Pubdate: Tue, 18 Feb 2003 Source: Daily Texan (TX Edu) Copyright: 2003 Daily Texan Contact: http://www.dailytexanonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/115 Author: Elliott Blackburn, Daily Texan Staff Cited: Drug Policy Forum of Texas http://www.dpft.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act) BILL AIMS TO EXPAND AID TO DRUG OFFENDERS Author Says Legislation Is Not a Drug Endorsement U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., submitted a bill last week to repeal legislation enacted in 2000 that delays or prohibits financial aid for college applicants who have been convicted of a drug offense. The current law, part of the Higher Education Act, makes students convicted of drug possession ineligible for financial aid for one year from the time of conviction for their first offense. Applicants must wait two years if convicted twice and are barred from federal aid permanently for three offenses. Drug possession convictions are the only crimes that impact federal aid eligibility. Students convicted of crimes such as rape or drunk driving are not prohibited from receiving financial aid. "It is indicative, I think, of an American overreaction on drugs," Frank said. "[This bill] doesn't mean that drugs aren't bad; it means that using marijuana is not worse than rape or arson." More than 29,000 students nationwide were denied financial aid in 2002 under the measure, according to Department of Education records. The current policy does nothing to discourage students from using drugs, he said. "I think when young people in particular see this kind of nonsense, you weaken your arguments," Frank said. Karen Heikkala, regional director of the Drug Policy Forum of Texas, said the act also disproportionately affects those who may need federal aid the most. "In its essence it's a racist provision, a [discriminatory] provision, because anyone who has the money to go to college isn't going to be affected by a block on financial aid," she said. Students are required to notify the Department of Education if they have been convicted of a drug offense as part of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. State law and UT policies are similar to the federal block on assistance. Of the 21,000 students at the University who receive federal, state and institutional financial aid, less than a dozen have been affected by the policy, said Henry Urick, an assistant director of Student Financial Services. "It's a very small population at UT-Austin that might have issues with that question," Urick said. Scholarships are not included under this policy, Urick said. A vote on Frank's previous bill with the same intent submitted during the last session of Congress fell largely along party lines, with approximately two-thirds of the Democrats voting for it and the majority of Republicans voting against it, Frank said. Though he does not expect the bill to pass as long as the Republicans control Congress, it does not mean it is worthless to keep trying, he said. "If you only acted when you were sure you were going to win, you would never do anything," Frank said. Partisan politics are not the only obstacles to a repeal. Both the Clinton and Bush administrations have said that it would cost money to change the bill, Frank said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake