Pubdate: Fri, 31 Mar 2006
Source: The Southern Digest (LA Edu)
Contact:  http://southerndigest.com
Address: Suite 1064 - T.H. Harris Hall P.O. Box 10180 - Baton Rouge, LA 70813
Copyright: 2006 The Southern Digest
Author: Ural Garrett
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act)

STUDENTS CHALLENGE POLICY RESTRICTING  FEDERAL AID DUE TO PRIOR DRUG
CONVICTIONS

The Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), with help from the 
American Civil Liberties Union, are challenging a law that strips 
college aid from students with prior drug convictions.

Started in 1998 by students at college campuses around the nation, 
the goal of the SSDP was to challenge the bill, which later became a 
law by Indiana Republican Mark Souder, that strips financial aid from 
college students with drug convictions.

The bill has affected 200,000 college students that have mostly 
dropped out of college because they simply just couldna€™t afford it.

a€œWe are an organization that feels that the war on drugs is doing 
more harm than good when effecting things like financial aid,a€ said 
Tom Angell, campaign director of SSDP. a€œThe law hurts society, it 
stops people who messed up once from moving on in their lives.a€

The lawsuit a€œ SSDP vs. Spellingsa€, challenges the Secretary of 
the United States Department of Education. It claims the ban 
unconstitutionally punishes people twice for the same offense, 
violating the Double Jeopardy clause of the U.S. Constitutiona€™s 
Fifth Amendment.

The ban also irrationally designates a class of people, those with 
drug convictions, as unworthy of educational aid, violating the equal 
protection guarantee of the Fifth Amendmenta€™s Due Process Clause.

The Suit also claims the ban disproportionately affects working class 
students who rely on financial aid to curtail the costs of their education.

Wealthy students who can afford tuition are entirely insulated from 
the law, while those less well off risk losing access to education.

a€œYoung people should not be punished twice for the same a€˜youthful 
indiscretionsa€™ many of our nationa€™s leaders got away with,a€ said 
Kris Krane, executive director SSDP. a€œFar too many students have 
lost their education, a collateral damage in the war on drugs. Ita€™s 
time to stand and take our aid back.a€

Latara Riley, a freshman from Orlando, Fla. majoring in mass 
communication agrees with Krane.

a€œI dona€™t think ita€™s right because if its in the past, let it 
stay in the pass,a€ she said. a€œPersonally I feel that its just 
a€˜The Mana€™ trying to keep them out of college.a€

Interested students who want to become a part of the cause can visit 
www.ssdp.org/lawsuit to get more information.

Also those affected by the aid elimination penalty should e-mail  or call (202) 203-4414 to obtain further information 
about the class action lawsuit.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman