Pubdate: Mon, 15 Mar 2004 Source: Technician, The (NC State U, NC Edu) Copyright: 2004 The Technician Contact: http://technicianonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2268 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act) STUDENT AID FOR ALL Congress passed a law in 1998 prohibiting federal student financial aid from going to students that convicted of a drug crime. Congress intended to deter students already in college from using drugs with the bill. If a student was convicted of a drug crime, their financial aid was revoked, putting the student's academic future in jeopardy. Now, five years later, representatives are rethinking the logic and the enforcement of the law. The law, which was supposed to be a deterrent of drug use, has come to deny thousands of students who have minor drug convictions on their record the chance to go to school, while allowing convicted murderers, armed robbers and rapists to receive financial aid to go to college once they serve their time and are released from prison. This law is hypocritical and counterproductive to people who made mistakes in the past and denies them their right to rectify those mistakes and start a new life. The author of the bill, Representative Mark Souder, a Republican from Indiana, says he never intended the law to be enforced in such as way. He blames the Clinton and Bush administrations for enforcing the law so harshly. The Department of Education claims they are legally enforcing a "vague and sloppy" law. The problem comes in the wording of the law itself. The law reads that a "student who has been convicted" of a drug offense is not eligible for federal student financial aid. It also does not distinguish between recent and past drug convictions and provides little for students to win back their financial aid. Students can go into drug treatment to try to win back their aid. But many drug treatment programs cost just as much as college tuition and if students can't afford college, how can they afford drug treatment? Also many students are not aware of the law, even when they fill out the Free application for Federal Student Aid. It just asks if the student has ever been convicted of a drug-related offense. Congress needs to rethink and rewrite the law to give students who have proven themselves a second chance. Many students that do have a drug conviction were charged as minors and it goes on their permanent record. If the student has no other convictions or infractions, they should be eligible for financial aid. If a college student is convicted of a drug crime, then they should be allowed to work for their aid, through community service and a drug treatment course, preferably through their college's health service. President Bush, in his State of the Union address in January, said when the "gates of prison are open, the path should lead to a better life." Change the law to allow aid for every eligible person. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom