Pubdate: Thu, 21 Jul 2005 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2005 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/letters/ Website: http://www.sptimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: Emily Anthes Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) STUDENT AID RULE PUT UNDER REVIEW Critics Of A Rule Used To Ban Financial Aid To Students With Drug Convictions Say It Punishes Only Those Who Want To Improve Their Lives. LECANTO - If a college student is convicted of drunken driving or assault, his eligibility for financial aid is not affected. But if he's caught smoking a joint, a little-known provision of the Higher Education Act allows the government to deny financial aid. More than 160,000 students have been refused aid since the provision was enacted in 2000, according to a coalition of groups working to repeal it. Today, the Congressional Committee on Education and the Workforce will consider changing the law as part of this year's reauthorization of the Higher Education Act. Even its original proponents say it may be time to scale back. Others want an outright repeal. "It's contrary to every theory of rehabilitation," said Elizabeth Osmond, an assistant public defender in Hernando County who has signed a national petition to repeal the drug provision. "We want people to be productive, and when they're doing drugs, we want them to get jobs and get education." Under the law, students who apply for federal aid must indicate whether they have ever been convicted of possessing or selling drugs. "The logic is quite simple," said Martin Green, a spokesman for Rep. Mark Souder, R-Indiana, who in 1998 introduced the bill that included the drug penalty. "Students who receive taxpayers' dollars to go to college have a responsibility to obey the law even if they don't agree with it." The penalty imposed depends on the crime. A first offense for possession of a controlled substance, for example, can result in one year of ineligibility. A second offense for sale of a controlled substance can make a student ineligible indefinitely. That seems unfair to James Strickland, 24, who is serving a nine-month sentence at the Citrus County Detention Facility for possession and sale of marijuana. He plans to apply to college when he is released. A Citrus High School dropout, Strickland spent "countless hours" in jail studying for his GED exam before finding out about the drug provision. Under the current law, Strickland, who is still awaiting the results of his GED exam, can have federal aid denied for two years. "It's going to make things a lot harder for me," said Strickland, who hopes to get a degree in chemistry and eventually work for the Environmental Protection Agency. "They have to let people start bettering their lives instead of having the same old routine of selling drugs and selling more drugs." Souder never meant for the law to apply to people like Strickland, Green said. Souder wants a change, and the committee will consider a narrowing of the provision today. In the revised version, the provision would apply only to students who are convicted of drug crimes while they are receiving aid, Green said. Students who have drug convictions in their pasts would no longer be penalized. "Mr. Souder very much believes in repentance," Green said. Others want the provision killed entirely. Reps. Rob Andrews, D-N.J., Danny Davis, D-Ill., and Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, are expected to introduce an amendment to fully repeal the drug penalty in today's committee session. The committee will send its proposed reforms to the full House for a vote. Critics of the drug law have a range of objections. Civil liberties groups argue that the provision unfairly targets minorities, who account for a disproportionate number of drug convictions. Social workers and medical officials worry that the provision keeps drug offenders from getting their lives back on track. "For people who are having a hard time with their lives, this is discouragement at exactly the time when they've decided to try," said David Borden, executive director of the Drug Reform Coordination Network. More than 200 organizations, including the ACLU, the NAACP, the American Council on Education and the American Public Health Association, have endorsed a full repeal of the provision. More than 115 student groups, including the Florida Student Association and the student governments at several Florida universities, have taken the same position. "Opposition has built tremendously," Borden said. But the debate isn't over. Supporters of the provision are offering no apology for the law. "If you're in college and you get a federal assistance loan to go to college, you're old enough at that point to understand that your behaviors have consequences," said Sue Thau, a public policy consultant for the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America. "It's not like there's any inalienable right to use drugs. It's illegal behavior. Why are we paying for people to go to college if they're going to addle their brains with drugs and alcohol?" For Strickland, there's nothing to do but wait - for his GED results, his release, and for Congress to rule on the law. Strickland is optimistic about passing his GED exam, though he had his jail Bible study group pray for him just in case. He already is planning the next step, thinking about going back to work in air conditioning so he can pay his way through school. "There's nothing that's going to stop me," he said. "When my heart and mind are set, they're set. I'm going to find a way to pay for school and it's not going to be by selling drugs. I'm through with that." - ---