Health care advocates press on with measure
Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- Local activists said they will continue campaigning
for an initiative to spend most of the county’s tobacco settlement money
on health care despite a lawsuit filed by the county to keep Measure H
off the November ballot.
“Morally, all of us feel it should be for health care,†said Jean
Forbath, director of the Share Our Selves free health clinic in Costa
Mesa and a member of the group behind the measure, the Committee of
Health Advocates to Reinvest the Tobacco Settlements.
The initiative proposes to use 80% of the county’s share of a national
tobacco settlement for anti-smoking programs. The county is expected to
receive $30 million each year for 25 years.
The county’s lawsuit, filed Friday, alleges that the measure would
violate state laws that dictate that county supervisors must decide how
to spend the funds.
In November, the Orange County Board of Supervisors voted to spend
most of an estimated $765 million the county will receive from tobacco
companies on jails and repaying debts.
The lawsuit is expected to be heard Aug. 30 in Orange County Superior
Court.
“It’s too bad they’re doing this,†Forbath said. “But it’s not a
surprise.â€
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