Pubdate: Fri, 07 Apr 2006 Source: Lantern, The (OH Edu) Copyright: 2006 The Lantern Contact: http://www.thelantern.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1214 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act) DRUGS DENY AID Past Convictions Haunt Some In America, we laud ourselves on the attainability of higher education by every one of our citizens. As a society we encourage the continuation of education, provide low-interest loans to subsidize the high cost, and push social programs designed to enlighten high-risk youths of the advantages of a college degree. You can, however, lose your eligibility for financial aid. A provision of the Higher Education Act denies financial aid to students with drug convictions. The act has been criticized by several health, legal and education organizations, including the American Public Health Association, the Association for Addiction Professionals, the American Federation of Teachers and the American Bar Association. This issue again has been brought to the forefront by a recent lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and the Students for a Sensible Drug Policy against the United States Department of Education Secretary Margaret Spellings. The suit accuses Spellings of violating students' rights under the Due Process Clause by "singling out , for denial of financial aid, the category of individuals with a controlled substance conviction." The lawsuit also argues that that the act violates the Fifth Amendment's double jeopardy clause which prevents multiple punishment for the same offense. As a society, do we want to rehabilitate, or merely punish to punish, when someone has broken the law? Education itself, however, promotes rehabilitation. Denying a student money to go to college does nothing to promote the betterment of this person's situation, to further his rehabilitation, or to encourage his assimilation into society as a productive, taxpaying citizen. Roadblocks to education are counterproductive to the policy of education for all that we pride ourselves on in America. If you deny someone who has been convicted of a drug offense from financial aid, there is a higher chance that person will not go back to school. The policy does nothing to promote rehabilitation or education. It is merely retroactive, and focuses on a person's past conviction with no productive plan for a person's future. Drug offenders with aspirations for higher education are people that want to go back to school and put past convictions - for which they already served their punishment - behind them so that they might prepare for the future. Without financial aid, most students would not be at a university. Denying aid does not help these students and does not help society. The current policy articulated in the Higher Education Act prevents people from attaining education, something that, as a country, we have always believed to the best way to empower an individual and create a skilled, productive citizen. - --- MAP posted-by: Tom