Pubdate: Fri, 15 Sep 2006 Source: Technician, The (NC State U, NC Edu) Copyright: 2006 The Technician Contact: http://technicianonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2268 Author: Allison Cardella Cited: Students for Sensible Drug Policy http://www.ssdp.org Cited: American Civil Liberties Union http://www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/youth/index.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) STUDENTS AGAINST DRUG WAR ACLU Helps the Fight With the Students for Sensible Drug Policy Students for Sensible Drug Policy are working to overturn the HEA Aid Elimination Penalty, a law that states students convicted of drug offenses automatically lose their financial aid. "We have been working to overturn this policy since it was passed in 1998," Tom Angell, campaigns director for SSDP, said. In February, SSDP and the American Civil Liberties Union were able to force congress to scale back the policy. It was changed so students who were convicted of the crime in college would lose their aid, but if convicted before college, students would still be eligible to receive aid. "This is first time in a decade that Congress has scaled back," Angell said. "It is because of the work of students all around the country." Julie Rice Mallette, associate vice provost and director of scholarships and financial aid, said the University doesn't have many students who run into this roadblock and the law has little impact on students. "It is my personal opinion that it seems unfair to tie free financial aid to such a condition when people who are convicted of other crimes are not affected, such as drinking and driving or murder," she said. "But we do still have to live within the conditions and stay with the guidelines." Kyle Benton, a member of the ACLU chapter for the University and a senior in mechanical engineering, agreed. "What is most ridiculous about the Aid Elimination Provision is that only drug crimes affect a student's eligibility. No other crime, including murder, has an effect," Benton said. This law has stripped the financial aid away from 200,000 convicted students, keeping some of those affected out of school. "For too long, the drug war has been waged supposedly to protect young people," Kris Krane, SSDP's executive director said during a public announcement. "But we know firsthand that these punitive policies hurt us instead of help us." The SSPD Web site says nationally, 0.25 percent of applicants for financial aid are denied aid due to drug convictions. In North Carolina, 0.28 percent of applicants are denied aid because of drug convictions, which is higher than the national average. In March, the SSDP challenged the constitutionality of the policy and filed a class action lawsuit. It said that it violates the Fifth Amendment by punishing people twice for the same offense and violated the equal protection guarantee by "irrationally designating a class of people, those with drug convictions, as unworthy of educational aid." "We will continue to pressure to try to get rid of this law," Angell said. "We hope to get rid of the policy sooner than later." About 80 campuses are involved with the campaign across the country, both in high school and college. "It's up to students to fight back against this. If we don't, nobody else will," Angell said. "This law directly targets our generation. If we don't do anything about it, it will just remain in the books." The SSDP is hosting an international conference and congressional lobby day in Washington, D.C., in November. Hundreds of students are expected to attend the event. "Young people have had it with the war on drugs," Krane said. The SSDP Web site said students across the country are working to get rid of harsh drug punishments and instead enact sensible policies on their campuses. The Campus Change Campaign is the group the SSDP created for students to take the lead and create alternative drug policies on campus. There is an N.C. State chapter of the ACLU, but not an SSDP chapter. "Unfortunately, I don't know of any N.C. State chapter of SSDP, but if there is we will definitely join forces and try to write a Student Government bill against the HEA," Benton said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake