Texas Must Focus on Increasing Funding for Tobacco Prevention and Quit Smoking Programs to Reduce Death and Disease from Tobacco Use

American Lung Association “State of Tobacco Control” report releases Texas grades for tobacco control policies, outlines steps to reduce burden of tobacco.

A new report from the American Lung Association urges Texas lawmakers to focus on increasing funding for tobacco prevention and quit smoking programs to reduce the overwhelming human and financial burden of tobacco use. The 2025 “State of Tobacco Control” report evaluates state and federal policies on actions taken to eliminate tobacco use and recommends proven-effective tobacco control laws and policies to save lives.

The “State of Tobacco Control” report grades states and the District of Columbia in five areas that have been proven to prevent and reduce tobacco use and save lives. In the 2025 report, Texas received the following grades:

  1. Funding for State Tobacco Prevention Programs – Grade F
  2. Strength of Smokefree Workplace Laws – Grade F
  3. Level of State Tobacco Taxes – Grade F
  4. Coverage and Access to Services to Quit Tobacco – Grade F
  5. Ending the Sale of All Flavored Tobacco Products – Grade F

“In addition to grading Texas’s tobacco control policies, this year’s ‘State of Tobacco Control’ report examines the tobacco industry’s increasingly aggressive actions to addict a new generation to tobacco and hinder proven public policies to prevent and reduce tobacco use. Here in Texas, we are seeing tobacco industry lobbyists at the state level working to stop or weaken proven tobacco control policies. The tobacco industry is also introducing new products that appeal to youth like e-cigarettes that mimic smartphones, kid-friendly flavors and flavored nicotine pouches that are heavily marketed by social media influencers,” said Charlie Gagen, Director of Advocacy at the American Lung Association in Texas. “In 2025, policymakers in Texas must build on last session’s momentum by increasing funding for the Department of State Health Services tobacco prevention and quit smoking programs, improving the state’s surveillance of tobacco retailers, and removing mandatory disciplinary penalties for youth caught with e-cigarettes on school campus.”

Despite receiving $1,530,300,000 from tobacco settlement payments, tobacco taxes and other state funding, Texas only funds tobacco control efforts at 3.6% of the level recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The Lung Association urges Governor Abbott and the legislature to significantly increase funding for tobacco prevention and quit smoking programs.

Federal Grades Overview

The 2025 “State of Tobacco Control” report grades the federal government in five areas:

  • Federal Government Regulation of Tobacco Products – Grade C
  • Federal Coverage of Quit Smoking Treatments – Grade D
  • Level of Federal Tobacco Taxes – Grade F
  • Federal Mass Media Campaigns to Prevent and Reduce Tobacco Use – Grade: A
  • Federal Minimum Age of Sale for Tobacco Products to 21 – Grade: A

The 2025 “State of Tobacco Control” report urges Congress to provide additional funding to the FDA so they can enforce against and remove all illegal e-cigarettes the tobacco industry has introduced to the market. To learn more about this year’s “State of Tobacco Control” grades and sign the petition, visit Lung.org/sotc.

Get involved and help the mission of the American Lung Association. The Fight for Air Climb in Dallas is coming up on April 12th. Learn more at FightForAirClimb.Org/Dallas.

State grades in “State of Tobacco Control” reflect actions taken by elected officials and do not reflect on the hard work of state tobacco control programs or advocates.

For more information, contact:

Texas Media Contact

[email protected]

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