Pubdate: Sun, 12 Aug 2001
Source: Register Citizen (CT)
Copyright: 2001 Journal Register Company
Contact:  http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=1652
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/598
Author:  Ian Shedd, Special To the Register Citizen

DRUG BUST CAN SMASH STUDENT LOAN

Millions of students each year apply for federal financial aid to help pay 
rising college costs, but most have no idea a drug conviction can get their 
application tossed in the trash. Any drug conviction from age 18 on is 
grounds for rejecting a federal financial aid application.

Marisa Garcia, 20, of Santa Fe Springs, Calif., knows first-hand how costly 
a minor drug conviction can be. Garcia was convicted of misdemeanor 
possession of marijuana in March 2000, fined $415 and then subsequently was 
denied federal aid for one full school year.

"I pretty much thought it was done with after my conviction," said Garcia, 
who is now a sophomore at California State University, Fullerton. "Usually 
that's how it works. When you get punished, you only get punished once."

Since last year, students filling out the Free Application for Federal 
Student Aid are asked if they have ever been convicted of possessing or 
selling illegal drugs.

A large number of blank responses led the U.S. Department of Education to 
ignore the mandatory nature of the question last year, but now a response 
is being strictly enforced by the department.

A total of 279,100 students out of 10.1 million applicants for aid left the 
question blank in 2000. They were then sent a separate letter, giving them 
a second chance to respond.

Some, like Garcia, answered the question, and were then denied aid. But 
many students who left the question blank were not denied aid. That won't 
happen this year, officials said.

After processing 6.97 million applications thus far for the 2001-2002 
school year, the Department of Education has declared 7,139 applicants 
ineligible for student aid based on their answers to the drug question.

That is up from 1,835 ineligible students from all of last year's applications.

Only convictions that occurred after people have turned 18 or in cases 
where they are tried as adults can result in a denial of aid. Students can 
avoid a penalty if their conviction has been wiped from their records.

For possession convictions, students are barred from receiving aid for one 
year after a first offense, two years for a second offense, and 
indefinitely for a third offense.

The penalty is harsher for those convicted of selling illegal drugs, with 
convicted persons losing aid for two years for one conviction, and 
indefinitely for a second conviction.

Despite the penalties, students can regain their eligibility for aid or 
lessen the time they are barred from receiving aid by enrolling in 
"acceptable" drug rehabilitation programs, according to the U.S. Department 
of Education.

Acceptable programs have to qualify to receive funds or actually be run by 
either the local, state, or federal government. Other acceptable facilities 
include those run by federally licensed hospitals, health clinics, or doctors.

However, those programs are not easy for lower income people to enroll in, 
as Garcia attests. She called a number of rehab facilities in her area, and 
was met at each one with a prohibitive cost. That cost amounted to $200 to 
enroll, $20 a week for the six-month program, and a $25 per drug test.

Since Garcia had a job, she was not eligible to receive aid to enter the 
program. That job was necessary for Garcia to attend college, so the 
addition of an expensive rehab program was not an option, she said.

Garcia, who had no drug history prior to being cited for having an empty 
pipe with marijuana residue in it, was faced with the large expenses for 
college. In order to make up for the lost federal aid, Garcia signed up for 
more hours at the flower shop where she earns $6.75 an hour, and her mother 
took out loans.

According to Graham Boyd of the American Civil Liberties Union, the first 
cases of people being denied aid for their answers on this year's form 
admitting to drug convictions are just becoming known.

"I don't really take issue with the Department of Education enforcing the 
law as it's written," said Boyd. "I take issue with the law itself."

One argument made by student groups and the ACLU has been that the drug 
information is private and confidential. Martin Margulis, a professor of 
law at Quinnipiac University's School of Law, dismissed the notion, since a 
conviction is a matter of public record.

"A convicted drug user is not a protected class, it's not like race, 
religion, gender, or something like that," said Margulis. "No special legal 
protection, constitutional or otherwise, is attached to the status of being 
a drug user, period, much less a convicted drug user."

Steve Yandle, associate dean of the Yale School of Law, who oversees 
financial aid operations there, does not see the question as optional for 
respondents.

"You don't have an entitlement to federal loans," said Yandle. "As long as 
there is a rationale to the question, it'd be hard to challenge."

One of the leading opponents of the question is U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, 
D-Mass., who has worked to repeal it for three years because he feels it is 
biased against low-income people.

"There's a real problem ... of who gets convicted, and who doesn't," Frank 
said recently.

Students for a Sensible Drug Policy, a two-year-old organization, has been 
leading a coalition of groups hoping to repeal the amendment. According to 
SSDP, the amendment is discriminatory, especially to African-Americans, who 
make up 12 percent of the population, 13 percent of drug users, and 55 
percent of convicted drug users.

"Drug laws in general have a discriminatory impact," said Alex Kreit, a 
member of SSDP's board of directors. "This law is one more way of keeping 
people down who have historically been oppressed."

Even U.S. Rep. Mark Souder R-Ind., who helped write the law, said it is not 
fulfilling his original intentions. "The law was originally designed for 
people who have some sort of drug conviction while they are receiving aid 
or while their application is pending," said Seth Becker, Souder's press 
secretary. "It was not supposed to be retroactive."

Becker also stated that the law is supposed to function as a sort of 
deterrent for young students. Garcia said the law does not work like that, 
as many students, like herself, are not aware of until it affects them. "I 
think that when people are out there getting pot, school is the last thing 
on their minds," said Garcia.

Boyd partly agreed with Souder. "What the Department of Education is doing 
is improperly interpreting the law."

Despite these arguments, chances of changing the interpretation are not 
good. The courts would not likely "second guess what political 
decision-makers do," Margulis said.

While Souder has qualms about the enforcement of the law in its present 
state, he is not willing to go as far as Frank and repeal it.

"We are hoping solutions to this will come out of the Bush administration," 
Becker said.

On the other side of the aisle, Frank's office is gaining bipartisan 
support for a repeal. As of July 20, 54 congress men and women had signed 
on as co-sponsors of the bill, according to Joe Racalto, Frank's 
legislative assistant on education.
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