Stuff you need to know, 2.12.24

“Rift between Democrats dooms this year’s alcohol tax push”
by Ted Alcorn and Trip Jennings, New Mexico in Depth
February 10, 2024

The push to reduce New Mexicans’ consumption of alcohol all but ended Friday when House Taxation & Revenue Committee declined to recommend an alcohol tax-increase bill, thus kicking the can down the road on one of the state’s leading public health crises.

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Diana Tittle
Diana Tittle

Diana Tittle, a member of the board of Sierra County Public-Interest Journalism Project, was the editor of the Sierra County Sun, the Citizen's precursor. A former resident of Truth or Consequences who now lives part-time in northern New Mexico, she spent her 42-year professional career in Cleveland, Ohio, where she worked as a newspaper reporter, magazine writer and editor, book author and publisher and publishing consultant. She is the recipient of a Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature.

Posts: 332

One comment

  1. Somehow, raising the taxes on alcohol seems very ‘classist’. In other words, the rich get to drink while the poor have to get more poor in order to drink. Not to diminish the bad effects of alcohol abuse but this way only the wealthy will be able to afford to be a social problem while even moderate drinkers of the lower classes will be curtailed while the addicts with little money will be inclined to beg or steal or, maybe a few will seek treatment. Perhaps this would be less offensive if those taxes went for treatment options AND if taxes on the very rich were raised to the same proportional level as those on the poor. In any case, my cocktails are going to cost me more. Sin taxes have always been regressive and seldom achieve more than making the rich feel self-righteous!

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