New Tobacco Tax Bill Touches All Bases

New Tobacco Tax Bill Touches All Bases

A new bill introduced in the California Legislature yesterday proposes a new tax on cigarettes and electronic cigarettes to raise money for a variety of purposes including solving the managed care tax conundrum, funding regional centers and boosting some Medi-Cal provider rates.

A bill introduced on Wednesday in the California Legislature’s special session on health care touches on almost all of the health policy concerns originally raised by the governor when he convened the special session in June.

SBX2-14, by Sen. Ed Hernandez (D-West Covina), would impose a $2-a-pack tax on cigarettes and an equivalent tax on e-cigarettes.

The bill includes several proposals:

That’s a lot in one bill.

“Not only will it generate much-needed revenue for health care and developmental services,” Hernandez said in a written statement, “it also helps reduce smoking rates and deters teenagers from getting hooked on a deadly habit.”

“It’s the only bill out there that comprehensively solves all the issues raised by the governor and the special session,” said Tim Valderrama, chief of staff for Hernandez.

The MCO tax component is based on the governor’s latest proposal of a tiered-tax system. Since federal officials declared California couldn’t use its current MCO tax formula (taxing only those plans that participate in Medi-Cal and then matching that money with federal dollars and basically paying the plans back through provider fees), the state needed to come up with a broader-based formula that taxes all MCOs, even those that don’t participate in Medi-Cal and therefore don’t reap any benefit from the tax.

“The big difference is, this new proposal limits the net liability by half for the plans,” Valderrama said, down to $317 million from the originally proposed $669 million.

The new “Mega Bill,” by the numbers:

“A budget is a reflection of a society’s values,” Hernandez said. “The revenue generated by enacting this bill will help provide care for the most underserved and neediest communities in California. These are our grandparents, parents, brothers, sisters and friends. As a society we cannot continue to ignore their cries for help.”

Exit mobile version