Pubdate: Mon, 25 Oct 2004 Source: Daily Campus, The (UConn, CT Edu) Copyright: 2004 The Daily Campus Contact: http://www.dailycampus.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2778 Author: Seth Harris Cited: Students for Sensible Drug Policy http://www.ssdp.org Cited: New Voters Project http://www.newvotersproject.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Higher+Education+Act Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?219 (Students for Sensible Drug Policy) HIGHER EDUCATION ACT UNDER SCRUTINY No matter what the outcome of the Nov. 2 presidential election will be, the controversial provision in the Higher Education Act, which denies financial aid to students with drug convictions, will be changed in some way. Presidential candidates George W. Bush, John Kerry and Ralph Nader released position statements in opposition to the 1998 provision, which has allowed for the loss of financial aid for more than 157,000 students nationwide. According to Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), a non-partisan group based in Washington D.C. which has campaigned for a repeal of the provision for six years, the candidates' statements are the result of a questionnaire compiled by the New Voters Project (www.newvotersproject.org). The New Voters Project is a young voter registration campaign sponsored by state Public Interest Research Groups around the country. The questionnaire is part of an online survey of 12 questions submitted by young voters. The financial aid question pertaining to the provision in the Higher Education Act was posted by a member of SSDP. The provision is an issue among young voters in the upcoming election, according to Josh Litwin, a 3rd-semester political science major and UConnPIRG staff member. "All the candidates are concerned about it," he said. "It is a huge issue if you are a student convicted of a drug crime and can't get financial aid." Litwin said the candidates' responses show how students can influence politicians if they are seen as voters. "The only way students are going to influence politicians and make them pay attention to our issues are by voting in this election and elections in the future," he said. "Voters should choose the candidate who will change the act if they want them to and hopefully change it for the better if that's what they are concerned about." The candidates and students alike are against the provision. Many feel education is the best way for students to overcome their past and change their lives for the better. "Education is perhaps the best way for someone who has been involved with drugs or crime to turn their life around," Kerry said. "If a young person has overcome past obstacles and is ready to go to college, I don't think that a nonviolent drug conviction in their past should prevent them form doing so. And the reality is that preventing them from obtaining federal loans means they won't be able to afford to go to college." Bush called for a partial reform of the provision so students entering college with a drug conviction could still obtain federal financial aid. "My 2005 Budget proposes to fix the drug provision of the Higher Education Act so that incoming students who have a prior drug-related conviction would be able to receive Federal student aid, and only students convicted while in college would lose their eligibility for student aid," he said, according to the New Voter's Project web site. The provision should be entirely repealed as it relates to nonviolent offenders, Independent candidate Ralph Nader said on the New Voter's Project website. "Repeal the Higher Education Act drug provision as it applies to non-violent offenders," he said. "The drug war has failed. We spend nearly $50 billion annually on the drug war and problems related to drug abuse continue to worsen." UConn students agree with the candidates' positions on some level and feel the provision only hurts these offenders instead of helping them. Drug policies and financial aid should be two separate issues, Jason Cabral, a 3rd-semester meteorology major said. "I think there should be stricter substance abuse policies, but to lose financial aid is a separate issue," he said. "I agree with the intention of it, but I disagree with what it is doing to people's education. Education in the long run will probably help people." "I agree with the candidates' stances," said Tyler Longland, a 3rd-semester history and political science major. "Everyone makes mistakes and to take their opportunity away is un-American." However, some feel students should lose their financial aid based on how serious the drug offense is and the circumstances surrounding their conviction. "If a student is receiving financial aid to go to college and they are caught dealing drugs they should lose their financial aid," said Steve Conley, a 7th-semester sociology major. "But there is a difference between someone smoking pot and someone snorting coke." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake