Going down in smoke: Funds cut for programs to reduce smoking in Maryland
11/21/2004 Andrew Schotz Herald-Mail Online A lower rate of smoking in Maryland has cut the amount of money available for health officials to curtail smoking. It's an interesting dilemma, but Earl Stoner, the director of health services for the Washington County Department of Health, isn't complaining. "If anything, you'd want to work yourself out of a job," he said. It's been six years since major tobacco manufacturers agreed to pay $206 billion to 46 states, Washington, D.C., and U.S. territories to settle a lawsuit. Four other states previously had negotiated their own $40 billion deal, according to a summary of the agreement posted at the National Conference of State Legislatures' Web site. Maryland's share is $4.4 billion, to be paid over 25 years, according to Carlessia Hussein, the director of the cigarette restitution fund program for the Maryland Department of Health & Mental Hygiene In the current fiscal year, Washington County is getting $277,122 for cancer prevention programs and $232,852 for tobacco-use prevention programs, Hussein said. The sum of the two amounts has dropped two straight years. The Washington County Health Department's funding was cut 13 percent from 2003 to 2004, then another 13 percent in 2005, said Kimberly Rasch, the program manager for the department's cancer surveillance and control program. The funding cuts forced the department to scale back its media campaign on colorectal cancer - a local focus - and left no money for prostate cancer ads, said William Christoffel, the county's health officer. Hussein said Maryland's overall [...]