SECTION 1.
The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the following:(a) Tobacco use is the single most preventable cause of death and disease in California, claiming the lives of more than 40,000 people every year. Each year thousands of Californians require medical and dental treatment as a result of tobacco use.
(b) Health care treatment of all types of cancer, cardiovascular and lung disease, oral disease, and tobacco-related diseases and conditions continues to impose a significant financial burden upon California’s overstressed health care system. Tobacco use costs Californians more than $13.29 billion in health care expenses every year, of which $3.5 billion is paid for by taxpayers through existing health care programs and services that provide health care, treatment, and services for Californians. The cost of lost productivity due to tobacco use adds an additional estimated $10.35 billion to the annual economic consequences of smoking and tobacco use in California.
(c) An increase in the tobacco tax is an appropriate way to decrease tobacco use and mitigate the costs of health care treatment and improve existing programs providing quality health care and access to health care services for families and children. It will save lives and save state and local governments money in the future.
(d) Most electronic cigarettes contain nicotine, which is derived from tobacco and is a highly addictive drug. Electronic cigarettes are currently not subject to any tobacco taxation, making them cheaper and potentially more attractive, especially to young people.
(e) There are more than 470 electronic cigarette brands for sale today offered in over 7,700 flavors including candy-flavors that appeal to youth, such as Captain Crunch, gummy bear, cotton candy, Atomic Fireball, and fruit loops. The fastest growing age range for electronic cigarettes is middle school and high school students and according to the Centers for Disease Control, electronic cigarette use among this group tripled from 2013 to 2014.
(f) Increasing the cost of cigarettes and tobacco products is widely recognized as the most effective way to reduce smoking across California, especially by young people. The 2000 U.S. Surgeon General’s Report, Reducing Tobacco Use, found that raising tobacco-product prices decreases the prevalence of tobacco use, particularly among kids and young adults, and that tobacco tax increases produce “substantial long-term improvements in health.” From its review of existing research, the report concluded that raising tobacco taxes is one of the most effective tobacco prevention and control strategies. Reducing smoking will save lives and saves state and local governments money in the future.
(g) Because increasing the tobacco tax will reduce smoking and use of other tobacco products, it is important to protect existing tobacco tax-funded programs from a decline in tax revenues.
(h) It is important that funding be dedicated to health care and prevention programs.
(i) California currently taxes cigarettes at only $0.87 per pack, and ranks 35th in tobacco tax rates, reflecting one of the lowest tobacco tax rates in the United States. The national average is $1.60 per pack. Thirty-five states have cigarette tax rates of $1.00 per pack or higher, and California is well below other western states (Washington: $3.025, Oregon: $1.31, Nevada: $1.80, and Arizona: $2.00). California last raised its tobacco tax in 1998.