Pubdate: Mon, 24 Oct 2005 Source: Daily Universe (Brigham Young U, UT Edu) Contact: 2005 The Daily Universe Website: http://newsnet.byu.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3970 Author: Jules Lindgren, Daily Universe Staff Reporter MANY TEENS UNAWARE OF ED ACT Question 31 on the Free Application for Federal Students Aid, could be a life changing one -- and no one knows why. The question asks whether a student has been convicted of the possession or sale of drugs, because as part of Title IV of the Higher Education Act, convictions for the sale or possession of drug make you ineligible to receive educational federal aid. However, few people seem to be aware of it. The Daily Universe contacted 91 high school students in Utah County and asked them what they knew about the Higher Education Act. Two of the students knew what it was. Of the rest, 82 percent said they knew nothing about it and the remainder either mistook it for Bush's No Child Left Behind Act or didn't answer. The act, though, has the potential to affect some of their educational decisions. Six of these students said they had participated in the sale of drugs, and 14 said they had used drugs at least once. Most of the high school students The Daily Universe talked to said they were planning to pay for college themselves or would depend on their parents, but eight said were counting on federal aid. One tenth grader from Orem High School said she would go to college if she could get the federal aid to pay for it. Nancy Volmer, public information officer for Utah State Courts said, the wording of the statute would exclude any minor's records. "It doesn't appear that juvenile court records have any bearing on this law," Volmer said. That's because juveniles are not convicted of offenses unless they are over a certain age and commit a felony offense. They also have the option of having their record expunged when they turn 18, Volmer said. The question, however, is what happens later If a student has been convicted of a drug offense, the period of time that he or she is ineligible to receive aid varies. One offense translates to one year of ineligibility, two offenses requires two years. If the student commits a third offense, the period is indefinite. When the law originally came down, said Joanna McCormick, director of financial aid at UVSC, the schools had to deal directly with determining the aid eligibility, but now students have to go directly through the Department of Education. "For a student to get it [the ineligibility period] cleared with the Department of Education he has to prove they've been through an approved rehab and they are drug-free," McCormick said. Part of the rehabilitation process, required to waive the ineligibility period, is setting educational goals, said John LaCognata, supervisor of Utah County After-care Program - a program that works with young men and women who have served jail sentences and are transitioning back into society. "The thing we try to stress with the kids is knowledge is power, and knowledge is money," he said. They try to piggy-back on what the young adults are already interested in, LaCognata said, and involve them in vocational training or more formal classes at UVSC. However, most of these people need outside financial sources to pay for college. "If we can't do the college thing right off the get go, we try and plug them in to other, work-related opportunities to fill the void," LaCognata said. The Higher Education Act states that students are ineligible for aid if they have been convicted at either the state or federal level. However, Melody Rydalch, public information officer for the U.S. Attorney's Office said in order to be a federal offense the amount of drugs would have to merit a 10-year mandatory prison sentence. "The people who get involved with us have a lot more to worry about than their grant money," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake