Agencies want share of tobacco money
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- Community leaders in the social services and medical field
were among those who testified passionately this week urging the county
board of supervisors to use millions of dollars of tobacco settlement
money for health care.
Representatives from Share Our Selves, the Orange Coast Interfaith
Shelter and Hoag Hospital attended a workshop with the county board of
supervisors at the Costa Mesa Neighborhood Center to talk about how to
spend the $30 to $40 million that will be funneled into Orange County
next spring.
During the next 25 years, Orange County will receive $912 million as part
of a nationwide tobacco lawsuit settlement. There are no restrictions on
how that money can be spent, but social and health care agency leaders
believe it should be spent on health care rather than on paying off the
county debt or on the proposed jail.
‘Too many people don’t have health-care coverage,’ said Paty Madueno, who
was representing St. Joaquim’s church.
Madueno, who is also a West Side apartment manager, said that 70% of St.
Joaquim’s parishioners surveyed and 50 of the 71 families who live in her
complex don’t have health insurance.
Madueno said that a community hospital for low-income people is also
needed.
Representatives from the Newport-Mesa community including Karen McGlinn
of Share Our Selves and Gwynn Parry of Hoag Hospital’s Community Medicine
Department spoke during the meeting.
‘I think we all recognize that initially these lawsuits were started
because of health-related issues,’ said Gary Burton, chief financial
officer for the county.
But in accordance with priorities set two years ago, in the county’s
strategic financial plan, staff recommended the money be spent on paying
off the county debt and capital costs for the proposed jail.
The county has a legal obligation to meet those priorities, and Second
District Supervisor Jim Silva said he supports that recommendation.
The county must repay bonds and there is a federal court order requiring
the county to build more jail space, Silva said.
However, Silva said he thought the testimony by social and health-care
leaders was very compelling.
‘I would like to see some arrangements made where we can meet some of
their needs,’ he said.
Sheri Barrios, director of the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter said the
funds are badly needed in a county where health care hasn’t historically
been a priority.
‘When the free clinics closed in Santa Ana, the health-care agency picked
up one of them, but there needs to be money for emergency health care, as
well as mental health,’ she said.
Barrios said one of her shelter’s clients also spoke at the workshop
about not being able to find child care for his child. That client’s case
illustrated the lack of child care for children with medical and
emotional issues, Barrios said.
The board of supervisors is expected to vote Nov. 9 on a conceptual
spending plan for the tobacco funds, Burton said.
Staff will be exploring the possibility of earmarking a portion of the
yearly allotment toward things outside of debt
payment and jail construction. He also touted the advantages of meeting
those obligations first.
As with any person, if the county pays off its debt, it will have more
expendable income.
‘In the end you’ll have more money to spend,’ he said. ‘Once you’re
removed from debt, it frees up other money for us to spend.’
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