Pubdate: Thu, 1 Oct 2009 Source: Grand Valley Lanthorn (MI Edu) Copyright: 2009 Grand Valley Lanthorn Contact: http://www.lanthorn.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5002 Author: Amanda Lechel, GVL Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?219 (Students for Sensible Drug Policy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act) DRUG CHARGES MAY DENY STUDENTS FINANCIAL AID More than 20,000 college applicants were declined eligibility to receive financial aid in 2006 because of drug convictions on their records. Of those 20,000, 6,722 were from Michigan. Those students were declined because of the Higher Education Act's Aid Elimination Penalty passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bill Clinton in 1998. For more than a decade, students who have applied for federal aid have been required to reveal past drug convictions. On Sept. 17 students at Grand Valley State University had a chance to make their voices heard about a bill going through the House of Representatives to keep the Aid Elimination Penalty intact. In July, the House of Representatives passed the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act, which would repeal the Aid Elimination Penalty for students convicted of drug possession policies. If the act becomes a law, only students convicted of drug distribution offenses would lose their financial aid eligibility. Two weeks ago, U.S. Rep. Mark Souder of Indiana, who wrote the act in 1998, offered an ammendment to reinstate the Aid Elimination Penalty. Souder wanted the law back to its original format where students with misdemeanor drug convictions would still not be able to receive financial aid. "When Souder launched his campaign on Thursday to keep misdemeanor charges within the law, (Students for a Sensible Drug Policy) launched a counterattack," said Joel Mounts, a SSDP representative. "All the chapters of SSDP were involved, including Grand Valley. We had members contacting their local representatives to let them know how we felt about misdemeanors being included in this law." Not only were SSDP members calling in, but many other civil rights and drug addiction groups collaborated with SSDP to tackle the issue. Gregory Hatt, the founder of Protest for Peace, was also involved. "We sent an urgent message out to everyone we could to call their representatives," Hatt said. "Students at GVSU were involved by increasing the number of calls to our representative. These calls really helped us get the result we were looking for." Mounts said this is a step in the right direction. "Thousands of students who have had their financial aid taken away because of misdemeanor chargers will have it reinstated," Mount said. SSDP said it hopes that eventually the entire law will be repealed. The group believes students should not be penalized twice for the same offense. When the Aid Elimination Penalty is intact, students with misdemeanor drug convictions are not only penalized by the law but by having their financial aid taken away, too. "I am not a fortune teller," Mounts said. "But I really think that our generation sees things differently than the older generations. We have quite a movement going here. Things are changing." SSDP said it wants its members and everyone involved to know "although we are celebrating our victory today, we have to keep fighting for tomorrow." There is no estimated time frame for the Senate's vote on the issue. When students fill out the Free Application for Financial Student Aid they must answer if they have ever been convicted of possessing or selling any illegal drugs. When this question was added to the 2000-01 FAFSA form, 189,065 people were denied financial aid for answering yes. The length of time students are denied aid depends on the conviction and the number of convictions. For the first offense of possession of a controlled substance, the student is ineligible to receive financial aid for one year; the second offense results in ineligibility for two years and the third offense brings indefinite ineligibility. If a student is charged with sale of a controlled substance, he or she is ineligible for two years, and the second offense means indefinite ineligibility. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake