Pubdate: Wed, 17 Oct 2007 Source: Guardian (Wright State U, OH Edu) Copyright: 2007 Guardian Contact: http://www.theguardianonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4586 Author: Adam Feuer Cited: Students for Sensible Drug Policy http://www.SchoolsNotPrisons.com Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?219 (Students for Sensible Drug Policy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/FAFSA Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) STUDENTS LOSE AID FOR ANY DRUG CONVICTION Students With a Marijuana Misdemeanor Have Same Consequences The number of on-campus drug arrests increased from 2006 to 2007, and being convicted of a drug offense while in college can put students' federal financial aid packages in jeopardy. The Wright State Police Department made 12 on-campus drug-related arrests in 2006, according to a crime statistics report published by the University. With two-and-a-half months left in the year, the number of campus drug arrests stands at 14 for 2007, according Wendy Chetcuti, Wright State Police Records Manager. Those receiving federal financial aid stand to have that aid suspended as the result of a drug conviction. At Wright State, there are 14,861 students receiving some form of federal financial aid. A provision of the Higher Education Amendments (HEA) of 1998 suspends or prevents eligibility for federal financial aid from any student convicted of a drug offense. This provision took effect in 2000, when question 31 was added to the Free Application for Federal Student aid (FAFSA). Question 31 asks applicants if they have ever been convicted of a drug-related offense. If a student answers yes to question 31 they are given a worksheet on which to provide details of the conviction, in order for the federal government to determine the extent to which they will be affected by the law. The answer to question 31 is entirely self-reported, according to Wright State's Financial Aid Director Willie Boyd. He stated that only two FAFSA applicants at Wright State have ever answered yes to question 31. In 2005, the HEA was re-written to provide suspension of financial aid only in cases where students are convicted while already receiving aid. In other words, only drug offenders who were receiving aid before their conviction, and answered "yes" to question 31 when re-applying for the next year of aid, would stand to be affected. "To my knowledge the University has never been notified by the federal government to rescind aid in the midst of an academic year," Boyd said. The re-write, called the Higher Education Reconciliation Act, was designed to narrow the scope of the law. Critics of the law argue that taking away a person's ability to pay for their education is antithetical to fixing their drug problems. "It makes very little sense to punish people with civil remedies that make it harder for them to get past their problems. Many students convicted of drug-related offenses are involved in a drug-culture. A college education helps them to get out of that drug-culture," said Michael R. Booher, Managing Attorney for WSU's Student Legal Services, Inc. Students For a Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) agrees. In 2006 they filed a class-action suit in South Dakota District Court against the US Secretary of Education, claiming the HEA inflicts unfair extra-judicial consequences on drug offenders. To do so, they asserted, violates the Double Jeopardy Clause of the 5th Amendment to the Constitution, which prohibits people from being punished twice for the same crime. The judge did not find that argument compelling and dismissed the case. Proponents of the law argue that the government has a right to restrict financial aid for drug offenders as long as they are attending school at taxpayer expense. Senior Jake Kohler, an organizational leadership major, wasn't aware of the law but says he supports it. He believes that if someone is going to school at the federal government's expense they should be accountable for their drug usage. "People shouldn't be able to use their federal loan to subsidize a drug habit. The government should be able to take it away, absolutely," said Kohler. Booher concedes that the government is entitled to take away aid from convicted drug users, "but does it really make sense?" He stated that the vast majority of drug cases his office sees are for marijuana, which he believes "should be dealt with differently." Of the 73 on-campus drug law arrests made by WSU police from 2004 to present, 70 were for marijuana possession. Another argument of the law's critics is that the law doesn't make any distinction between types of drugs. A student convicted for smoking a joint faces the same risk of losing aid as one convicted for selling cocaine "Possession of under 100 grams of marijuana is a minor misdemeanor," Booher said. Rather than take away federal aid for students convicted of that offense, he suggests mandatory counseling and drug testing. "That would be more sensible, at least for the first-time (offender)," he said. But taking away financial aid from a first-time marijuana possession offender is "fundamentally wrong," he said. Under the HEA, aid for drug offenders is suspended either indefinitely or for a specified period of time, depending on whether the conviction is for sale or possession, and on whether it is a repeat offense. The 2005 re-write of the HEA does stipulate that drug offenders may undergo drug rehabilitation and submit to random drug testing, to shorten the amount of time they must go without aid. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake