Pubdate: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2000, The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Forum: http://tampabayonline.net/interact/welcome.htm Author: Andrew Millison, Cox News Service STUDENTS SKIP DRUG QUESTION ON FEDERAL FORM WASHINGTON - More than 100,000 applicants for federal college aid in the coming school year didn't answer a question about whether they recently have been convicted of drug crimes. Few of the students were tying to hide a conviction, federal and college officials said Wednesday. Instead, most of the one-fifth of the first 500,000 applicants who left the answer blank on their aid applications were confused, they said. So many skipped the new question that the Education Department has decided to let colleges promise federal grants or loans to students who didn't answer it. Otherwise, the steady flow of billions of dollars in student aid that will eventually go mostly to colleges and universities could have been imperiled. Among those who did answer the question, less than 1 percent admitted to a recent conviction for possessing or selling illegal drugs, Education Department officials said. A total of 104 questions must be answered on the four-page Free Application for Federal Student Aid, -which is filled out each year by more than 8.5 million applicants for $50 billion in federal grants and loans. The question(#28) asks: "28. If you have never been convicted of any drug offense, enter '1' in the box and go to question 29. A drug-related conviction does not necessarily make you ineligible for aid; call 1-800-433-3243 or go to http://www.fafsa.ed.gov/q28 to find out how to fill out this question." Calling the toll-free number leads to a voicemail menu that is supposed to help the applicant decide whether to write "1," "2" or "394 in the box. At the Web site, applicants can download a work sheet or answer a number of questions online. "The question and the work sheet worked well when we pilot-tested it with different groups of students," said Greg Woods, chief operating officer of the Education Department's Office of Student Financial Assistance Programs. "But in the context of the entire form, it was apparently confusing," Woods said. He said a phone survey of 1,500 applicants who skipped, the question produced such excuses as, "The item talked about drugs, and I figured it didn't apply to me," or "it mentioned a work sheet and I went on to the next question, and forgot to go back to it." After July 1, a student cannot receive federal financial aid within one year of a first conviction for possessing illegal drugs or two years of a first conviction for selling them. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D