now under debate
in the House could draw a cigarette tax amendment this week or when
it moves to the Senate for consideration.