Nixon calls for program to discourage smoking by youth
12/2/2004 St. Louis Carolyn Bower STLToday.cm Missouri Attorney General Jay Nixon said Tuesday that state legislators should use about $7 million in new tobacco settlement money to pay for a program to stop young people from smoking and using tobacco. Missouri lacks a significant youth smoking prevention program even though the state has received more than $822 million in tobacco settlement money so far, Nixon told sixth-graders at Pattonville's Holman Middle School in St. Ann. Instead, the money went to the general fund to help balance the state's budget. "Not one dollar of that $822 million has been spent to keep young people in Missouri from smoking," he said. Three of every 10 Missouri high school students smoke, one of the highest rates in the country, Nixon said. In fact, the percentage of Missouri high school students who smoke - 30.3 percent - surpasses the percentage of Missouri adults who smoke - 26.6 percent, he said. Nixon said nearly 40 tobacco companies recently signed on to the settlement agreement reached in 1998 between tobacco manufacturers and 46 states. The decision will bring about $7 million in new money to Missouri each year, he said. "This should be earmarked to stop our children from picking up the smoking habit," Nixon said. "We have seen the success of other states in efforts to reduce smoking rates. We have the resources. But do we have the will? It's up to the legislators to take the next step." Nixon said he was working with [...]