Pubdate: Mon, 04 Mar 2002
Source: Yale Daily News (CT Edu)
Copyright: 2002 Yale Daily News
Contact:  http://www.yaledailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1614
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act)

A MISGUIDED SHOT IN THE WAR ON DRUGS

By relying on a specious link between drug offenses and financial aid, the 
Drug Free Student Aid Provision of the Higher Education Act represents an 
unreasonable and misguided attempt by the federal government to fight drug 
use. Administrators at colleges across the nation should publicly advocate 
the provision's repeal and commit to replacing any student financial aid 
lost as a result of the law.

Under the provision, which was tacked on to a revision of the Higher 
Education Act in 1998, federal financial aid would be suspended for any 
college student convicted of a drug offense. For the first drug conviction, 
a student loses financial aid for one year; for the second, a student loses 
aid for two years; for the third, a student loses aid indefinitely.

The goal of stopping drug use is a laudable one, but using the Higher 
Education Act to do so presents many serious problems.

Fundamentally, the provision illogically assumes a connection between drug 
offenses and financial aid. But since there is no federal law linking 
murder, rape or other severe crimes to cuts in financial aid, it makes 
little sense to enact a law designed to expose one specific class of 
criminals -- drug offenders -- to punishment both in the courthouse and in 
the classroom.

Furthermore, the provision is an ineffective way of deterring students from 
using drugs. Suspension, expulsion or other penalties imposed by individual 
schools present more effective ways of punishing students. These measures 
are far more likely to turn students away from drugs than the withdrawal of 
federal financial aid. A loss of financial aid will merely make it more 
difficult for those already disadvantaged to attend school.

Equally disturbing is that the provision flagrantly discriminates against 
students who need financial aid. Wealthy students caught with drugs face 
punishment from only the criminal justice system, but lower- and 
middle-income students are subject to a double penalty. And as it currently 
stands, Yale financial aid won't bail them out.

Not only is it morally unsatisfying to privilege one group of students 
blatantly over another, but such also contradicts the purpose of the Higher 
Education Act, which was passed in 1965 to give more students the 
opportunity to go to college.

Some campus administrations have already taken a firm stance against the 
law. Last Thursday the managing board of Swarthmore College agreed to 
replace all federal financial aid lost as a result of the 1998 provision. 
One day before, the Yale College Council urged Yale administrators to take 
concrete steps toward replacing lost federal financial aid.

Yale administrators, however, have delayed taking a position until a Yale 
student is affected by the law. But with a law as misguided as the Drug 
Free Student Aid Provision, waiting until the problem knocks on Yale's door 
is irresponsible.

As one of the nation's leading institutions, Yale should openly commit to 
considering reimbursing financial aid to any student affected by the law, 
and it should actively criticize the provision as a misguided means to 
achieving a worthwhile end.