Pubdate: Thu, 31 Oct 2002 Source: Good 5 Cent Cigar (RI Edu) Copyright: 2002 Good 5 Cent Cigar Contact: http://www.ramcigar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2599 Author: Robert Hanson, Assistant News Editor SENATE SUPPORTS REPEAL OF DRUG LAW The University of Rhode Island Student Senate voted Wednesday night to support a bill in the House of Representatives that would repeal the portion of the 1998 Higher Education act mandating students or prospective students who have been convicted of any drug-related offense to be denied eligibility for federal financial aid. There are currently 67 members of the House of Representatives who have co-sponsored the bill. Rhode Island congressmen Langevin and Kennedy are not currently co-sponsors. Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) helped to bring this measure to the senate with their petition that was signed by over 1,000 students and faculty members. URI joined over 90 other colleges and universities nationwide who passed similar resolutions according to the press release from SSDP. URI was the first campus in Rhode Island to pass such a resolution according to SSDP president Thomas Angell. "Massive amounts of students and faculty have raised their voices in support of this bill," Angell said. "We must not let the war on drugs become the war on education." "86,898 students have been denied aide because of drug convictions," SSDP member Isaac Mamaysky said. "Education is a right, denying it should not be a punishment." Members of the senate echoed the statements of SSDP in support of the bill. "Barring someone from federal financial aid for a drug conviction is either racist or classist," Senator Eric Venet said. "[This bill] would not effect those who have not had drug convictions," Academic Affairs Chair Jesse Whitsitt-Lynch said. Only one senator voted against the support of this bill by the student senate. "Financial aid should be given to people that deserve it, not people that take drugs," Senator Marc Bialek said. "Everybody knows that [drugs] are illegal." The senate also debated over its own expansion through the inclusion of new seats. The bill, which failed after prolonged debate, proposed to expand the body by five members, adding two multicultural representatives, one freshman representative and two degree-granting undergraduate college seats. Debate focused on the proposed addition of the multicultural representatives. "This body should reflect a world that you will live in once you leave this campus," Director of the University Multicultural Center Melvin Wade said. Senators in support of the bill questioned the current diversity of the senate, as well as the current difficulties multicultural students encounter in running for senate. "I've had members of different multicultural organizations express their interest in running for senate, but don't feel that they can get elected," Cultural Affairs Committee Chairman Kevin Lopes said. "This bill gives minority students another avenue to get on the senate." "The senate is not representative of the student body," Senator Mbuyamba Tshibaka said. "Different groups on campus feel disenfranchised." "Calling this seat a cultural affairs representative will encourage minority students to run," President Domenic Murgo said, referring to the provision in the bill changing the name from multicultural representative to cultural affairs representative. Those speaking against the bill suggested that adding the seat might give minorities an unfair advantage, and whether it is necessary for the seat to be aimed at multicultural affairs at all. "A cultural seat does not equal a minority seat because we cannot make the qualification that you have to be a minority," Campus Affairs Chair Lindsay Unger said. "By creating these seats, while the intentions behind it are good, it suggests that we need to create a special situation for them to qualify to be on senate," Senator Evan Duggan-Lever said. "The student senate needs to understand that they represent not individual people, but the student body as a whole," Senator Eddy Pacheco said. An amendment failed that would eliminate the multicultural representative and replace it with a general representative. Senators suggested the debate might not have been necessary. "A lot of the problem had to deal with people not doing their homework," Whitsitt-Lynch said. "The senators had two weeks to analyze this bill," Senator Chris McMahon said. Senators also proposed that some might have been unwilling to speak during debate. "People were terrified of being called racist," Whitsitt-Lynch said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth