Pubdate: Sun, 21 Mar 2004 Source: Los Angeles Daily News (CA) Copyright: 2004 Los Angeles Daily News Contact: http://www.dailynews.com/Stories/0,1413,200%257E21664%257E,00.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/246 Website: http://www.DailyNews.com/ Author: Greg Winter, The New York Times Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Mark+Souder DRUG PENALTY DECRIED Law's Author Protests Some College-Aid Loss NEW YORK -- Given that she had been thrown out of the house by age 13 and spent her teenage years sleeping on subway trains and rotting piers, Laura Melendez figured she had kept her nose pretty clean -- even managed to get a high school-equivalency diploma. Sure, there had been a few arrests for smoking marijuana, but what did this record really amount to after an entire adolescence spent on the streets, with more visits from the police than from the parents who threw her out for declaring herself a lesbian? "It means I'll be denied an education," said Melendez, who is from the Bronx and applying to college. If Melendez, now 22, had been an armed robber, a rapist or even a murderer, she would not be in the same predicament. Once out of prison, she would have been entitled to government grants and loans. But under a contentious provision of federal law, tens of thousands of would-be college students have been denied financial aid because of drug offenses, even though the crimes may have been committed long ago and the sentences already served out. "It is absurd on the face of it," said Rep. Mark Souder, R-Ind. Souder, who wrote the law, says the Clinton and Bush administrations have both turned it on its head, taking a penalty meant to discourage students from experimenting with drugs and using it to punish people trying to get their lives back on track. "I am an evangelic Christian who believes in repentance, so why would I have supported that?" he said. "Why would any of us in Congress?" Since its enactment in 1998, the aid prohibition has been a sore point, inciting debate and recriminations all around. Members of Congress have accused the Clinton and Bush administrations of distorting the law's intent. Education Department officials have fired back, saying Congress handed them a vague and sloppy law -- referring simply to "a student who has been convicted" of a drug offense -- that they are faithfully enforcing. Students are equally perplexed. After serving almost 10 years in prison for attempted murder, Jason Bell went straight to college on federal grants and loans. Now a senior at San Francisco State University, he helps other ex-convicts enroll in the university but often has the hardest time assisting drug offenders whose crimes were minor -- far less serious than his. "It's a form of double jeopardy," said Bell, 32. "They do the time, but then there are still roadblocks when they finish. I don't believe people should be punished twice." Some members of Congress say they are pushing to rewrite the law for precisely that reason. For the first time since the prohibition took effect, the president's budget includes a commitment to revise it -- not to throw it out, but to narrow its scope so that students like Melendez get a second chance. "It would really take a lot off my mind," she said. "I need to go to school. I can't just leave it like this." Yet the changes would perpetuate what some members of Congress see as the law's contradictions. Under President George W. Bush's language, anyone who violated drug laws before going to college could get financial aid, regardless of the offense. That would be in keeping with Bush's philosophy, as laid out in his State of the Union address, that "when the gates of the prison open, the path ahead should lead to a better life." But those already in college when they commit a drug offense, however small, would be stripped of aid for at least a year. The idea, supporters say, is to continue trying to dissuade students from using drugs, especially since they are being educated with taxpayer money. The problem, detractors say, is that the law would still impose stiffer penalties on drug use than on any other crime. "We should abolish the whole rule," said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. "Not that we should encourage drug use, but you shouldn't single that out as being worse than rape or arson or armed robbery." Souder doubts that the prospect of losing financial aid would deter a murderer or a rapist, but says the same threat deters many students from drug use. Some student counselors agree, arguing that at times students wrestling with substance abuse need an extra incentive to stay clean. Critics, however, have an additional complaint: that the proposed changes would have the odd effect of barring some first-time, minor offenders from getting financial aid while restoring it for ex-convicts who were serious drug offenders. By his own count, Donald Miller, a 53-year-old freshman at York College in Queens, was arrested 17 times for abusing drugs and occasionally selling them, a result of what he describes as a fruitless attempt to quiet his schizophrenia. It left him homeless and addicted. Now that Miller is sober and taking his medications regularly, he has been confronted by the discouraging news that he is not eligible for financial aid despite living on less than $600 a month. But under the new rules, he almost certainly would be. "It would mean that I could continue all the way through school," he said. On the other hand, there is the case of Marisa Garcia, a junior at California State University, Fullerton. A few weeks before her freshman year began, Garcia received a ticket for having a small marijuana pipe in her car. It had some ashes in it, she admits. That was her first and only offense. Accordingly, she paid a $415 fine. But she also lost her federal grants and loans for a year, amounting to thousands of dollars. Under the revised rules, her penalty would be no different. "It doesn't make sense," Garcia said. "To punish someone by taking away their education? It's counterproductive." The law allows students to win back their aid by going through drug treatment. But when Garcia looked into that option, all she could find was residential counseling that cost as much as her tuition. "If I couldn't afford to pay for school," she said, "then how was I supposed to pay for these programs?" Congressional supporters of the drug prohibition argue that students should obey the law or surrender the privilege of financial aid for college. But they also contend that the aid prohibition was never meant to punish people for bad choices they made long ago. Given the way the law has been applied, Souder says, students who have been denied aid because of offenses committed before they were in college should consider suing the government. "I know as a conservative I'm not supposed to say this, but there are lawsuits to be had here," he said. Education Department officials strongly disagree, contending that Congress passed a statute that does nothing to distinguish between past and current offenses. By clarifying it, some lawmakers hope to eliminate the confusion that has surrounded it since its inception. But others worry that as long as students are asked on financial-aid forms if they have had a drug conviction, many will simply assume that they are ineligible for help. "There's so much confusion about this law, and it ends up discouraging people from moving forward with their lives," said Michael Dean, a substance-abuse counselor in Denver. "At what point in our society do we say that a person has paid the debt?" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake