Pubdate: Tue, 08 Apr 2003 Source: Diamondback, The (MD Edu) Copyright: 2003 Maryland Media, Inc. Contact: http://www.diamondbackonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/758 Note: is also listed as email contact Author: Martin Baer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act) DRUG WAR SEEPS INTO UNIVERSITIES In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Higher Education Act into law. By establishing federal financial aid programs, this act was an attempt to open the doors to a college education to students who might not otherwise have been able to attend. However, in 1998, during the law's congressional reauthorization, Rep. Mark Souder (R-Ind.) authored a provision that disqualifies applicants based on any prior drug conviction, even non-violent misdemeanors. According to the Department of Education, over 91,000 students to date have had their financial aid fully or partially denied because of the new provision. This makes the HEA Drug Provision the No. 1 legal obstacle to low and middle-income families trying to send their children to college. The law applies a second level of punishment to the students who need extra help to pay for their college education: those from poor and middle-class families. Over 40 groups have argued that by denying access to education, the HEA Drug Provision closes the door to the best opportunities of society, thereby fulfilling the prophecy that drug use ruins the future of young people. Worse yet, the Drug Provision brings the inequities of the drug war into the realm of college enrollment. According to the Department of Justice and Department of Health and Human Services, people of color commit drug offenses at a rate proportional to their percentage of the United States population (Hispanics 12.5 percent and black non-Hispanics 12.6 percent), but 46 percent of those charged with drug offenses are Hispanic and 28 percent are black. At a time when American colleges and universities are struggling to make gains in minority academic achievement, they cannot afford to have enrollment dictated by the injustices that infest the war on drugs. Substance abuse among our young people is a serious national problem, but blocking the path to an education is an inappropriate response. Closing the doors of our colleges and universities, making it more difficult for at-risk young people to finish college and succeed in their goals, is not a policy fit for an advanced society such as ours. There is a bill in the House of Representatives that would repeal the drug provision: H.R. 685, introduced by Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.). In support of H.R. 685, today is a national day of action with coordinated events all around the country. Concerned citizens will be calling their representatives and voicing their opposition to the HEA Drug Provision. On the way to your next class, use those precious minutes on your cell phone to call your representatives to let them know that you support H.R. 685, the legislation to repeal the HEA Drug Provision. Do not forget to also call the representative from your hometown (you can find them at www.house.gov). These would-be students have already paid whatever price the criminal justice system demanded. Judges handling drug cases already have the option of denying drug offenders federal benefits, and school administrators have the power to expel problem students. When we deny students the opportunity for a college education, it brings us no closer to solving the nation's drug problem; instead, it only increases the already destructive impact of the horribly misguided war on drugs. Our university's administration has the responsibility to do what it can to protect against assaults on higher-education funding, which they have been doing admirably thus far with the budget cuts. University President Dan Mote's colleagues Gregory Prince and Richard C. Levin, the presidents of Hampshire College and Yale University, respectively, have been very aggressive in voicing opposition to the HEA Drug Provision and have pledged that students attending their schools will not be denied financial aid for a drug conviction. The following university groups hope very much that President Mote and his administration will have the courage to voice their opposition to this misguided policy: American Civil Liberties Union, College Park Libertarians, Students for Sensible Drug Policy, Electronic Dance and Music Club and the International Socialist Organization. For more information, visit www.RaiseYourVoice.com, and come to Jimenez 0220 on Thursday, April 10 at 7 p.m. to hear a panel discussion titled "The Drug War and its Effects on Higher Education." Martin Baer is co-president of the university's Students for Sensible Drug Policy. He can be reached at --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom