Pubdate: Sat, 29 Dec 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: The Associated Press 43,000 STUDENTS WITH DRUG CONVICTIONS FACE DENIAL OF AID More than 43,000 college students face possible denials of federal aid this year under a 1998 law that bans such help to people who have drug convictions. The main lobbying group for colleges would like the ban repealed, but those efforts have reached an impasse. The author of the law, Representative Mark Souder, Republican of Indiana, says the Bush administration is being tougher on applicants than he intended, and federal officials have tried to find an administrative action to ease the ban. "We looked in every nook and cranny," a spokeswoman for the Education Department, Lindsey Kozberg, said. Mr. Souder said he wanted the ban to apply solely to students already receiving federal aid when convicted. His staff has repeatedly met with Education Department officials this year to try to bring enforcement more in line with what Mr. Souder says Congress intended. But this month, the department told the congressman that it could not change and that such a move would require Congressional action. Mr. Souder accused the administration of a "simply shocking" defiance of Congress and threatened to hold hearings. Ms. Kozberg said the department was ready to help him draw up a change that Congress could act on. Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of Massachusetts, has already introduced legislation to repeal the ban. The ban involves a small fraction of the more than 10 million people a year who fill out applications for federal grants, work-study funds or subsidized loans. Question 35 asks, "Have you ever been convicted of possessing or selling illegal drugs?" Those who answer yes are given a second work sheet that asks for details. For a first drug offense, ineligibility lasts a year after conviction, and for a second offense, two years. More convictions bar aid indefinitely. A single conviction for a drug sale means no aid for two years. For additional convictions, the ban lasts indefinitely. Those facing an indefinite loss of aid can have that reversed by undergoing drug rehabilitation. Of 9.8 million applicants for aid for the 2001-2002 school year, 43,436 were rejected for all or part of the year or risked automatic denial for not answering Question 35. The American Council on Education, which represents major colleges and universities, called the restriction "double punishment" and said it discriminated against poorer people, because more affluent students did not need financial aid. "Far more serious crimes do not carry the automatic denial of student aid," a senior vice president of the council, Terry Hartle, said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens