Pubdate: Thu, 24 Sep 2009 Source: Spartan Daily (San Jose State, CA Edu) Copyright: 2009 Spartan Daily Contact: http://www.thespartandaily.com/home/lettertotheeditor/ Website: http://www.thespartandaily.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1386 Author: Alicia Johnson, Staff Writer STUDENT GROUP SEEKS CAMPUS DRUG POLICY REFORM About 10 Student for Sensible Drug Policy members gathered in the student union on Monday evening to discuss the war on drugs and their success in helping thousands of students with marijuana convictions obtain financial aid. Students for Sensible Drug Policy is an international grass-roots network of students who are concerned about the impact drug abuse has on our communities, according to its site's mission statement - it has been active on SJSU's campus since Spring '09. The group's goal is to spread awareness on the failed drug policies in the U.S., and to help students and minorities, who are affected by drug policies, said Alexander Woon, founder of the SJSU chapter. In the past 11 years, 200,000 students were denied financial assistance in the United States, Woon said. "It was unfair that rapists and murderers were able to get financial aid - it's pretty ridiculous," Woon said. "I'm tired of the amount of money that we're spending each year on the war on drugs. We're spending over $50 billion a year fighting this - federally and locally." According to the group's Web site, convicted murderers and rapists are eligible to continue receiving federal student loans and grants. Kamal Boparai, a senior finance student and group treasurer, said students should care about Students for Sensible Drug Policy because federal funds affect them. Before Student for Sensible Drug Policy, students who had marijuana convictions were disqualified from receiving Federal Student Aid. Thursday, Congress voted "on an amendment that would continue the harmful practice of denying financial aid to students with drug convictions," according to the group's Web site. The aid elimination penalty was added as an amendment to the Higher Education act in 1998, according to the site. "We made phone calls to our representatives, and we got it passed," Boparai said. So at least people who were caught with marijuana are no longer disqualified from financial aid, but people who are selling marijuana are still (disqualified)." In addition to fighting the war on drugs, the SJSU chapter also hopes to implement the Good Samaritan Policy on the campus. According to Student for Sensible Drug Policy's Web site, under the Good Samaritan Policy, students who are underage are encouraged to call for medical help during an emergency related to alcohol or other drugs without fear of punishment. Craig Negrete, a senior behavioral science and psychology major and vice president of Student for Sensible Drug Policy's SJSU chapter, says the Good Samaritan policy is about saving lives, not about doing something illegal. In order to implement the policy, the SJSU club must approach the student senate. More than 80 universities already have it, including New Mexico, Negrete said. Spencer Finkle, a junior liberal studies major, said he has been trying to get involved in a club for a while, it was the Good Samaritan Policy that convinced him Student for Sensible Drug Policy was the right one. "I actually thought we had something like that on campus," Finkle said. "I think (students)can learn a lot … if you have a friend that is overdosing - people are freaking out when that happens. Also, people are afraid to get into trouble. I think we need to lessen up the enforcement, and treat everything like a medical issue and get people some safety." "Drug use has remained consistent no matter what law they pass, no matter how long they have been prohibited of use, and there are things that we can do to reduce the harms done by them, and helping save lives," Negrete said. "I feel that people shouldn't be treated as criminals for doing nonviolent things … it don't make sense to me that somebody who is being nonviolent and not harming someone else should go to jail and waste our money, especially with the situation that California is in," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr