Albuquerque Journal

Alcohol tax hike on the table

$155M earned would cover programs, treatment

- BY DAN MCKAY

SANTA FE — Democratic legislator­s launched an emotional push Friday to establish a flat 25-cents-a-drink tax as part of a strategy to combat New Mexico’s incredibly high alcohol death rate — the worst in the nation.

Pausing to compose herself, state Rep. Joanne Ferrary explained in a public hearing that her niece was buried last month, dead after an alcohol-related fall.

“We’ve been working on this a long time,” she said, “but we keep losing people along the way.”

The legislatio­n narrowly survived its first committee Friday, advancing on a 6-4 vote.

If it advances, New Mexico would raise alcohol taxes and dedicate an extra $155 million in new revenue to support health, treatment and other programs.

Perhaps more importantl­y, supporters said, the higher prices would reduce alcohol consumptio­n in New Mexico.

The proposal faced blunt opposition Friday from the national alcohol industry, local breweries and others.

Al Park, a lobbyist for the New Mexico Brewers Guild, said the changes would undo incentives that helped the state grow its craft beer scene.

The bill would damage local breweries that already impose two- or three-drink limits on customers and are “among the leading proponents of responsibl­e drinking,” he said.

After Friday’s hearing, even proponents acknowledg­ed the bill will face powerful opposition. But they expressed optimism that the proposal can succeed this session as a growing number of lawmakers recognize the harm caused by excessive drinking.

Ferrary, D-Las Cruces, said the state hasn’t raised its liquor tax in decades, allowing its value to be eroded by inflation.

Alcohol “has a such an enormous cost to our state,” Ferrary said. “We are basically subsidizin­g the profits of the alcohol industry. We’re suffering by losing the lives and productivi­ty of so many of our constituen­ts.”

Alcohol would still be subject to state GRT

The flat tax would represent a sharp jump in taxation on liquor, beer and wine, especially for craft distillers and brewers.

New Mexico now taxes alcohol by the liter or gallon. The amount varies based on the type of booze, how much of it is sold and who made it.

Local breweries and small winegrower­s, for example, pay lower taxes than big national companies.

But the legislatio­n, House Bill 230, would shift to a flat tax per serving, regardless what the customer is buying.

The goal, supporters say, is to avoid favoring any particular drink.

“The path to abuse takes many forms,” Democratic Sen. Antoinette Sedillo Lopez of Albuquerqu­e said.

Under the bill, each 12-ounce can of local beer, for example, would see its tax set at 25 cents — rather than ranging from less than 1 cent now to 4 cents. A can of, say, Budweiser is now taxed at roughly 4 cents.

Wine is now about 7 cents a drink, with small winegrower­s taxed at just 2 to 5 cents. Under the bill, the tax would go to 25 cents.

The per-drink tax would be incorporat­ed into larger purchases. A six-pack of beer, for example, would come with a $1.50 tax, and a 25-ounce bottle of wine would be taxed at $1.25. Alcoholic drinks would still be subject to the state’s gross receipts tax.

The new taxes would kick in this summer. An inflation adjustment — likely raising the tax beyond 25 cents — would begin in 2027.

About $180 million would flow into a new Alcohol Harms Alleviatio­n Fund. The state’s general fund, which now receives some of the alcohol tax revenue, would lose about $25 million.

The new alcohol fund would pay for prevention, treatment and recovery services; behavioral health programs for individual­s not covered by Medicaid or other health insurance; and services to help victims of domestic violence, sexual assault or other alcohol-related crimes.

Sen. Shannon Pinto, D-Tohatchi, said the legislatio­n could make a real difference in her part of the state — preventing problems on the front end by reducing consumptio­n — without imposing an excessive cost on consumers.

“This is just a drop in the bucket to me to battle this,” she said.

David Jernigan, a professor at the Boston University School of Health, said increased alcohol taxes are associated with a number of positive health outcomes, including less underage drinking and fewer drivers with alcohol in their system.

“The message of the science is clear,” he said. “Alcohol taxes save lives.”

Several lawmakers credited a series published last summer by New Mexico In Depth, a nonprofit news organizati­on, with boosting awareness of the state’s alcohol problem. The series, “Blind Drunk,” concluded the state has largely neglected the crisis even as it grows worse.

Tax increase called unnecessar­y

Opponents say increased taxes aren’t necessary to address New Mexico’s alcohol problem.

State revenue is hitting record highs amid an oil boom and uptick in consumer spending, providing financial flexibilit­y, opponents said, to launch new health programs without tax changes.

“We won’t dispute that our state has a drinking problem,” said Sara Fitzgerald, senior vice president at the Greater Albuquerqu­e Chamber of Commerce. But “simply ratcheting up a tax isn’t the answer to combatting alcohol abuse.”

Jason Weaks, a lobbyist for the New Mexico Distillers Guild, said the industry has been an economic bright spot sendng locally made products out of state and injecting new money into the economy. “These are good jobs,” he said.

The proposal cleared the House Health and Human Services Committee over the objection of three Republican members and Democratic Rep. Tara Jaramillo, of Socorro.

It advances now to the House Taxation and Revenue Committee, which would be empowered to send it to the full chamber for considerat­ion.

Data shared with New Mexico legislator­s last year show the state had the nation’s worst alcohol-related death rate, at almost twice the national average. And the problem is getting worse.

The death rate from alcoholrel­ated causes per 100,000 residents jumped from about 66 in 2017 to 103 in 2021, according to the Department of Health.

 ?? JOURNAL PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON ??
JOURNAL PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON
 ?? SOURCE: STATE OF NEW MEXICO ?? Wine by small grower:
Today’s tax: 2-5 cents Serving size: 5 oz. New tax: 25 cents
SOURCE: STATE OF NEW MEXICO Wine by small grower: Today’s tax: 2-5 cents Serving size: 5 oz. New tax: 25 cents
 ?? ?? Spirits by craft distiller:
Today’s tax: 0.4-3 cents Serving size: 1.5 oz. New tax: 25 cents
Spirits by craft distiller: Today’s tax: 0.4-3 cents Serving size: 1.5 oz. New tax: 25 cents
 ?? ?? Beer by microbrewe­r:
Today’s tax: 1-4 cents Serving Size: 12 oz. New tax: 25 cents
Beer by microbrewe­r: Today’s tax: 1-4 cents Serving Size: 12 oz. New tax: 25 cents
 ?? ?? Spirits:
Today’s tax: 7 cents Serving size: 1.5 oz. New tax: 25 cents
Spirits: Today’s tax: 7 cents Serving size: 1.5 oz. New tax: 25 cents
 ?? ?? Beer:
Today’s tax: 4 cents Serving size: 12 oz. New tax: 25 cents
Beer: Today’s tax: 4 cents Serving size: 12 oz. New tax: 25 cents
 ?? ?? Wine:
Today’s tax: 7 cents Serving size: 5 oz. New tax: 25 cents
Wine: Today’s tax: 7 cents Serving size: 5 oz. New tax: 25 cents
 ?? COURTESY OF VARA WINERY DISTILLERY ?? A proposal to establish a flat 25-cents-a-drink tax as part of a strategy to combat the state’s high alcohol death rate faced blunt opposition Friday from the national alcohol industry, local breweries and others.
COURTESY OF VARA WINERY DISTILLERY A proposal to establish a flat 25-cents-a-drink tax as part of a strategy to combat the state’s high alcohol death rate faced blunt opposition Friday from the national alcohol industry, local breweries and others.

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