Pubdate: Tue, 26 Oct 1999 Source: Orange County Register (CA) Copyright: 1999 The Orange County Register Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Section: News,page 1 Author: Anjetta Mcqueen, The Associated Press DRUG OFFENDERS TO LOSE FEDERAL COLLEGE MONEY Those Who Sell Illegal Substances Face Stiffer Penalties Than Their Customers WASHINGTON-Students convicted of drug offenses - especially for the sale of drugs - will lose eligibility for federal college tuition aid programs, including Pell Grants and student loans, under new Education Department regulations. Penalties under the rules, which take effect July 1, will range from a yearlong suspension to permanent denial of financial aid, according to the regulations, which are based on a law passed last year. Students must report any past drug violations on federal financial aid forms. "We are very concerned about students' being truthful about all aspects of the financial aid application," said D. Jean Veta, the Education Department's deputy general counsel. "There is no database (of drug convictions) that we can check. On the other hand, if we find out a student has lied, we not only require repayment of any aid received, but the student would be at risk for prosecution for lying to the federal government." The rules released Friday, will not apply to juvenile records or proceedings. A recent survey indicated that drug use among young adults ages 18 to 25 has risen in the last five years, with 16.1 percent, or 4.5 million, saying they had used such a drug in the month before they were surveyed. Veta had no estimate of how many students the rules could affect. The rules are based on provisions in a higher-education law - passed amid partisan debate - intended to reduce waste in the federal student-loan system. Repercussions will be worse for drug sellers than for those who merely possessed them. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. - who unsuccessfully sought to limit the legislation - said that could unfairly hurt young people who sold drugs because they had, or thought they had, few options. "Obviously if someone is a drug dealer or a serious user, that is a reason to say no," Frank said Monday. "This kind of blanket ban is a mistake." Some students say the rules set a bad precedent. "It's kind of backward to deal with a drug policy by denying people an education." said Jamie Pueschel, a 1998 college graduate who is now legislative director of the United States Student Association. Under the rules, a first possession conviction will block aid for a year, while a sales conviction will bar aid for two years. Students convicted of possession a second time will lose aid for two years; a third time, forever. A student convicted twice of selling drugs will lose aid for good. Some student offenders will be able to keep or regain eligibility by completing drug rehabilitation or having their convictions reversed. Colleges won't have to police their students. Instead, students will be asked to report their own criminal records on aid forms in each year of eligibility. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea