New Jersey minimally funds its Statewide Comprehensive Tobacco Control Program

The FY 2012-13 New Jersey State Budget (July 1, 2012-June 30, 2013) that was approved in summer 2012, drastically cut State funding for the New Jersey Department of Health’s Office on Tobacco Control (NJOTC). Funding is mostly from the collection of the State’s annual cigarette retailer licensing fees in the amount of $500,000. New Jersey ranks LAST of all states spending on Tobacco Control Cessation. View a NJTV News video.

Read a January 30, 2014 letter and news article from PolitickerNJ sent to Governor Christie's office by Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. about the lack of funding for New Jersey's Tobacco Control Program.

The prior year’s FY 2011-12 New Jersey State Budget (July 1, 2011-June 30, 2012) that was approved on June 30, 2011, funded NJOTC with State funding in the amount of $1.2 million, of which $500,000 was from the State’s annual cigarette retailer licensing fees. Read the January 25, 2012 NJ Spotlight article on reduced New Jersey State funding for smoking prevention and cessation, and encouraging consistent tobacco tax rates between tobacco products, and the January 19, 2012 NJ Today news article. The prior year’s FY 2010-11 Budget was minimal as well. Previously, the NJOTC (then called the NJ Tobacco Control Program) was State-funded at $7.5 million, and prior to that, there was a time that the State funded the program at $30 million.

Watch Fred M. Jacobs, M.D., J.D., a former New Jersey Commissioner of Health, on the February 10, 2012 edition of NJ Capital Report. He discusses the need for New Jersey to fund the state's tobacco control program at a previous level of $30 million. Dr. Jacobs is currently President of GASP's Board of Trustees, and the Chair of the Tobacco Strike Force for the Northeastern Division of the American Cancer Society.

Read an August 25, 2013 Philly.com news article about the lack of funding for tobacco cessation in Pennsylvania and New Jersey and the potential impact on future smoking rates.

Read the February 2013 Op-Ed piece, presented here in English and Spanish, by Dr. Jeannette Noltenius, National Director of the National Latino Tobacco Control Network, which discusses the benefits of funding state tobacco control and prevention programs at adequate levels, and how Latinos and other minority groups are at risk to have illnesses and prematurely die from tobacco, if recent funding declines are not reversed.

The American Lung Association (ALA) publishes its annual State of Tobacco Control report, giving New Jersey low grades for tobacco control program spending and tobacco. Read the NJ highlights and the report card from the current ALA report.

In December 2012, A Broken Promise to Our Children, which is a national annual report, ranked New Jersey at 50th (tied in last place) for funding its statewide tobacco control program with State dollars. Learn more about this annual national report on state ranking. Read the December 29, 2012 NJ Star-Ledger’s Opinion Letter by the American Cancer Society on the 2012 report’s New Jersey findings.

Cutting the budget for statewide tobacco control programs is expensive in the long-run, according to the August 2012 Health Policy Paper from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation:

Read the May 24, 2012 news article about the U.S. Center for Disease Control's (CDC) Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report which shows the States' spending levels for tobacco control programs. The article points out, "Between 1998 and 2010, states have collected nearly $244 billion in cigarette taxes and settlement money, compared with only $8.1 billion earmarked for state tobacco control efforts... States that have spent larger amounts on tobacco control programs have seen cigarette sales fall about twice as much as in the U.S. overall." Read the May 25, 2012 CDC report.

The ALA publishes its annual report, Helping Smokers Quit – Tobacco Cessation Coverage 2012, which identifies the most and least supportive States on tobacco cessation coverage. For the ALA’s 2012 report, New Jersey ranked as being one of the 5th least supportive States for smokers who are trying to quit. Read ALA’s 2011 report, Helping Smokers Quit - Tobacco Cessation Coverage 2011. On December 12, 2011, the Star Ledger Editorial Board published an editorial on New Jersey being one of the 5 least supportive states for smokers who are trying to quit.

In April 2010, Penn State University researchers published a report, Potential Cost Benefits of Smoking Cessation in New Jersey. The report concluded that smoking "... costs the residents and the state's economy $30.29 per pack when lost wages, premature death and health care expenses are factored in...Smoking costs the state $8.3 billion, including $3.6 billion in health care expenses and $1.8 billion in lost wages, according to the analysis." Read the September 2010 Star-Ledger article about the findings from an April 2010 study released by the American Lung Association of the Mid-Atlantic regio; read the report summary and the full report. Read the September 21, 2010 Courier-Post editorial in support of dedicating a portion of the New Jersey cigarette taxes to fund strong smoking cessation and prevention programs in New Jersey.

Increasing NJOTC’s State funding aligns with federal strategic initiatives to prevent and reduce tobacco use and exposure. On May 11, 2010, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius outlined her Department's Strategic Initiatives, which includes preventing and reducing tobacco use. Read her set of four actions to accelerate this initiative. Read Secretary Sebelius' CNN commentary from March 19, 2010 entitled, New Tobacco Rules Good For Kids.

Since July 1, 2010, there is very limited state funding for NJOTC activities, and limited federal funding from the CDC. The U.S. Surgeon General's Office continues to recommend increased state funding for state tobacco control programs, as referenced in its December 2010 Report which concludes that even occasional exposure to tobacco smoke is harmful and damage is immediate. Visit our webpage about the U.S. Surgeon General's report and its findings, conclusions and recommendations. Recommendations include:

For years, New Jersey tobacco control advocates have worked tirelessly to educate policymakers and the public at large, on the need to fund NJOTC and related activities. Going forward, the New Jersey legislature could introduce legislation to increase the licensing fees to sell cigarettes, and create a licensing fee system to sell other tobacco products, earmarking such fees to fund NJOTC.

Click here for a 2010 archive of GASP's webpages on NJOTC funding that were posted online during Spring 2010. These webpages help to educate the public and advocates on the positive outcomes of funding NJ OTC and the negative impact from the loss of funding. The information may be helpful, especially if the legislature takes an interest in raising licensing fees for tobacco, with the revenue going towards funding NJ OTC.

Last update: 2/7/14